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Showing posts with label state taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label state taxes. Show all posts

26 May 2019

Supreme Court Rules In Favor Of Native American Rights In Wyoming Hunting Case & Gorsuch Provides Decisive 5th Vote In Case Interpreting Treaty With Indian Tribe 20MAI&20MAR1919


 Image result for symbols of yakima tribeImage result for symbols of crow tribe

SO much is owed Native Americans by this country, and so little has been done to make amends. These decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court are very small steps, but at least they are rulings in favor of the Native Americans. From NPR......

Supreme Court Rules In Favor Of Native American Rights In Wyoming Hunting Case

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Native American rights in a 5-4 decision in a case out of Wyoming. Justice Neil Gorsuch, the only Westerner on the court, provided the decisive vote in this case, showing himself again to be sensitive to Native American rights.
The court held that hunting rights for the Crow tribe under a 19th-century treaty did not expire when Wyoming became a state. This case centered on a member of the tribe, Clayvin Herrera, who faced charges for off-season hunting in Bighorn National Forest in Wyoming.
There isn't "any evidence in the treaty itself that Congress intended the hunting right to expire at statehood, or that the Crow Tribe would have understood it to do so," Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote for the majority.
Gorsuch, who was a judge in Colorado and dealt with his share of Native American rights cases before joining the Supreme Court, also provided the fifth vote in another American Indian treaty case dealing with the "Yakama Tribe and its right under an 1855 treaty to travel the public roads without being taxed on the goods brought to the reservation," as we wrote in March.
More context: "For those familiar with Gorsuch's record, his vote was not a surprise. He is, after all, the only westerner on the Supreme Court; indeed, prior to his 2017 appointment to the court, he served for 11 years on the federal court of appeals based in Denver — a court that covers six states and encompasses 76 recognized Indian tribes."
There is another major decision coming from the court out of Oklahoma dealing with Native American rights — Carpenter v. Murphy — but Gorsuch is recused from that case, meaning it could result in a deadlock.

Gorsuch Provides Decisive 5th Vote In Case Interpreting Treaty With Indian Tribe

Every year, the Supreme Court hears dozens of cases, and while there will usually be a few blockbuster opinions, the majority garner little media attention. But these more obscure decisions can often illustrate something interesting, even unexpected, about one of the justices. And so it was on Tuesday with Justice Neil Gorsuch and a relatively obscure and underplayed Indian treaty case.
On this conservative court, Gorsuch has been one of the most conservative voices. But in cases involving Indian treaties and rights, he is most often counted among those sympathetic to Indian claims.
On Tuesday, Gorsuch split from his conservative colleagues, siding with the court's more liberal members in a case involving the Yakama Tribe and its right under an 1855 treaty to travel the public roads without being taxed on the goods brought to the reservation.
Not only did he provide the decisive fifth vote in the case, he wrote an important concurring opinion for himself and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the leader of the court's liberal wing.
For those familiar with Gorsuch's record, his vote was not a surprise. He is, after all, the only westerner on the Supreme Court; indeed, prior to his 2017 appointment to the court, he served for 11 years on the federal court of appeals based in Denver — a court that covers six states and encompasses 76 recognized Indian tribes.


The issue before the court on Tuesday centered on the Yakama Indian Nation and one of its members who owns a wholesale fuel company, Cougar Den Inc., that imports large amounts of gasoline from Oregon to gas stations on the Yakama reservation in Washington state.
Washington imposes a per-gallon tax on those who import large amounts of fuel from out of state, using public highways. The state had assessed taxes of more $3.6 million on Cougar Den. The company and the tribe objected, contending that the taxes were barred by an 1855 treaty agreement between the Yakama Nation and the U.S. government.
On Tuesday, five justices agreed. Justice Stephen Breyer wrote one opinion for three members of the court — himself and Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor.
Gorsuch wrote a concurring opinion for himself and Ginsburg using somewhat different reasoning. But the heart of the case was the meaning of the 1855 treaty that guaranteed the Yakamas the right to travel on all public highways.

To the four conservative dissenters, led by Chief Justice John Roberts, that meant members of the Yakama Tribe would be able to use the roads, as every other citizen does, paying the same taxes and licensing fees.
To Gorsuch and Breyer, that would be an "impotent" interpretation of the treaty originally negotiated.
The Yakamas knew in 1855 that they were going to lose most of their lands. But the record, said Gorsuch, also shows that the Yakamas knew their land was "worth far more than an abject promise they would not be made prisoners on their reservations."
In fact, he observed, the millions of acres the tribe ceded under the treaty "were a prize the United States desperately wanted." U.S. negotiators were under tremendous pressure to come up with a deal because the lands occupied by the Yakamas were important in settling the Washington territory.
"Settlers were flooding into the Pacific Northwest and building homesteads without any assurance of lawful title," Gorsuch recounted. So obtaining the Indian lands east of the Cascades became "a central objective" for the government. "The Yakamas knew all this and could see the writing on the wall." They knew they would lose their lands, so they needed to "extract from the negotiations the simple right to take their goods freely to and from market on the public highways," Gorsuch said.
"It was a price the United States was more than willing to pay" and "by any measure it was a bargain-basement deal," he added.
What the tribe got in exchange, he said, was a right it had had for centuries — not only the right to travel on public highways, but "the right to move goods freely to and from market using those highways," without having to pay a tax or licensing fees on those goods. The only thing the U.S. government gave up, and that the Yakamas insisted on in 1855, was the U.S. government's promise "not to impose a tax or toll on tribal members or their goods as they pass to and from market."
The government is free to try to negotiate for more if it wants to now, Gorsuch said, but it "does not get to rewrite the existing bargain in this court."

03 May 2014

Kansas Economy Craters, Revenues down 45% as Brownback Blames Obama 1MAI14

Dorthy and Toto Tapestry - the-wizard-of-oz Photo 
I remember driving across Kansas one Summer three years ago. It was so hot the air conditioning in the car barely kept the temperature tolerable. When I stopped for gas opening the door was like opening an oven door, the blast of heat and dust from the wind ( always blowing hard) was not the least bit refreshing. The landscape was mostly flat and brown, scorched buy the sun and drought. The one time it did rain, in western Kansas the wind was blowing so hard the rain came down sideways. I was so glad when I crossed into Colorado. This from Daily Kos shows the weather and landscape aren't the only harsh, extreme aspects of life in Kansas, politics are as just as bad. While Kansans have no control over the weather but can only pray for rain and protections from tornadoes, I do not understand how they can continue to believe the lies, deception and propaganda of the right wing repiglican / tea-bagger extremist controlling their state. Gov sam brownback, with his gop / tea-bagger controlled state assemby, is leading them straight to fiscal hell, and Kansans are letting it happen, blinded by racism and their voluntary ignorance. Check this out, and let it be a warning for other states considering the Kansas "economic miracle".....
In a March 10 interview on Fox, Governor Brownback told the nation about the wonders that were taking place in Kansas.   He cited the reduction of taxes in Kansas as being key to helping the economic engine continue to run.
http://video.foxnews.com/...
Brownback discusses how Kansas tax plan and continued tax reduction would help the Kansas economy grow.
Why Just last Fall, Forbes Magazine called Brownbacks plan a way to 'take the region to school'
http://www.forbes.com/...
I am sitting atop a limestone bluff overlooking the Osage River at my home in Folk, Missouri, and it seems as if the only way to get Congress to reform this country’s tax code is to ask for an intervention by the Great and Powerful Oz. But, here in the nation’s heartland, results from an experiment in state income tax policy just might provide other states with a roadmap to real growth. You may recall from a past Forbes column by me that laid out the landmark legislation signed into law one year ago by the forward thinking Kansas Governor Sam Brownback.  Brownback’s tax plan flattened and simplified the tax code, cut personal income tax rates for most earners from 6.45% to 4.9%, and got rid of small business income taxes.
Why, Kansas economy is humming like a bird according to Forbes!  Job Creation!  Tax Growth!  The state could be rolling in money! So, you have to imagine some of the shock and dismay Republicans feel today as the sales tax returns start showing that for all the praise they might be wrong.
So, when the May 1 report on Sales & Income tax returns came in, someone should have been surprised:
TOPEKA — Tax revenue in April dropped 45 percent from a year ago, the Kansas Department of Revenue announced Wednesday. The state’s revenue for the year is $92.9 million less than projected earlier this month.
The unexpected news weighed heavily on a joint committee of senators and House members who worked late into the night, trying to hammer out a budget in a wrap-up session that started Wednesday.
“It’s certainly impacting decisions. I mean any decision that would have included more spending is out the window obviously,” said Sen. Ty Masterson, R-Andover.
The state has taken in $480 million less overall than it had by this point in the last fiscal year.
The governor and other Republican leaders attributed the April drop to federal tax changes. Democrats called that claim ridiculous and said the revenue numbers showed the governor’s tax cuts are unsustainable.
http://www.kansas.com/... That's right.   Kansas is on track for a nearly 1.3B tax shortfall this year, and in April we endured an unprecedented income drop of over 45%.  That's right.  The state economy lost 45% of its tax income.
But maybe Kansas isn't the only state experiencing the problem.  Maybe it's the whole region.
https://www.moodys.com/...

The downgrade reflects Kansas' relatively sluggish recovery compared with its peers, the use of non-recurring measures to balance the budget, revenue reductions (resulting from tax cuts)
which have not been fully offset by recurring spending cuts, and an underfunded retirement system for which the state is not making actuarially required contributions. In recent years the state has appropriated funds from or shifted costs to the State Highway Fund to help balance the general fund budget. The phasing in of increasing income tax cuts, along with rising pension costs, will continue to exert pressure on the budget.
Whoops.  Kansas job revenue market grew at a slower rate then nearby states (like Missouri) and Kansas revenue estimates led to Moodys downgrading state bonds, increasing the cost to borrow. Despite the analysis from outside agencies that other states are performing significantly better than Kansas in equal economic situations and that Kansas tax policy led to the downgrade of Kansas Debt, Governor Brownback issued this statement today:
“What we are seeing today is the effect of tax increases implemented by the Obama administration that resulted in lower income tax payments and a depressed business environment,” Gov. Sam Brownback said in a statement.
Read more here: http://www.kansas.com/... Apparently, Obama's policies just want to hurt Kansas more than ... anywhere else I suppose.   We just must be in that Obama is out to get us vortex for Moody to make the analysis that others are not suffering this kind of economic crater effect.
Kansas Republicans have a plan for this though.   Today, they began debating ending the Mortgage Filing Fee, a tax of .26 cents for every 100 dollars financed that goes back to county offices to use for emergency funds.
Because we all know, with a drop of 45% in expected revenue, there is no way they will ever need emergency funds for basic services.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/05/01/1296248/-Kansas-Sales-Economy-Craters-Revenues-down-45-as-Brownback-Blames-Obama?detail=email 

21 February 2012

Gov. Christie Introduces Tax Plan That Gives 40 Percent Of Its Benefit To The Richest One Percent from THINK PROGRESS 21FEB12

WANT a preview of what the gop / tea-baggers want to do to you if they win the Presidency and control of the Senate in this years elections? Here's a hint for 99% of us...BOHICA!!!! And here's a an example from gov chris christie r NJ, who has endorsed mitt romney because they have the same goals, make the 1%, the rich richer at the expense of the rest of us the 99%. And I can't help but ask the voters of NJ, so how's that right wing gop / tea-bagger thingy working out for you now? From Think Progress.....
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) today formally announced his intention to implement a 10 percent cut in New Jersey’s income tax. “Lower tax rates will relieve over-burdened middle class families,” Christie said in his annual budget address.
However, the middle class is likely to hardly notice Christie’s cut, as it would give just $80 annually to a households making $50,000. In fact, according to New Jersey Policy Perspective, President Deborah Howlett, 40 percent of the benefit of Christie’s tax cut will go to the state’s richest 1 percent:
The recession blew a $2.5 billion hole in the state budget that has never been filled. Now, the governor wants to dig that hole even deeper with an irresponsible gimmick that only benefits the wealthiest 1 percent.
Proposing an income tax cut might be good politics, but it’s bad policy for most New Jerseyans.
For most of us, the governor’s proposed income tax cut will amount to $2 a week, which will be quickly eaten up by rising property taxes. Meanwhile, the top 1 percent will reap nearly 40 percent of the savings.
The state’s tab for this tax cut will ultimately be $1.1 billion, and that money has to come from somewhere. While the governor seems to think it will come from his pie-in-the-sky revenue projections, it’s hard to imagine the state’s stagnant economy will turn around quite so quickly.
Already, according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP), New Jerseyans in the bottom 20 percent of earners pay 10.7 percent of their overall income in taxes, whole, those in the top 1 percent — with an average income of $2,258,300 — pay 7.2 percent. Christie’s income tax plan certainly won’t add any progressiveness to the code, though it will help those at the very bottom of the income scale via an increased Earned Income Tax Credit.
As Blue Jersey’s Bill Orr noted, tax collections in the Garden State are already off $325 million through the first six months of the current year, so “the governor is in no position to arbitrarily call for a self-inflicted wound through deliberately reducing the State’s income stream.” Christie’s tax cut will cost about $1.3 billion when it is fully phased in in four years.