Funding Swaps
Instead of assuming $500 million in local school transportation costs, as Gov. Mitch Daniels has proposed, the Senate plan unveiled Tuesday would have the state spend $386.4 million a year on the following categories. Here's the breakdown:
$123.6 million in local school pension debt
$90 million in local pensions for police and firefighters hired prior to 1977
$50 million to offset budget cuts schools face under proposed tax caps
$22.8 million in juvenile incarceration costs now covered by counties
$100 million for additional tax credits to homeowners
Senate, Daniels' plans compared
How the Senate tax relief blueprint advanced Tuesday squares up with the plan Gov. Mitch Daniels released last fall.
Impact
Daniels: 33 percent cut in homeowner property taxes.
Senate: Cut homeowner taxes by at least a third, or perhaps in half if counties OK income taxes.
Tax Hikes
Daniels: Penny state sale tax hike, from 6 percent to 7 percent.
Senate: Same.
Income
Daniels: County option taxes available as "last resort."
Senate: Counties encouraged to adopt 0.5 percent income tax for property tax relief. If they do, they could impose 0.25 percent income tax to fund public safety -- police, fire, etc.
Circuit Breaker
Daniels: Constitutionally cap tax bills at 1 percent of assessed value for homeowners, 2 percent for rental properties and 3 percent for businesses, beginning in 2009.
Senate: Phase in the cap over two years. The circuit breaker would be 1.5 percent next year for homeowners, 2.5 percent for landlords and 3 percent for businesses. Caps would go to 1, 2 and 3 percent in 2010.
Assessment
Daniels: Get rid of all 1,100 elected assessors -- have each county appoint one assessor.
Senate: Keep the 92 county assessors and 44 local assessors in townships that handle more than 15,000 parcels.
Construction
Daniels: Let voters decide via referendum whether costly school and local government projects go forward.
Lawmakers: The same, but referendum-approved projects would not be subject to tax caps.
Cost Shifts
Daniels: Have state government assume $3 billion in child welfare and school operating costs.
Senate : Have state pick up about $2.5 billion in school and welfare expense. But instead of assuming $500 million in school transportation costs, state would take on $340 million in juvenile incarceration costs, teacher pension bonds and municipal police and fire pensions for employees hired before 1977.
SPENDING CONTROLS
Daniels: Limit local government spending increases to annual growth in personal income (2.9% in Lake, 4.6% in Porter).
Senate: No hard spending caps, but repeal 18 property tax levy appeals local government now use to boost spending, including the annexation appeal Valparaiso used last year.
SCHOOLS
Daniels: Statewide, schools would lose about $170 million a year to his tax caps.
Senate: State would spend $50 million a year to offset school cuts caused by phased-in caps.