DENVER A Democratic state senators campaign to raise taxes for schools poses vexing questions for people in his own party who want better funded state services for everyone, not just students.
Sen. Rollie Heaths Proposition 103 would raise sales and income taxes the next five years, collecting an estimated $3 billion that would be earmarked for schools and colleges.
Heath has the support of teachers unions and progressive groups, but he at first had to overcome worries that he would step on the toes of people who want to ask the voters for bigger reforms.
For a couple of years, politicians, business leaders and nonprofit activists have been quietly talking about the big fix some sort of constitutional change or tax change to pull the state out of the cycle of perpetual budget cuts.
Ideas include a repeal or rewrite of constitutional amendments that mandate spending on schools and low property taxes, as well as the Taxpayers Bill of Rights cap on government spending.
Others have proposed a permanent tax increase, and Heath had to convince liberal groups this spring to abandon their drive for a long-lasting tax increase in favor of his five-year plan.
Hes impatient to do something now for schools and colleges, which have seen large cuts the past three years.
Do we just sit here and twiddle our thumbs while we figure out the big fix? Heath said.
Heath doesnt think Prop 103 is a long-term solution for Colorado, but each child gets only one chance at each grade in school.
To make the kids wait this out until the adults figure it out is not an option for me, Heath said.
He isnt getting help from Gov. John Hickenlooper, a fellow Democrat.
Hickenloopers predecessor, Gov. Bill Ritter, took pride in cobbling together budgets that shielded schools from cuts to the largest extent possible, mostly by relying on temporary funding like the federal stimulus bill.
Hickenlooper, in contrast, has a two-year plan to make permanent cuts in the hopes of ending the cycle of emergency budget cuts. But the size of education cuts he proposed last spring shocked many people in his own party, and he has signaled that more large school cuts are on the way next year.
Hickenlooper has not talked about the big fix, but he hinted at a long-term strategy in an interview last week.
This first year, we were really focused on trying to make sure we had a way of trying to restore the publics faith that there isnt waste, that were using every dollar wisely, Hickenlooper said. If youre a business, you cant ask your customers for more money if they dont already trust that youre giving them value right now.
Although he is not supporting Proposition 103, hes not actively stumping against it, either.
Were not campaigning for 103. I made a commitment I wouldnt support any new taxes the first year, Hickenlooper said.
Republicans have prodded Hickenlooper to explicitly campaign against the initiative.
Hickenloopers budget proposal is due to the Legislature the first week of November. His staff is preparing just one budget, with no backup plan in case Prop 103 passes.
If it does, the windfall would help schools, but it might cause headaches elsewhere in the budget. The proposition forbids the state from cutting schools and colleges below their current funding levels and requires the new tax money to also go to schools.
Its possible that the provisions could require deeper cuts in social services.
Its something weve talked about. Next year, lets say were even worse off and we have to cut more, that money would have to come from somewhere else, said Sen. Mary Hodge, D-Brighton, chairwoman of the Joint Budget Committee.
Hodge supports Prop 103. Shes optimistic that state finances will not take a turn for the worse, and she thinks the best plan is to help schools now and figure out the rest of the budget when the JBC starts to meet next month.
But the JBCs vice-chairwoman, Rep. Cheri Gerou, said the proposition would make it harder to write a budget by inserting another spending requirement into state law.
Rollie Heath and several other people have said they dont like to have their hands tied, and that in effect is what this measure is doing, said Gerou, R-Evergreen.
Ballots for the mostly mail election will go out this week.
Reach Joe Hanel at joeh@cortezjournal.com.