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1 Ea Summer-02 EMPLOYER Summer 2002 • Vol. 2, No. 2 F i n a n c e & T a x a t i o n My Kingdom for Tax Reform by Curt Leonard plodding demeanor, provided the only true enate President John McKay (R- diligent and prudent leadership, taking the Bradenton) entered the 2002 Regular time necessary to scrutinize the proposal and SSession of the Florida Legislature with solicit public input. a mission: Enact something, anything, that gave voters the opportunity to use the state’s First, Kill All the Exemptions constitution as a cudgel to force the legisla- In January, after months of secrecy, What’s Inside ture to rewrite the sales-tax code. McKay’s plan was introduced as Senate Joint McKay and his Senate cohorts believe that Resolution 938, under the sponsorship of Sen. Common Sense: the legislature — an institution that recently Ken Pruitt (R-Port St. Lucie), the powerful Running the Clock adopted dramatic reforms in education chairman of the Senate Finance and Taxation by Jon L. Shebel governance, civil service, and tort law — is Committee. The constitutional amendment incapable of executing, all on its own, an embodied in SJR 938 reduced the sales-tax Caveat Banana orderly review of sales-tax exemptions. Sen. rate from six percent to four percent, effective by Curt Leonard McKay made it clear that, unless his quest July 1, 2004. On that date all current sales tax was successful, he was prepared to pitch exemptions, except for those on purchases of Double Trouble overboard the state budget, redistricting, the groceries, medicine, health care, and residen- by Jacquelyn Horkan Republican Party, and the political futures of tial rent, would disappear. his fellow senators and the governor. The 2003 and 2004 legislatures could Dividing the Spoils That single-mindedness worked. McKay resurrect sales-tax exemptions lost to the by Jacquelyn Horkan got legislative approval of a constitutional across-the-board repeal by a simple majority The Wrong amendment mandating a rewrite of the prior to the July 1, 2004, deadline, after which Shade of Green state’s tax code, which will appear on the passage of any exemption or rate increase by Curt Leonard November ballot. would require a three-fifths vote by both The whole tax reform debate was a study chambers. The proposal also repealed the Code Word: in contrasts, a juxtaposition utterly lost on hospital-bed tax, the intangibles tax, and the Excellence the statewide press. As McKay was ap- per-alcoholic-drink tax. The rate rollback and by Frank Brogan plauded for his diligence and prudence, the tax repeals would blow a $9.5-billion hole in Senate stood on shifting sands, adjusting its the 2004-05 budget if all of the existing Session slapdash proposal until it came up with a exemptions were left in place, so the legisla- Business Report version that could be pushed through the ture would have to let some exemptions die committee process and off the Senate floor in or pass new taxes to replace the lost revenue. AIF’s Team of the blink of an eye. Since the measure required revenue neutrality Lobbyists House Speaker Tom Feeney (R-Oviedo), a in the first fiscal year, lawmakers could kinetic powerhouse who speaks in clipped resurrect no more than $9.5-billion worth of The Business at Hand sentences, in stark contrast to McKay’s sales-tax exemptions. (Continued on page 3) A publication of ssociated Industries of Florida Service Corporation C o m m o n S e n s e Under the law passed by the legislature, claimant attorneys are supposed to be paid a percentage of the benefits they win for their client, unless some unusual circumstances merit a higher hourly fee. Under the law passed by the appeals court, claimant attorneys can effectively choose between a Running percentage or an hourly fee, whichever is higher. So attorneys play the clock, taking the unnecessary depositions, requesting treat- ment by this medical provider and that one, filing nonsensical motions and briefs and Clock claims. Churning a case is more lucrative than simply settling down and helping an injured by Jon L. Shebel, Publisher worker get the assistance he needs as here are two jarring incongruities in quickly as possible. Florida’s workers’ compensation system. Claimant lawyers argue that any reduc- T First: Independent studies have found tions in their fees would leave injured work- that Florida employers pay the highest or ers without recourse to much-needed legal second highest premiums in the nation. counsel. A cursory glance at claims files, Second: The schedule of benefits paid to however, reveals that all too often the attor- injured workers, as set out in the Florida neys are pocketing more money than their statutes, ranks among the lowest in the nation. clients, those injured workers that the system In other words, a system designed to is supposed to serve and that the attorneys EMPLOYER benefit injured workers and their employers are allegedly protecting. is failing at the task. Here’s one last statistic to ponder. Eighty Published by Since the 1970s, business people have been percent of all workplace injuries that occur Associated Industries trying to wrest fraud and excessive litigation every year require medical treatment only; of Florida Service from the workers’ compensation system. the employee loses little if any time from the Corporation to inform readers about issues Eliminating unnecessary litigation was a job. Another 15 percent involve injuries pertinent to Florida’s keystone of the latest round of major re- severe enough that the employee qualifies for business community. forms, in 1993. The task was to be accom- indemnity benefits, which help make up for © 2002. All rights plished in part by setting up an informal- reserved. the income he loses while he recovers. The dispute resolution system to help injured final five percent of the injuries are the ones PUBLISHER workers quickly settle differences with Jon L. Shebel that involve lawyers and they are the ones insurance companies over benefits without that eat up 70 percent of the benefit dollars ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Stephen B. Trickey the need for posturing by attorneys. But even paid in this state. the best intentions disappoint. As they say, you get what you pay for. This EDITOR Jacquelyn Horkan Attorney involvement in workers’ comp summer, think about spending some time claims doubled between 1994 and 1998. The with the candidates running for seats in your GRAPHIC DESIGNER J. Gregory Vowell Division of Workers’ Compensation discov- House and Senate districts. Let them know ered that claimant attorneys had wriggled that you are tired of paying for a workers’ EDITORIAL OFFICES 516 North Adams St. their way into 95 percent of the claims filed comp system that enriches attorneys at the Post Office Box 784 in the informal-dispute resolution process. expense of everyone else. ■ Tallahassee, FL Attorneys have not gone quietly into the 32302-0784 night, thanks to a perverse incentive plunked Jon L. Shebel is president and CEO of Phone: (850) 224-7173 Fax: (850) 224-6532 into the system by the First District Court of Associated Industries of Florida and affili- E-mail: [email protected] Appeals. ated companies (e-mail: [email protected]). 2 Employer Advocate • Summer 2002 F i n a n c e & T a x a t i o n (continued from page 1) With the raising of the hue and A predictable firestorm erupted from the cry, McKay and business community, led by AIF. McKay’s plan mandated a drastic and haphazard his backers tried approach to setting tax policy, taking from the to assuage their legislature its responsibility for setting poli- opponents with cies in accordance with the state’s economy, sleight of hand. government finances, and civic expectations. It would force lawmakers to let die enough tax exemptions, regardless of their merits, to fill the $9.5 billion shortfall. With the raising of the hue and cry, McKay and his backers tried to assuage their oppo- nents with sleight of hand. First, the McKay plan underwent a dramatic rewrite, dropping the repeals of the drink tax and the intan- gibles tax and reducing the sales-tax rate to 4.5 percent, instead of the original four percent. Taxes on certain tourism-related items would be subjected to the current six- percent rate. With the modifications, the new plan cut the revenue deficit to $4.5 billion. Senate leadership then rolled out SB 1106, (R-St. Petersburg), and Pruitt came up with calling it an implementing bill for the joint the brilliant idea of a good old-fashioned tax resolution. SB 1106, drafted in less than a increase. Again, with virtually no debate week’s time, was designed to protect the tax among dismayed fellow senators in the exemptions of the amendment’s noisiest Senate Appropriations Committee, a $1.1- critics. It was cold solace and an empty billion tax increase was stuck into the promise. In normal legislative circumstances Senate’s proposed budget. an implementing bill, which fills in the statutory details of a broad policy, is enacted They Protest Too Little after the adoption of a constitutional amend- As the Senate seesawed on its tax gambit, ment. The reason is simple: a sitting legisla- the House put together two committees to ture cannot bind the hands of future legisla- evaluate Florida tax policy in general and tures. The dirty work would still have to be the Senate proposals specifically. Two undertaken by those who would actually be overriding facts became evident from the in office after the amendment was passed. public and expert testimony solicited by the McKay and Pruitt muscled both bills House.
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