The supposedly non-partisan Tax Foundation put out a special report ranking the 50 states in terms of the burden of state and local taxes on taxpayers and guess who's Number One.
Us.
Not Tax-achusetts, Not Taxas. Not Ca-ching-alifornia. Not New (Yikes!) York.
For the second year in a row, the state/local tax burden carried by Vermonters was heavier than any other state -- 14.1 percent of our income went into state and local coffers, nearly 3 percentage points above the 11.0 percent average nationally.
There will be those who say the study fails to recognize that more than $100 million of tax revenue collected in the name of the Act 60 school funding reform law is recycled back to a majority of our taxpayers, this year via a credit against their property taxes.
But then why is it that only since 2002 has the state's ranking been steadily climbing the charts, from 7th in country to 6th, then 3rd, then 2nd and last year, 1st. Curiously this march toward ignominy has occurred entirely on Gov. Jim Douglas' watch. The last three years Howard Dean was governor, the ranking sat in the 7th position and didn't move.
Republicans will argue that the increasing burden took place as Democrats consolidated their control of the House and Senate, but hey, the buck stops with the guv. He's still the guy who has the last word on what becomes law and what doesn't.
What do you think? What's it like to know Vermont leads the country in a category that we are confident won't be featured in the state's promotional literature?
-- Sam Hemingway