Posted on 09/15/2002 7:58:05 PM PDT by SheLion
SALEM, Ore. (AP) - Oregon residents are voting this week on a cigarette tax increase and a boost in school aid in an effort to stem the state's budget problems.
Votes will be tallied Tuesday for a measure that would raise the cigarette tax by 60 cents and another that would take $150 million from a Lottery-fed education endowment fund to shore up state school aid. Neither measure faces organized opposition.
Under the cigarette-tax proposal, the levy on a pack of cigarettes would increase from 68 cents to $1.28 and generate about $70 million. Most of the money would go to the state's health plan for low-income residents. If the measure fails, the health plan funding would be cut by $70 million.
Eighteen other states already have raised cigarette taxes this year to help balance their budgets in the midst of the nation's economic slump.
The tobacco industry decided not to launch a major advertising campaign against the tax increase because the measure is widely expected to pass.
The other proposal on Tuesday's ballot would give schools $150 million from an education fund in order to cover a cut lawmakers approved earlier this year to balance the budget. If the measure fails, that budget cut will stand.
Oregon is facing a $482 million budget shortfall, which will not be affected if the measures pass.
All Oregon elections are conducted by mail, but voters may leave ballots in designated drop-sites by Tuesday evening.
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heh! You might be right!
Something is definitely amiss here!
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