For Immediate Release Additional
Information:
Senate
Democratic Leader Robert Brown
January 29, 2008 404-656-5035
House
Democratic Leader Dubose Porter
404-656-5058
Package ends years of Republicans tax hikes; keeps
promise to
“This is immediate,
effective tax relief without shifting the burden to local governments,” said
Rep. Jamieson (D-Toccoa). “It creates no new taxes.” Under the first bill
sponsored by Rep. Jamieson, counties who lower local property taxes can tap
into $300 million this year in state education funding.
Accompanying that bill is
legislation sponsored by Representative Kathy Ashe (D-Atlanta) that mandates
the state to fully fund the Quality Basic Education Act for the first time in
over 20 years. This will ensure that K-12 public education is adequately funded
and the state no longer shifts the burden to local property owners.
The funding for local
governments that reduce property taxes would come from the state’s reserve fund
for the next two years, $300 million this year and $300 million next year. Funding received would be dedicated to the
Quality Basic Education formula that funds public education.
Rep. Kathy Ashe stated, “We
cannot demand increased student achievement while the state is starving public
education. Under the Republicans, public
education has been cut by $1.5 billion and over 100 systems have been forced to
raise property taxes as a result. It’s time we do the right thing, and made the
state government pay its fair share.”
“These are great bills that roll back property taxes and
help fund public education in
House Caucus Chairman Calvin Smyre (D-Columbus) noted, “There
is a direct cause and effect here – cuts to education funding lead to higher
property taxes. I’m calling on the Republican leadership to do their utmost to
give both of these worthy proposals a fair hearing. It is time that education and protecting
local property taxes becomes a priority once again in
In total, public education cuts by the GOP are as follows:
|
BUDGET YEAR |
AMOUNT |
|
Proposed fiscal year 2009 |
$141,510,679 |
|
Fiscal year 2008 |
$142,968,687 |
|
Fiscal year 2007 |
$169,745,895 |
|
Fiscal year 2006 |
$332,835,092 |
|
Fiscal year 2005 |
$332,838,099 |
|
Fiscal year 2004 |
$283,478,659 |
|
Amended fiscal year 2003 |
$134,594,245 |
|
Total |
$1,537,971,356 |
###