Rebuttal

May 27th, 2008

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House Bill 657 of 2008 was the GARVEE highway financing bill. Historically, Idaho has had a “pay as you go” policy with financing the construction of new highways. The GARVEE program uses debt financing to pay for new highways, where the revenue to pay off the debt is future federal highway aid dollars.

The Idaho GARVEE program is now in its third year. At the time of the 2008 session, when we voted on HB 657, the Idaho Transportation Department was 14 months behind spending their GARVEE authorized funds out of 24 months of funding. In other words, out of 24 months of funding, the state had only spent 10 months worth of funds.

GARVEE bonds are tax exempt bonds. According to IRS rules, tax exempt bonds can not be use for any kind of “for profit” ventures. But, since Idaho was spending its GARVEE bond revenue so slowly, the state had a lot of bond revenue sitting in the bank earning interest, and that interest income was considered “profit” by the IRS. Evidently we earned too much interest and the IRS fined the state of Idaho for an amount nearly equal to the interest earned. If the state of Idaho does not spend this bond revenue quickly, the IRS will impose another fine, and might even declare the GARVEE bonds to no longer be tax exempt. This will create a huge problem for the state of Idaho and the GARVEE program with the New York City banking community.

Consequently, I voted “no” on HB 657 because we were 14 months behind spending the GARVEE money and could/should have skipped a year.

We also have a performance audit scheduled for the Transportation Department for 2008. I believe having the results of the audit back before we authorize more debt financing for highway construction would be good management, especially since there have been a few scandals associated with the GARVEE program.

House Bill 121 of the 2007 legislative session was a bill to ban smoking from bowling alleys. I voted against this bill as I saw it as a property rights issue. There is no reason that commercial enterprises in the private sector can not regulate the behavior of their patrons. And patrons can vote with their feet if they don’t like the policies and practices of any particular private sector business enterprise.

Personally I hate cigarette smoke. No one in my immediate family smokes. My father ran the 10,000 meters in the 1956 Olympics and held the American record for the 5,000 meters. My brother competed in the NCAA Track and Field nationals twice in the 3,000 meter steeple chase. And I came within 6 seconds of the American record for a cycling 10 mile time trial. The last thing I want to have to put up with is cigarette smoke.

However, this is a property rights issue, and not an issue for the government to delve into.

In my opinion House Bill 121 deals has a “police state” mentality behind it. I fully supported Governor Otter’s veto message which is found below:

House Bill 503 of the 2008 session would provide tax payer funded college scholarships for high school students that agree to remain drug and alcohol free. These high school students would have submit to random drug tests during the last 2 years of their time in high school. However, there is no tracking of whether or not the students receiving the scholarships remain drug and alcohol free during their time in college. Bills similar to this have been proposed in earlier sessions and have always failed.

I voted against this bill as I don’t think it is a legitimate use of tax payer’s money to bribe students to do what they should do anyway. Fortunately, the bill never got a hearing in the Senate and consequently died.

House Bill 630 of the 2006 session is a legislator “feel good” bill that is un-needed. It is a bill that criminalizes threatening statements between people on school grounds including students. With HB 630, making a statement between students like “I am going to blow your head off” is a criminal act.

The United States leads the world in incarcerating its people at 712 persons per 100,000 in population. Russia is second at 568 people in prison per 100,000. Most of Europe and Canada falls in the range of 100 to 150 persons in prison per 100,000. House Bill 630 follows a misguided assumption that every problem can be solved by making it a crime and putting people in prison. We owe it to our students to try harder to solve problems before we call law enforcement and have them arrested.

We already have plenty of statutes on the code books to handle actual threats or acts of violence between students, and we don’t need to pile on more. Most inappropriate behavior on a school grounds should be handled by the school principal with a wooden paddle. Our rush to involve law enforcement is actually an abdication a responsibility that belongs to the school administrators.

House Bill 680 – Community Infrastructure Districts, was a bill that should have been defeated. We will be revisiting this legislation many times in the future as it provides opportunities for abuse. It reminds me of the Urban Renewal legislation that was passed in the 1980’s that we are struggling to fix today.

The legislation is said to provide a way for development to pay for itself. In reality, it allows a real estate developer to transfer his development costs to the property taxpayers. House Bill 680 is special interest legislation that was heavily promoted by lobbyists. This 20 page bill is very complex and has some major flaws.

The bill allows for a taxing district to be formed by only one landowner. The taxing district can sell bonds (a form of debt financing) to be paid back by multiple future land owners after the original land owner has subdivided the property. It transfers from the developer the financial burden of developing the infrastructure of his development to the property taxpayers. It will allow developers to get into and out of a real estate development with minimal investment. The developers love this bill, the property tax payers owners are not going to hate it.

We already have a problem in our country with what I call a “culture of debt.” The housing bubble created excessive inflation in housing costs and was caused by too many reckless borrowing schemes. Now that the housing bubble has turned into a bust, the resulting credit crunch threatens the entire economy and banking system. House Bill 680 is just yet another scheme to add to the consumer’s out of control debt burden.

Another problem with this CID scheme is that it requires county commissioners or city council members to be the board members of the CID. These public servants are already overburdened with too many meetings and issues to deal with. It will be difficult for them to be adequate watchdogs over the workings of the CID.

Once established, the CID will be able to sell future bonds without a vote of the property owners. And the use of these bond revenues does not have to be within the CID!! This is a huge departure from the long established policy in Idaho that property owners get to vote on whether or not their property will be collateral for public debt.

There was another bill in the 2008 session that allows for financing of community infrastructure that was more worthy of support, that being HB 655. HB 655 would finance community infrastructure with newly developed sales tax revenue sources from new commercial development. The funds could be spent on infrastructure improvements some distance from the commercial establishment generating the sales tax. HB 655 pay-as-you-go scheme accomplishes the same result as HB 680 without using debt. I supported HB 655.

What the sponsors will tell you HB 588 does is to give all Idahoans an income tax credit for the money they spend on sales tax on food.  The credit starts out at $50 and grows to $100 in 5 years.  Those who don’t make enough “income” to file an income tax return will receive their credit from the state in the form of a check that the state will mail to them assuming that the proper paperwork was submitted.

House Bill 588 – the Grocery Tax Credit Bill – was the bill I worked on the hardest in the 2008 session.  My goal was to kill it as it was and is a terrible bill.  We were successful in killing its predecessor in committee, HB 439, which was even worse.

The sponsors will tell you that the advantages of keeping the tax on food is that we get to collect “free sales tax” revenue from out of state tourists, illegal aliens and out of state business travelers.  However, the pie in the sky claims of the sponsors were never supported by any research or data.  The sponsors claims were based on “off the top of my head” assumption of a single economist.

I did the research of the expected impacts of the bill and the results were vastly different than the sponsor’s claims.  The “free money” is only half of what the bill sponsor’s claim it is.  And the sponsors never even looked at the entitlement that the bill would create for the state.

Idaho has approximately 35,000 illegal aliens. (Federation for American Immigration Reform)  Much of their income is sent back to Mexico, and what they are left with here is about $18,000 per year per household. (Pew Hispanic Center, Wash. D.C.)  According to the BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics) such a household will spend $2,476 on food a year.  With a household size of 3.2 persons, the 10,938 illegal alien households will yield $1,625,000 in sales tax revenue to the state of Idaho.

According to the IRS, many illegal aliens file for the earned income tax credit and receive checks from the federal government for about $3,200 per household.  We will have the same problem at the state level as HB 588 makes no provision as to how to police this situation.  This bill will result in the state of Idaho sending $100 per person checks to illegal aliens to reimburse them for their food sales tax expenses.

According to the Idaho Department of Commerce, Idaho has 6,830,000 business and tourist overnight stays per year.  Of these 4% stay in resorts, 12% stay in campgrounds, 40% stay with friends, and 44% stay in hotels, motels and B & B’s.  Plus there are 7.5 million out of state day visits. Based on data from consumer spending habits, these visitors will spend $106 million on grocery store food yielding sales tax to the state of Idaho of $6,362,000.

But, HB 588 created a grocery tax credit entitlement for about 205,000 Idahoans who don’t make enough “income” to file a tax return.  These Idahoan will get $100 or $120 per year check from the state to reimburse them for their food tax. (There is a lot of income tax complexity to this bill in order to figure out exactly who gets how much.)  In year 5 this will cost the state $21,000,000 per year.

The “free sales tax revenue” claim of the sponsors was in reality a government give-a-way.  House Bill 588 created an entitlement and has the state upside down on the legislation for $21 – 1.6 – 6.4 = $13 million dollars.

So the sponsor’s claims were unsubstantiated smoke and mirrors for which they did not spend even a minute trying to actually figure out.  All their time was spend on backroom deals on how they were going to get their bill heard while other alternative grocery tax relief bills were bottled up.

In 2007 I authored HB 82 which would have taken the sales tax off of food at the cash register.  There would have been no forms to fill out, nor income tax credits to claim, and no money held by the government to be doled out later.  House Bill 82 was tax simplification.  I re-introduced HB 82 in the 2008 session, but never got a hearing on the bill.

Still unaddressed by my analysis is the fact that all the states surrounding Idaho have no sales tax on food, with the exception of Utah which taxes food at 2.75%.  About 30% of the population of Idaho lives within 35 miles of a large out-of-state grocery store.  Based on conversations I have had with Idaho grocery store owners in border areas, I estimate that Idahoans buy approximately $137 million of groceries out of state each year.  Idaho is losing jobs and corporate income tax revenue because we tax our groceries.  Of the 50 states, 34 do not tax food at all.

House Bill 588 was a dumb bill.  We need to take the tax off of food at the cash register and stop trying to do social engineering with the income tax code.

Letter

May 12th, 2008

Dear fellow citizen of District 3,

Phil and Sarah
Phil and his daughter, Sarah

My name is Phil Hart and I’m running for re-election to the Idaho Legislature to once again represent your voice in Boise. Since I began pursuing this office, I’ve knocked on over two thousand doors in northern Kootenai County. But, there are many of you that I have yet to meet. That is why I’m taking this opportunity to write to you about why I’m seeking your support.

I believe in smaller government, lower taxes, and less spending. The current rule of thumb is, for every dollar government collects in taxes, it delivers about thirty cents in services. Every dollar that is extracted from you, the taxpayer, represents money that could be better spent in North Idaho to help your family and boost our local economy.

There are many issues that are important to me: educational choice and flexibility; fundamental tax reform that can shift the burden off of take-home pay and help our families find financial independence; a balanced state budget; and, like most of my constituents that I’ve talked to, I’m very concerned with the fact that our property taxes are out of control because of soaring property values. I’m also a strong advocate for business, agriculture, free enterprise, and protection of our clean air and safe living.

These important items will be my highest priorities as we return to Boise next year, if you see fit to re-elect me.

I believe that my record is consistent with how I told you I would vote when I first ran. As a committed social and fiscal conservative who believes in limiting government involvement in our lives, I’m happy with what I’ve already been able to accomplish.

Today’s Idaho Legislature has only a half dozen legislators with financial expertise and only one other civil engineer besides me. As a professional civil engineer who also holds a Master’s Degree in Finance, I am able to offer experience in both of these areas to the Legislature.

Rep. Phil Hart

Probably what I’m proudest of so far is my work on the House Transportation Committee. In my first session, special interests tried to ram through a GARVEE road bill that was loaded with pork. Several projects in the bill definitely weren’t needed. I was able to work with like-minded colleagues on the committee to stop that. Now all of the GARVEE projects have to go through the same approval process as any other road project. In other words, they must now be selected on their merits. Because of the changes we made, the first year of GARVEE appropriated funds sends 40% of those monies to North Idaho.

In a recent public forum, my opponent falsely claimed that I “killed” the GARVEE bill. But that just isn’t true. We did the right thing for the entire state and saved well over a half billion dollars when we held the GARVEE bill in committee and amended it. Now, because we had the courage to resist pressure from special interests, those substantial resources are going to be spent where they are really needed, particularly here in North Idaho.

Because I’m an engineer, I’ve also found myself heavily involved in the pending Statehouse renovation and addition. As I studied the various proposals for the project, I became concerned that not enough thought was going into the planning process in terms of the Legislature’s likely needs for the next fifty years.

So I formed an ad hoc committee to address these issues, and have devoted my own time and resources to digging into the details of our Capitol Building. What we do with the Statehouse is permanent, and is something our kids and grandkids are going to be living with for a very long time.

I also authored House Bill 732, which limits how much government can take when a home or real property is seized and auctioned to pay back property taxes. Today, the county keeps 100% of the proceeds, regardless of how much is actually owed. There is no reason that government should be allowed to take the taxpayer’s entire equity. All that should be owed are the taxes and related expenses. People who hit a financial rough spot in their lives need to be protected from government making the situation even worse by taking what government isn’t entitled to.

I was gratified to be able to support the Idaho marriage amendment. My commitment to pro-family, pro-life issues is one of the things that got me involved in running for office in the first place. I also supported the slate of gun rights bills that we saw this past session. I was honored that Idahoans for Tax Reform, a public-policy advocacy group that I admire, ranked me as “the 6th most influential conservative in Idaho” for 2006.

Meadow at Runnymede
Magna Carta Monument

Over the entire course of human history, any system by which a People have the chance to choose their leaders through a democratic process is a rarity. But, this great blessing didn’t come easily. It was a process that was born out of conflict — conflict between the People and their governments.

The first great legal document in the history of the English-speaking world was the Magna Carta, “signed on the Meadow of Runnymede between Windsor and Staines,” just outside London, in the year 1215.

When I wrote my book Constitutional Income a number of years ago, I wanted to be thorough in my understanding of the timeless battle for the rights of the People, so I visited that meadow. I saw the very spot where this great founding document of liberty was signed almost 800 years ago as England prepared for civil war. King John had been abusing the laws that allowed him to tax the English people, and the barons had had enough. And so, in an act of bravery that is still paying dividends for the people of the world today, they forced the reluctant king, by threat of war, to affix his signature to that document.

Phil discussing his book on Boise TV - KBCI Channel 2
Phil discussing his book on
Boise TV – KBCI Channel 2

A very wise man once said, “Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.” In my civic life, I have taken that admonition seriously. Almost every great legal document that we cherish today was born out of war and conflict. These include the Declaration of Independence and our Constitution.

In that spirit and with that motivation, I have worked to advance the tenets of those inspired documents in my battle over the issue of taxation.

In my desire to resolve the constitutional underpinnings of the income tax, I engaged in several thousand hours of historical study, so that I could answer the question Supreme Court Justice John H. Clarke asked in 1921 concerning “the meaning of the term [income tax] which must have been in the minds of the people when they ratified the Sixteenth Amendment.” 255 U.S. 509, 519 (1921)

This journey took me on many visits to the Library of Congress and the United States Supreme Court Law Library. I also visited numerous law libraries and public libraries throughout the country. All of my efforts were focused on answering that one question, “What does the word ‘income’ mean as it is used in the Constitution?”

No one had ever tried to answer that particular question before, it seemed. My friend, the distinguished Dr. Herb Titus, a Harvard Law School graduate and law school dean, encouraged me to do the work and later, after my book was written, had me on his radio show That’s the Law.

Phil Hart, Tax Policy Speech, 7-19-04<br>National Press Club, Washington, D.C.
Phil Hart, Tax Policy Speech, 7-19-04
National Press Club, Washington, D.C.

Although all the research and analysis was difficult, my year of formal legal training helped me immensely. One of my most striking discoveries was that in the first decade of the twentieth century, as the passage of a constitutional amendment to allow an income tax was being debated, ninety percent of the American people supported it. How could this be? Back then, it was the People’s intent that the income tax be much more narrowly defined than it is today.

By their very nature, governments everywhere are like weeds. They gradually take over and choke out everything else in the garden, unless someone cuts them back. In my advocacy for fundamental tax reform, I have worked hard to stop the ninety-year creep of the scope and complexity of the income tax, at great personal cost and at considerable risk to my own reputation and livelihood.

Your decision two years ago to elect me to represent you in the Idaho Legislature has given me the opportunity to carry on this fight in a new and very practical way, for which I am grateful. I want my daughter and my grandkids to freely enjoy the fruits of their labors in an even greater measure than do today. When the tax code is radically simplified, both at the state and national levels, all of us will benefit immeasurably.

Coeur d'Alene Press, Dec. 11, 1997:  Phil Hart testifies during a congressional hearing on the IRS at City Hall
Coeur d’Alene Press, Dec. 11, 1997:
Phil Hart testifies during a congressional
hearing on the IRS at City Hall

I foresee a day when we have a tax system in which businesses won’t be forced to seek tax havens overseas, our families will only need one bread winner, and churches will not be muzzled by the need to keep their “tax exempt” status.

Change will come, but it will take more work and more time.

Serving in the Idaho House of Representatives is not always easy, and some of the sacrifices, particularly of time, are fairly substantial. But, I do feel a calling to this important work, and think I’ve found a balance between working for you in Boise and keeping my engineering firm in Hayden on an even keel. I have the energy and the stamina to work on your behalf for two more years.

I noticed when I visited the Meadow at Runnymede that the only monument there was built and paid for by Americans. After some thought, I decided that this was not surprising. We have always been the ones who took Edmund Burke’s powerful words to heart, and put them into action: “All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.” If we don’t have good men willing to step up to the plate and “do something” the cause of our founding fathers is lost.

I believe in fighting for the principles that built this country. That’s why I’m seeking your support once again in the GOP primary on May 23rd.

Please feel free to contact me personally if you have any questions or comments.

Sincerely,

Phil Hart

Representative Phil Hart
Idaho House District 3