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An honest budget, like it or not (Ohio's Gov. John Kasich)
cleveland.com ^ | March 17,2011 | Kevin O'brien

Posted on 03/17/2011 2:35:05 AM PDT by Las Vegas Dave

Well, this is different.

Ohio has a governor who isn't sugarcoating a fiscal crisis and isn't frantically mining the couch cushions for one-time nickels and dimes to stave off the inevitable.

Instead, Gov. John Kasich is giving Ohio a straight-from-the-shoulder budget that reflects reality.

Ohio's books show an imbalance of at least $6.2 billion, and probably more like $8 billion. Surprise at an austerity budget simply isn't an option.

Nor should there be any surprise at the unhappy mooing from cows who are coming to the realization that they're no longer sacred.

"Kasich's irresponsible slashing of local aid will have dire consequences for middle-class families across Ohio. Local communities will face unprecedented budgetary shortfalls and have to depend on local property tax increases to maintain even the bare essential services," moans a press release from the Service Employees International Union, which represents lots of government workers.

Funny how the only solution the SEIU can imagine is a local tax increase to keep its dues-paying members employed. Taxpayers may actually consider making government smaller and less expensive a more attractive option.

Dozens of variations on the SEIU's theme have hit my electronic junk mail folder lately. All of them have come from people who make their living on the taxpayers' dime.

Feel free not to like everything -- or anything -- about Kasich's budget, but money is finite, states' budgets have to balance and choices have to be made. At least Kasich is offering an unambiguous course: He wants government to be smaller, less expensive and more efficient.

Local governments that embrace that goal will have a much better chance to achieve it, once the General Assembly passes a bill to put the clamps on some aspects of collective bargaining by public employee unions.

School districts, like Cleveland's, that are hamstrung by deadwood-friendly work rules and seniority requirements will have an opportunity to make meaningful, educationally beneficial changes in staffing, and save money at the same time.

If it's done right locally, education will improve. If it's not done right locally, taxpayers should at least get to pay less for an inferior product.

And speaking of education and this budget, shed no crocodile tears for Ohio's public universities. A 3.5 percent cap on tuition increases is hardly crippling for institutions that have long raked in fabulous amounts from taxpayers and tuition payers to prop up systemwide redundancies in majors and scores of classes that the public has no interest in funding.

If a mere 3.5 percent educational inflation rate forces Ohio State University to cancel Intro to Queer Studies, some professor might have to find honest work, but the taxpayers won't take to the streets.

At all levels of government in Ohio, the incentive to do anything is money. The incentive to do anything smarter or cheaper -- or to admit that someone else, like a private firm or a private citizen, ought to do it instead -- is the lack of money.

As long as the state was hovering nearby with ready cash, it was safe for public schools to be ineffective, safety agencies to duplicate all sorts of services and equipment, and public employees to be the beneficiaries of overly generous pension and medical benefits. When money is easy, overspending isn't such a big deal.

But money is tight now, and there's a price to be paid for a long tradition of spending unwisely amid prosperity.

Boiled down to its essentials, the choice Kasich faced was to take yet another chunk out of the taxpayers or a chunk out of government.

He chose well, but as a result Ohioans will be subjected to another round of hysterics about the "death of the middle class" and, of course, the bleak fate of "the children." The cries will come from people who collect public paychecks or, more to the point, dues from people who collect public paychecks.

But there is a limit to what the people are willing to pay for government. The real reaction to Kasich's budget -- the response that comes from the people who write the checks rather than the people who collect them -- will tell us whether Ohioans have reached that limit.


TOPICS: Government; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 03/17/2011 2:35:08 AM PDT by Las Vegas Dave
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To: ADemocratNoMore; Akron Al; arbee4bush; agrace; ATOMIC_PUNK; Badeye; Bikers4Bush; BlindedByTruth; ...

Ohio Pings!

To be added to the Ohio Ping List, please freepmail (works best),
LasVegasDave.

2 posted on 03/17/2011 2:36:15 AM PDT by Las Vegas Dave ("Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican." Ronald Reagan)
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To: Las Vegas Dave

SEIU’s response to the taxpayer: “Screw your family”.


3 posted on 03/17/2011 2:44:50 AM PDT by Gene Eric (*** Jesus ***)
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To: Las Vegas Dave
Oh, No, cancel queer studies, the sky is falling

the ten thousands dollar question why not fire the SOB that came up with such stupid stuff to start with.

4 posted on 03/17/2011 2:52:20 AM PDT by org.whodat
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To: Gene Eric

SEIU: Protecting the rights of rich gubmint leeches and thugs.


5 posted on 03/17/2011 3:01:49 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (~"This is what happens when you find a stranger in the Amber Lamps !"~~)
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To: org.whodat
A review of the records for that sort of decision sounds like a very good way to prioritize pink slips. The biggest problem with its execution (if you will pardon the hostility-inducing word “execution”) is that most of those decisions will have been made by faceless committees. So....start by firing the person who signed out the order. The word will soon spread among administrators that they had better develop a backbone.
6 posted on 03/17/2011 3:39:47 AM PDT by Pecos (Liberty and Honor will not die on my watch.)
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To: Las Vegas Dave

I have to admit that I must have severely misjudged Kasich in the past. I though of him as a rather timid and politically correct type of politician.

I’ve been proved wrong and I now have to “eat crow.”

We need 49 more state governors to follow his example and I commend him on his dedication to the job he has been elected to do.

Hang in there John!


7 posted on 03/17/2011 4:19:41 AM PDT by DH (48th TFW, A&E Lakenheath England, 67-70)
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To: DH

John is the bomb!


8 posted on 03/17/2011 4:31:04 AM PDT by SMARTY (Conforming to non-conformity is conforming just the same.)
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To: Las Vegas Dave

As a productive small business owner in OHio, I’d like Kasich. These leeches (unions whose job it is to get as much money for the most people for the least work) are finished.
ps, we wouldn’t be in such a mess had the teachers ‘educated’ instead of indoctrinated. There would be more ‘productive’ members available.


9 posted on 03/17/2011 4:48:16 AM PDT by griswold3 (Character is destiny)
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To: org.whodat

Queer studies will probably survive. They’ll just get rid of “optional” things like: Math, Physics, Chemistry, and Engineering.


10 posted on 03/17/2011 4:49:32 AM PDT by rbg81
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To: Las Vegas Dave
Funny how the only solution the SEIU can imagine is a local tax increase to keep its dues-paying members employed. Taxpayers may actually consider making government smaller and less expensive a more attractive option.

A new revolution is brewing. Starting to bubble over!

11 posted on 03/17/2011 5:55:29 AM PDT by FatherofFive (Islam is evil and must be eradicated)
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To: Las Vegas Dave

I think history will be kind to Kasich, Christie, Walker, etc., these governors are doing what they have to.

Look, nobody likes pay cuts, benefit cuts, etc., but it just has to happen sometimes.

Think of the chiiiiiiillllldren! (the libs can use that line, why can’t we?)


12 posted on 03/17/2011 6:13:56 AM PDT by RockinRight (I once had my identity stolen. Once they got to know me, they gave it back right away.)
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To: griswold3

Do you live in OH?

I was born there and spent the first 29 yrs of my life there.

Now I’m in liberal Maryland with our d-bag governor Owe Malley...blech.


13 posted on 03/17/2011 6:15:30 AM PDT by RockinRight (I once had my identity stolen. Once they got to know me, they gave it back right away.)
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To: RockinRight

Funny how “elections have consequences” only applies when the leftists win. If the adults are voted in, the children all start crying that their candy and playstation budget is being cut.


14 posted on 03/17/2011 6:36:08 AM PDT by AT7Saluki (No cejar, no ceder)
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To: Las Vegas Dave

Excellent article!!! This piece is priceless: “Nor should there be any surprise at the unhappy mooing from cows who are coming to the realization that they’re no longer sacred.”


15 posted on 03/17/2011 8:37:44 AM PDT by flutters (God Bless The USA)
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To: Las Vegas Dave

I have relatives who live in Ohio and I drive there often. The one experience I’ve had on several occasions is when I’ve remarked to a turnpike toll booth operator that I’m pleased they are linking up with the EZ-Pass automated toll collecting service as it will be more convenient.

The response is usually a combination of sour faces, simmering anger, and once, a comment by an older lady of “everyone wants convenience but convenience costs jobs!”.

While she is probably shielded from layoffs due to seniority, she’d be the first one to be replaced by an EZ-Pass sensor if I had my way.


16 posted on 03/17/2011 8:55:03 AM PDT by Crolis ("To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it." -GKC)
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