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Leadership
Summit: Shaping Oregon's Economic Future
Senator Ron Wyden, Summit Co-Chair
Senator Gordon Smith, Summit Co-Chair
Governor-elect Ted Kulongoski, Summit Co-Chair
Oregon Convention Center
December 9, 2002
Portland, OR
Summit Press Clips
Business
leaders call for sales tax
by Jeff Mapes, THE
OREGONIAN
Oregon's
business community turned out in a massive show of force Monday to
present Gov.-elect Ted Kulongoski with an economic recovery plan
that included a strong plea for slashing the state's income taxes in
favor of a sales tax.
Kulongoski
said he thought state government needed to focus on cutting costs
before talking about tax reform, and several other political leaders
said they were skeptical about pushing a sales tax that has been
repeatedly rejected by voters.
At
the same time, the incoming governor and the business leaders did
agree to move quickly to urge the Legislature to double the state's
$15-a-year vehicle registration fee to pump hundreds of millions of
dollars more into road and bridge repairs.
Kulongoski
said he'd also follow business recommendations to find ways to
quickly free more land for industrial development and to speed the
permitting process for new businesses.
The
proposed recovery plan was developed by the Oregon Business Council
for a meeting that the corporate leaders thought would attract 300
or 400 people. Instead, more than 1,300 showed up at the Oregon
Convention Center in Portland for the daylong conference that many
said was a watershed event.
Richard
Reiten, the Northwest Natural Gas chairman who helped organize what
was billed as the Oregon Leadership Summit, said it signaled a new
determination by business to work together to heal a state economy
that has been hard-hit by the recent recession. Oregon has the
nation's highest unemployment rate -- 7 percent -- and faces large
state budget shortfalls that are threatening schools and other
services.
"The
new governor has a real opportunity to grab the momentum of this and
move forward," Reiten said.
The
day's events were centered on a series of 13 white papers, issued by
the council, that in many cases repeated what many business and
political leaders have been saying since the state's economy and
budget tanked in 2001.
The
council urged the state to reform the financially troubled Public
Employees Retirement System and to improve its efforts to recruit
and keep businesses.
There
also were repeated calls to quickly revamp the state's tax system,
which relies heavily on one of the nation's highest income taxes.
"We
believe that fixing our public finance system is the biggest single
issue facing this state," said Ron Parker, president and CEO of
Hampton Affiliates, a forest products firm, who delivered one of the
conference's main speeches.
Parker
said the income tax is volatile and that businesses are discouraged
from investing in the state because of the high tax on capital gains
and other forms of income. Revamping the tax code "probably
means a sales tax," he said.
That
theme was picked up by another speaker, Steven D. Pratt, president
and chief executive officer of Portland steel-maker Esco, who drew a
large, spontaneous round of applause in one of the morning's first
speeches when he declared: "Personally, I believe our state
needs a sales tax to stabilize our revenues."
Kulongoski
did not rule out a sales tax during the campaign, but he said in an
interview at the conference Monday that he is not ready to commit to
tax reform. Until Oregon voters see that government is operating
more efficiently, "whether you call it tax reform or revenue
neutral or whatever it is, I don't think Oregon voters are going to
buy it," he said.
Chuck
Sheketoff , who heads the Oregon Center for Public Policy, a liberal
think tank, said the business leaders were too concerned with
wanting to "to feed the investor class, putting more money in
the hands of the top 1 percent, the absolute richest people."
"The
wealthy get huge tax cuts, and the poor actually end up paying
more," Sheketoff added. "It turns the whole notion of
progressivity on its head."
Vehicle
registration fees There was less controversy over Kulongoski's
campaign proposal to double the state's vehicle registration fee,
which at $30 every two years is the nation's lowest. The business
council endorsed that idea, and Kulongoski said he expected to
present it to the Legislature in January shortly after he takes
office.
State
Rep. Bruce Starr, R-Hillsboro, said he was working with Kulongoski's
transition team on a transportation package, but he declined to
discuss specifics.
"It's
a question of where the Legislature's going to be," Starr said.
"It's a challenge to move any kind of transportation funding
bill when you're asking the Legislature to raise taxes."
Kulongoski
said his transition team also is working to ensure the state has an
adequate supply of land that can be used for industrial development,
a concern expressed by some business leaders who worry that there's
little room for growth under the state's land-use laws.
In
a speech at the end of the conference, Kulongoski promised that the
"days of business as usual in state government are over."
He
said state agencies would be forced to justify their entire budget
-- not just an inflation increase -- and that he wouldn't let the
Legislature go home "until we reach an agreement about PERS."
Kulongoski
said he would "retool" the state's Economic and Community
Development Department to focus on attracting and keeping business
in the state.
He
also delivered a strong defense of the timber industry, saying the
state should have more freedom to develop harvest policies in
national forests.
"Although
I want to build a strong federal-state partnership, I consider this
issue one that cries out for state's rights," said Kulongoski,
adding that "Oregon is a national leader in healthy forest
practices."
Kulongoski
also teamed up with Sens. Ron Wyden and Gordon Smith in a
seven-point plan to bring more federal dollars to bear on Oregon's
economic woes.
The
three intend to work together to obtain more federal research,
education and work-force training funds for the state. They also
hope to meet regularly to discuss trade promotion for Oregon
businesses and develop a federal/state partnership that allows the
state to better manage its natural resources. |