Thursday, July 26, 2007

Luxury Tax Response from Gov.Granholm


If you remember a little while back(Tuesday June 26th) I sent an e-mail to Gov.Granholm regarding a Luxury Tax on sports and entertainment tickets, and below is the response I was sent from her office. Go to the bottom of the response for more comments.



Dear Mr. S(aka- Pvt. Gump):

Thank you for contacting Governor Granholm’s office. Your email in opposition to increased taxes on tickets to sporting events and other entertainment venues has been received and read. The following is the Governor’s response on the issue:



“To resolve the unprecedented fiscal crisis facing our state I have been working to enact the plan that I introduced in my State of the State address and in the budget I submitted to the Legislature. It is based on a balanced approach that combines additional cuts in government spending, with reforms that reduces the cost of government and new revenues. Through this approach, we could invest in the things we need to bring jobs to our state and avoid the deep cuts to education, health care and public safety that would jeopardize any chance we have for economic recovery.



Since offering this plan, I have eliminated the approximately $1 billion shortfall in our current budget, which resulted in cuts to every department of state government. In addition, I was able to reach agreement with the Legislature to replace our Single Business Tax when it expires at the end of the year. This prevents adding $2 billion to our $1.8 billion deficit in the Fiscal Year 2008 budget and gives Michigan a competitive business tax that will make it easier to keep existing jobs here and attract new investment and jobs to our state.



As these most recent spending cuts and the $4 billion in deficits I resolved in my first term indicate, I am willing to make tough choices to balance the budget. However, I reject a “cuts alone” solution to the deficit because it would result in severe funding reductions to schools, health care and our police and fire departments. Without new revenue and cost cutting reforms, we would give up any hope of economic recovery for our state.



The Legislature is entertaining numerous proposals about the best way to generate revenue, including a tax on high-end discretionary services. While I believe that new revenues must be part of the overall solution to our budget deficit, I cannot predict with any certainty which of these many proposals for new revenue will become legislation that reaches my desk. I will keep your views in mind as negotiations over the Fiscal Year 08 budget go forward.”


Again, thank you for your correspondence to the Governor’s office.


L. S., Assistant to T. G.
Constituent Services Division
Office of Governor Jennifer M. Granholm


Did the Governors office just tell me to F-off, because it just sounded like it!? You will keep my opinions in mind, sure you will.

Where the state gets the money is important and a concern, but my point was and still is "Do not tax our free time recreational outlets." Hell, we have to work more hours or more jobs just to provide for our families, which means less time with them anyway so dumping a state tax on top of that is an insult to an already injured situation. This is the same old issue of an elected official telling the general public to get bent and deal with it. Its sad that we have to put up with this low level Dictatorship type governing.

So in closing I want to say sorry to local sports, I can not support you anymore due to being taxed to death by my State Government and basic lack of fiscal responsibility.

If the above is the best our State can do maybe we need to look for outside help.

1 comment:

Lt. Dan BeauPeep said...

Sadly, Michigan lawmakers are not in-tune with their constituents as evident by the Governor's response. There is an arrogance in the Lansing machine that infuriates me. Granholm said we'd be "blown" away...some of us knew she didn't mean it in a good way which she's proven time and again. A tax on ticket purchases for sporting events is wrong in so many ways. It's just more bureaucracy and government poking their noses into things regular people like to do. There is also the issue of the outrageous cost of tickets to sporting events. The stadium and/or Team owners and players need to work together to reduce ticket prices. Taking your family to a game should be affordably priced. Instead of taxing tickets, enact government wide paycuts, reduce expense accounts, etc., - Same for players and owners. Player's salaries and owner profits are obscene. It's way past time for the Regular Guy (you know who you are...you actually reach into your own pocket and bank account to purchase tickets and libations at the game-you don't get comp'd or have a government or corporate expense account that you can write off entertainment) to get a break. Reduced ticket prices and NO TAX on sporting tickets would be a nice start.