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WILL THE FOURTH TIME BE A CHARM?

Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels delivered his fourth, and what could be his final, State of the State address tonight. In the nearly half-hour long address, the Governor reiterated his property tax reform plan to lawmakers and told them not to make any plans for Spring Break if the job wasn’t done.

Daniels said he wanted to provide Hoosiers with immediate tax relief, constitutionally cap homeowner assessed values at one-percent and increasing the sales tax by one-percent. He wants to have the state pick up the costs of child welfare and school operation costs.He wants a uniform property tax system and controls on local spending and borrowing.

The Governor did not address the issue of repealing property taxes. His staff said he has already spoken on the issue and does not support any of the current property tax repeal plans because he says they don’t add up.

Daniels told lawmakers he will keep them there for as long as it takes to solve the property tax crisis. However, he said the bi-partisan spirit and cooperation that the General Assembly has taken on property taxes gives him hope that the problem can be solved.

Daniels also touched on some of Indiana’s accomplishments such as the state’s low unemployment rate compared to neighboring states and shorter times at the Bureau of Motor Vehicles (an average wait last month of 8 minutes and 11 seconds). Daniels also addressed the shortcomings of his administration saying some experiments had worked poorly and were abandoned.

The main objective Daniels put out for his administration this year was to improve child support enforcement. Saying single parents lose more than $5 million a year in uncollected child support.

Overall the Governor, seemed positive an upbeat in his address. However, he also acknowledged the reality that his efforts of the past four years may be rewarded with him being returned to the private sector. And while he closed his speech with words of “bravery and bipartisanship” he also quoted the motto of Special Olympics, Win or lose, may I be brave in the attempt.”

  • anonymous

    I saw parts of Mitch’s speech. I thought it was pretty good, and I think he has taken the mess this state was left in and turned it around.

    I particulary liked the part where he said someone from the 1800s could come back today and wouldn’t know what an ipod was, or a computer or cell phone or I-70, but they would recognize local government! Brilliant.

  • Taxpayer

    I had to laugh at his talk about how it would take “bravery” to get this job (proprty tax reform) done. Bravery? The only reason they’re even talking about it — the only reason it’s suddenly Job One for the General Assembly THIS year (when it should have been LAST year) is because they’re all looking at what happened to Bart Peterson and quaking in their boots with the knowledge that they ALL could be next!

    When I e-mailed my state senator in July demanding that something be done about property taxes, I got a blow-off, typical political double-talk reply. Now suddenly she’s sending me surveys and mailings about how this is the most important issue on the table to her. Funny, the only thing she thought was important LAST year — when the crisis could have been averted — was making sure gay folks couldn’t marry in Indiana. Amazing how quickly their priorities change when The People get noisy!

  • William

    Daniels ’stooped’ on the ‘bravery’ BS but otherwise it was a pretty good, forward-looking speech. He was left with a ‘heck’ of a smelly mess but he should have addressed the Property Tax issue much sooner. He’s a Bush-RINO just ‘feelin yuh’…. look-out…
    That said, he seems to now be acting like he’s going to fix this issue. I’ll wait and see if he has the balls to cap this issue by excluding the ‘usual’ suspects from the resultant legislation.

  • MissouriDemocrat

    If we can get government out of the bedroom and into the living room to see how people are having a difficult time paying bills, and then see their homes threatened by property taxes then it is likely they might work on changing the entire complexion of government. You have Eric Miller and Brian Bosma to thank for this rampant desire to think about gay marriage. Add those two to Greg Garrisons morning tirades about all democrats being Marxist/Leninists and Tom Rose wanting us to further adopt Israel and you have a formula for ignorance that defies the imagination. Sure Republicans are interested in property taxes now, but both the parties knew it was a looming disaster as far back as 2001 and both the parties did zero to address it. They preferred to concentrate on their morality issues over the pocketbook ones. Good Luck at getting either party to see the real Indiana. It will not happen because we are headed for a total collapse and they are Nero fiddling as Rome is burning.

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