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Governor Ted Kulongoski
State Capitol

Press Release     

December 4, 2006

Governor's budget bolsters schools, health care, public safety, and clean energy

Strong revenues offer “the ability to do more, the opportunity to do better and the responsibility to do our best,” Governor says

Salem—Today Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski presented a “Hope and Opportunity Budget” for the 2007-09 biennium, with significant new investments in public education, children’s health, law enforcement and criminal justice and the development of renewable energy.

“We are entering an era of great opportunity for Oregon,” the Governor told reporters, legislators and government officials during the official rollout of the state budget.  “We have the ability to do more, the opportunity to do better and the responsibility to do our best.”

For the first time in eight years, the Governor said, Oregon has the resources to keep pace with inflation and population growth and to make schools better, communities safer, while also strengthening critical services for the elderly, the disabled and children and families in need.

“We begin with the ability to meet the growing demand for state-funded programs by fully funding the services projected to meet the needs of a growing population,” the Governor said.  “But for the first time in many years, we also have additional resources—$820 million above this level—to restore, improve and expand critical services.”

The bulk of these new resources will be used to make schools better and stabilize funding for the 198 school districts in the state, the Governor said, and expand access to post-secondary education for students who graduate from high school and adults in the workforce who seek to upgrade their skills.

Other investments will enable the state to, “make our communities safer…provide a stronger safety net for vulnerable Oregonians…upgrade our mental health system…and control health care costs,” the Governor said.  “We can keep children safe and families stronger.  We can clean up our air and water and sustain a healthier landscape.  And we can accelerate our movement toward energy independence and a renewable energy economy.”

Today’s improving economy highlights the need to rebalance Oregon’s tax system to provide more equity for working families and stability for essential services, the Governor said, highlighting his recommendations for tax fairness under the heading, “the opportunity to do better.” 

“Almost everyone in Oregon recognizes that our tax system is unstable and unfair,” the Governor said.  “And there is a growing consensus on changes within our reach that can make our system more stable and more fair.  This legislative session offers an opportunity to act on those consensus items.”

The Governor asserted that a growing consensus exists around the need to redirect the state corporate “kicker” to a rainy day fund, rather than let it go to corporations and shareholders, who are reaping significant benefits from Oregon’s economy.  Most of these shareholders live out of state, the Governor said.  “Placing the corporate kicker in a rainy day fund will protect our schools, human services and public safety when we hit the next economic downturn.”  

Raising the $10-corporate minimum tax is also a matter of consensus, the Governor said.  The state has not increased the tax since 1931, when most working families lived on less than $30 a week.  “Raising the corporate minimum will enable us to fully fund Head Start for all eligible three- and four-year-olds, and launch our Shared-Responsibility Model to make college truly affordable for all Oregonians.”

A third consensus item is the need to raise Oregon’s tobacco tax to match the tax rates now in effect in Washington state.  This will enable Oregon to recover more of the costs that smoking inflicts on society, especially the health care system.  “Dedicating new tobacco tax revenues to health care will allow us to provide affordable health insurance to every child in the state and bring more needy adults into the Oregon Health Plan,” the Governor said.

A fourth consensus item is the need for a stable funding source for the Oregon State Police, the Governor said.  That funding source may be a surcharge on car insurance premiums on policies that go beyond the mandatory minimum coverage.  “No one disputes that we need 24/7 coverage by state troopers on our state highways,” the Governor said.

“If we adopt all of the consensus items I have outlined, our tax system will be more fair, more stable and better able to support the services that our citizens deserve for the long-term.  We will end our rollercoaster trend of cutting in bad times and re-investing in good times, but never quite getting ahead.”

Under the heading of “the responsibility to do our best,” the Governor’s budget allocates $5 million to facilitate the consolidation and administration of school district health plans, which is expected to save $40 million in future biennia.  The budget also proposes to close the Eastern Oregon Training Center in Pendleton and to transition the 40 developmentally-disabled adults who now reside there to community group homes or foster care.

Further, the Governor’s budget increases funding for the Government Standards and Practices Commission, the state’s ethics enforcement agency, to provide the “tools to enforce the laws and rules to ensure that the people’s business in conducted openly, honestly and without improper influence.”  And, his budget restores full funding for the Oregon Voters Pamphlet and increases staffing for the administration of elections in the Secretary of State’s office.

Finally, the Governor’s budget increases reserves to $902 million by doubling the Educational Stability Fund (to $452 million), establishing a new rainy day fund with the proceeds of the corporate kicker ($275 million), boosting the budget’s projected ending balance ($145 million) and re-establishing an emergency fund ($30 million).  These reserves will exceed six percent of the state’s General Fund revenues by the end of the 2007-09 biennium – a record level in recent years and one praised by State Treasurer Randall Edwards as “an enormous step forward on the path of long-term financial stability in Oregon.”

Summary of Budget Highlights
Education Enterprise
Healthy Kids Plan
State Troopers
Human Services
Public Safety
Renewable Energy
Economic Development
Reserves
Contact:
Anna Richter Taylor: 503-881-0491
Kristina Edmunson 503.378.5040

Page updated: December 06, 2006

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