Rhode Island Policy Reporter

Join the RIPR Mailing List! For a weekly column and (a few) other items of interest, click here or send an email to ripr-list-subscribe@whatcheer.net.

RIPR is a (paper) newsletter that looks at local, state and federal policy issues that affect life here in the Ocean State. Each issue focuses on particular policy areas of interest. Future issues will examine controversial aspects of environmental policy, health care, state tax reform, and education spending. The intention is to look at action rather than talk.

RIPR also issues a weekly column about public policy, carried by ten of Rhode Island's finer newspapers. See here for an archive of recent columns.

If you'd like to help, please contribute an item, suggest an issue topic, or buy a subscription. If you can, buy two or three (subscribe here).

Search this site

whole site RIPR back issues

Available Back Issues:

  • Apr 08 (31) - Understanding homelessness in RI, by Eric Hirsch, market segmentation and the housing market, the economics of irrationality.
  • Feb 08 (30) - IRS migration data, and what it says about RI, a close look at "entitlements", historic credit taxonomy, an investment banking sub-primer.
  • Dec 07 (29) - A look at the state's underinsured, economic geography with IRS data.
  • Oct 07 (28) - Choosing the most expensive ways to fight crime, bait and switch tax cuts, review of Against Prediction, about the perils of using statistics to fight crime.
  • Aug 07 (27) - Sub-prime mortgages fall heaviest on some neighborhoods, biotech patents in decline, no photo IDs for voting, review of Al Gore's Against Reason
  • Jun 07 (26) - Education funding, budget secrecy, book review of Boomsday and the Social Security Trustees' Report
  • May 07 (25) - Municipal finance: could citizen mobility cause high property taxes? What some Depression-era economists had to say on investment, and why it's relevant today, again.
  • Mar 07 (24) - The state budget disaster and how we got here. Structural deficit, health care, borrowing, unfunded liabilities, the works.
  • Jan 07 (23) - The impact of real estate speculation on housing prices, reshaping the electoral college. Book review of Blocking the Courthouse Door on tort "reform."
  • Dec 06 (22) - State deficit: What's so responsible about this? DOT bonding madness, Quonset, again, Massachusetts budget comparison.
  • Oct 06 (21) - Book review: Out of Iraq by Geo. McGovern and William Polk, New rules about supervisors undercut unions, New Hampshire comparisons, and November referenda guide.
  • Aug 06 (20) - Measuring teacher quality, anti-planning referenda and the conspiracy to promote them, affordable housing in the suburbs, union elections v. card checks.
  • Jun 06 (19) - Education report, Do tax cut really shrink government?, Casinos and constitutions, State historic tax credit: who uses it.
  • May 06 (18) - Distribution analysis of property taxes by town, critique of RIEDC statistics, how to reform health care, and how not to.
  • Mar 06 (17) - Critique of commonly used statistics: RI/MA rich people disparity, median income, etc. Our economic dependence on high health care spending. Review of Crashing the Gate
  • Feb 06 (16) - Unnecessary accounting changes mean disaster ahead for state and towns, reforming property tax assessment, random state budget notes.
  • Jan 06 (15) - Educational equity, estimating the amount of real estate speculation in Rhode Island, interview with Thom Deller, Providence's chief planner.
  • Nov 05 (14) - The distribution of affordable houses and people who need them, a look at RI's affordable housing laws.
  • Sep 05 (13) - A solution to pension strife, review of J.K. Galbraith biography and why we should care.
  • Jul 05 (12) - Kelo v. New London: Eminent Domain, and what's between the lines in New London.
  • Jun 05 (11) - Teacher salaries, Veterinarian salaries and the minimum wage. Book review: Confessions of an Economic Hit Man
  • Apr 05 (10) - Choosing a crisis: Tax fairness and school funding, suggestions for reform. Book review: business location and tax incentives.
  • Feb 05 (9) - State and teacher pension costs kept artificially high. Miscellaneous tax suggestions for balancing the state budget.
  • Dec 04 (8) - Welfare applications and the iconography of welfare department logos. The reality of the Social Security trust fund.
  • Oct 04 (7) - RIPTA and DOT, who's really in crisis?
  • Aug 04 (6) - MTBE and well pollution, Mathematical problems with property taxes
  • May 04 (5) - A look at food-safety issues: mad cows, genetic engineering, disappearing farmland.
  • Mar 04 (4) - FY05 RI State Budget Critique.
  • Feb 04 (3) - A close look at the Blue Cross of RI annual statement.
  • Oct 03 (2) - Taxing matters, a historical overview of tax burdens in Rhode Island
  • Oct 03 Appendix - Methodology notes and sources for October issue
  • Apr 03 (1) - FY04 RI State Budget critique
Issues are issued in paper. They are archived irregularly here.

Subscription information:

  • 11 issues/year more or less
  • $35/11 issues, $20/6 issues
  • send check or small bills to:

    Rhode Island Policy Reporter
    Box 23011
    Providence, RI 02903

  • Pay online here

Contact:

For those of you who can read english and understand it, the following is an email address you are welcome to use. If you are a web bot, we hope you can't understand it, and that's the point of writing it this way.

editor at whatcheer dot net

Archive:

2007 print columns 2008 print columns Deep archive

Links:

Links page

RSS

RIPR is primarily a print publication (yikes! how 20th century!), and the work it represents is supported by its subscribers. Feel free to use this link to an RSS feed for the blog, but the real meat is in the newsletter, so come back and subscribe when you have a chance.

Responsibility:

Creative Commons License Tom Sgouros

Fri, 20 Jun 2008

What a budget, what a year!

The fiscal 2009 budget has now been approved by the Assembly, and everyone expects the Governor to sign it. Here are a dozen things worth knowing about it.


  1. The official word is that there were no changes to any taxes. But what this means is that the tax on bottled water the Governor and legislature enacted in May will stand. This also means that taxpayers earning more than around $250,000 will get their cut on schedule and pay a few thousand dollars less in income tax than they did last year. It also means that raising the tax on health insurer premiums and expanding it to cover dental insurance apparently doesn't count. The last such change in this tax was promptly passed on to you, though, so this one probably will be too.
  2. All traffic fines will increase. An offense that cost you $75 will now be $85. Minimum court costs are going up, too.
  3. The only bond issue to be on the fall ballot is a transportation bond: $80 million to make the fiscal train wreck of the Department of Transportation much worse, and also $7 million for public transit. The agricultural open space bond and other DEM priorities were not deemed important enough, so you won't get to vote on them.
  4. But that's not the only borrowing. The state intends to borrow (without a referendum) almost $350 million to buy back already-issued historic tax credits -- at full price. This will cost us about $47 million for the next nine years. Of that $47 million, a bit more than $9 million a year will not go to restoration or the wages of construction workers, but to lower the taxes of whoever bought the credits. For perspective, this is just a little bit less than the state collects from taxes on alcohol each year. So if you buy a ten-dollar bottle of wine, about sixty cents of its sales tax will go to lower someone else's tax bill.
  5. There are several cuts to Medicaid, though some were not quite as bad as the Governor had proposed. (Medicare drug share payments, however, are slated to increase slightly.) The state remains essentially without a plan to realize the savings they claim in shifting long-term care patients to home care, though, so these savings likely won't happen. Quite a number of the poor people and immigrant children who are cut off will wind up getting care from emergency rooms, so these savings probably won't materialize either.
  6. You'll be happy to know that escalating costs due to the escalating caseload at DCYF have been addressed. That is, DCYF is to be empowered to help only 1,000 kids who need foster placements or similar services. If you happen to be kid number 1,001, you are officially out of luck. This, of course, is likely unenforceable, and could possibly put the state at some legal risk, making those savings unlikely to be realized, too.
  7. Administration of the crime victim's compensation fund will take a 10% chunk out of that fund, so if you are due some money from the fund, you'll get 10% less than you might have had you been beaten up this year instead of next.
  8. The reimbursement rates for child care are going up, slightly. Last year, they were pinned at 75% of the going rate for child care in 2002. (Seriously.) This year, the rate will be 75% of the average of the 2002 rate and the 2004 rate. (No joke, it really says that.)
  9. The budget changes law to allow "Mayoral Academies". These are charter schools, championed by Cumberland Mayor Daniel McKee, and exempted from any requirement about teacher pay, benefits or pensions. Proponents say they won't deprive the regular schools of money, but the claim is only convincing to people with short memories. In 2004, Governor Carcieri took $7.9 million from the state's public schools and gave it to the charter schools, and subsequent budgets have been only slightly less obvious. The record is pretty clear on the point: new charter schools will mean less money for existing public schools. Period.
  10. Municipal aid will remain unchanged from this year (which, you will remember, was cut $12.5 million in May). To make this a little more palatable, the state is promising "up to" $14.1 million in new education funds to be split among the cities and towns. (For technical reasons, it also takes back a little aid from a few towns, leaving the difference at $12.8 million.)
  11. Those cities and towns will doubtless be glad to hear about the establishment of a new "Advisory Council on Municipal Finance".
  12. There is barely a hand's width of distance between the Governor and the House leadership. The budget reads like the Governor's second draft. There are some important modifications here and there, but the basic thrust of his intent is intact -- the budget is balanced by spending cuts that affect the poor and middle and tax cuts that affect the people at the top of the income heap.

But really, the bottom line of this budget is that it's not even going to meet its own goals. False savings claimed today will give us a shortfall come November, and we'll have to cut more next spring. Meanwhile, wealthy people get their taxes cut, everyone's property taxes will go up (five towns have requested and received waivers of the state limits on property tax increases) and some of the biggest cost drivers -- DOT borrowing and health insurance, to name two -- remain completely unaddressed.

23:28 - 20 Jun 2008 [/y8/cols] link

Ads and the like:

RIPR, subscriptions

Cost of the War in Iraq
(JavaScript Error)
To see more details, click here.