Crosscut

With state taxes, a little addition means a lot of relief

Depending on what ballot measures are before voters in November, the state may have a lot more chance to talk about the revenue increases approved by the legislature and governor. But, for now, it's important to understand that Washington acted in a balanced way, like most other states, and protected the state's core values.

By Remy Trupin

May 27, 2010.

There's been a lot of talk about the revenue increases passed by the state legislature this session. And undoubtedly there will be more if initiatives to repeal them get on the fall ballot.

But there's a lot you might not have heard much about. Like what the increases are for. And how they compare with the increases passed by other states.

The approach legislators took in the face of the recession was reasonable. It was balanced, and according to a new analysis, it was on par with most states in the nation.

It's also important to remember there have also been major cuts. The state slashed $3.6 billion from the budget last year and slashed another $755 million this year.

In human terms, that means more than 40,000 people were cut from the Basic Health Plan, and the waiting list now approaches 100,000 people.

We're also cutting deeply into the education funding that voters approved to reduce classroom sizes, meaning Washington's kids will continue to learn in overcrowded classrooms. Colleges will get less money, and tuition is skyrocketing.

Though some say the state should have made cuts, the fact is the state did make cuts — deep painful cuts. The real question is what would have happened had lawmakers not taken the balanced approach of raising revenue, through a targeted package that closed tax loopholes and imposed largely temporary "sin tax" increases on non-essential items.

For all the attention focused on raising revenue, it made up a very small part of our state's response the past two legislative sessions to the recession.

In January, the governor gave an idea of what an all-cuts budget would have looked like. They were cuts we're glad the governor and state lawmakers couldn't stomach.

This is what would have happened had we not raised revenue through such actions as paying a few more cents to drink beer or eat candy: