THE $5.2 BILLION HOLE
Will Pawlenty pledge keep costing Minnesota?
Gov. Tim Pawlenty, predictably, looks to cut vital programs as the only way to solve the state's $5.2 billion deficit problem. A more enlightened approach would, despite tough economic times, include growing tax revenues from those of us who can spare a dime or two as part of the mix.
But we only need to recall Pawlenty's off-the-wall rant when legislators defied him and imposed an additional 5-cent tax on a gallon of gas and his ironclad oath to not raise taxes even a nickel. Never mind that those nickels add up when we all pay. Pawlenty would rather have the higher education affordability index get even worse. Just how many more kids need to go into poverty? How much worse does our health care system have to get before this Tim one-note wakes up to the reality that Minnesotans (not his friends, however) are paying a steep price for his tax pledge?
At this time of the year when we fondly recall the happy ending to "A Christmas Carol," we can only hope that our own Ebenezer Scrooge, the fellow who lives in the governor's mansion, may find redemption.
JOSH GRUBER, St. Louis Park
•••
Regarding Dane Smith's Dec. 4 column about the shrinking of state government: Minnesota collects taxes to pay for the needs of its citizens. There is no correlation between the Price of Government (POG) index and the needs of our citizens. I want to know how our current spending compares to the last three, five or 10 years. Or how does state spending growth compare to the rate of inflation plus population growth?
Smith uses statistics like a drunk uses lamp-posts, more for support than illumination. He should rename the index to the Parasites in Government (PIG) index.
WADE YARBROUGH, APPLE VALLEY