February 10, 2005: Headlines: COS - Tunisia: State Government: Politics: Budget: Duluth News Tribune: Gov. Jim Doyle bragged his budget would fix the state deficit without raising taxes
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February 10, 2005: Headlines: COS - Tunisia: State Government: Politics: Budget: Duluth News Tribune: Gov. Jim Doyle bragged his budget would fix the state deficit without raising taxes
Gov. Jim Doyle bragged his budget would fix the state deficit without raising taxes
Gov. Jim Doyle bragged his budget would fix the state deficit without raising taxes
Gov. Jim Doyle bragged his budget would fix the state deficit without raising taxes
Associated Press
MADISON, Wis. - Gov. Jim Doyle bragged his budget would fix the state deficit without raising taxes. Still, his proposal would charge Wisconsinites millions more in fees to visit state parks, register their vehicles and rent cars, among other things.
Doyle spokesman Dan Leistikow said Wednesday the fee increases would not be used to balance the budget. Rather, the money generated from the fees is designed for specific uses, like the proposed increase in a hunting license going toward hiring new game wardens.
But state Sen. Neal Kedzie, who chairs the Senate's Natural Resources Committee, said the fees are a tax by another name. He said the bottom line is they make life more expensive for Wisconsin families.
"To cloak a tax as a fee is disingenuous to the public," said Kedzie, R-Elkhorn. "The farther we dig into this document, the more and more of these we're going to find these hidden costs or fees."
Doyle presented his budget to the Legislature Tuesday night, advocating a series of spending cuts and accounting moves to solve the state's $1.6 billion deficit. Wisconsin faces the shortfall because expected revenues do not cover requested spending by state agencies.
His proposal would have to be approved by lawmakers before he could sign it into law.
Among the changes, Wisconsin residents would pay $25, up from $20, for an annual vehicle pass to state parks and $7, up from $5, for a daily pass. A resident deer hunting license would jump by $12 to $32, while an annual fishing license would go up $3, to $20.
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Story Source: Duluth News Tribune
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Tunisia; State Government; Politics; Budget
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