Ralston is right on
May 20th, 2007 . by Mark Warden
Here is my letter to the editor sent to the Las Vegas Sun newspaper on in response to Jon Ralston’s editorial of May 06, 2007.
Dear Editor,
In Sunday’s editorial by Jon Ralston, he accurately reflects many policy-watchers’ sense of “deja vu” in this year’s legislative session. To many, it seems that the Gang of 63 is constantly whining that they need more money, and it’s always for nice-sounding, nebulous expenses like “better” education or transportation or to help the mentally ill.
The problem is that legislators, and the special interests that author many of their bills, rarely talk about accountability in the agencies they want to throw money at, or point to less-important programs that should be cut, minimized, or de-funded.
Independent voters and citizens who want lower taxes and limited government, who represent a significant base in Nevada, seem to have been forgotten by our elected officials.
Ralston correctly notes that “Republicans . . . bleat about cutting spending and waste and then can’t provide a list longer than a half-page.” How (sadly) true that is! So I’ve provided real ammo for their blank-shooting rhetoric with a comprehensive offering of suggested cuts to our bloated state spending in www.BudgetWatchNevda.com. With a non-partisan analysis of common-sense approaches to helping government be more efficient, more constitutionally true, and more lean, the site provides over $500,000,000 (yes, half a billion dollars) in possible spending cuts that would improve our economy and prioritize taxpayer dollars where they are truly needed.
I’ll have to agree with Chancellor Jim Rogers’ assertion that “sooner or later, the free ride is over.” That could not be more applicable than to his own NSHE (Nevada System of Higher Education), where the customers (students) only pay 15% of the total cost of our universities and colleges. We taxpayers pick up 85% of the tab. This kind of socialistic subsidy makes us all look like suckers, especially when large numbers of entering freshmen, even Millennium Scholars, require remedial math and English classes.
So let’s stop “enabling what happens . . . in far away Carson City” and ask our elected officials to make the tough decisions, and exercise more fiscal and moral responsibility. Let college students pay a little more of their own way, end massive subsidies to colleges and businesses, scrap the inflationary, union-rigged “prevailing wage” construction contracts, and go build some roads!
Mark Warden
Las Vegas

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