An alert reader (hat tip to Live Free Colorado) brought the Colorado Springs Gazette editorial criticizing the tax and “fee” ‘bait and switch’ tactics employed by the current administration - thanks to the Mullarkey Majority’s unconstitutional ruling last November - to my attention this morning.

The Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights clearly says that voters have to approve any new tax in Colorado. Many jurisdictions, including the state and Colorado Springs, have danced around this requirement by instituting fees to cover costs that should rightly be funded with taxes. This allows those governments to get what they want - and in all fairness sometimes what they need to serve the public - without the bother of asking permission. The Colorado Supreme Court has been complicit in allowing this, ruling many times that these fees aren’t really stealth taxes. That fact has unfortunately emboldened new abuses of fees, and the latest example is Gov. Bill Ritter’s August raid of the state’s fee-funded tire cleanup fund to help balance the budget.

The Gazette editorial is yet another example of what seems to be a groundswell of opinion critical of the Mullarkey Majority’s outrageous rulings - brought to the forefront by last week’s ruling usurping the power of the legislature to make policy on school funding that kicked off a virtual storm of commentary by some of the most prominent observers of political events in Colorado. (Mike Rosen’s Denver Post column Thursday, Mark Hillman’s excellent article WednesdayVince Carroll’s superb commentary Sunday, and - not least -  Independence Institute’s expert analyst on Education Policy (and frequent online commentator)  Ben DeGrow (who’s big - but “not as big as Rasmussen”) Taking on the Colorado Supreme Court last Sunday, too).

The Gazette editorial correctly calls Governor Ritter to account for resorting to ”the ol’ bait and switch” - moving funds collected by fees for a specific purpose (in this case, the tire waste fund) - into the general fund in order to “balance the budget”:

Any time a fee is imposed by government, the legislation setting up the fee provides for how the money is to be spent. A fee should address a specific issue to be addressed with that revenue. The tire waste fund comes from a $1.50 fee the state charges when you buy a new tire and leave the old one at the dealer. It is supposed to be used to subsidize tire recycling efforts in the state. The subsidy is needed because, according to a recent Denver Post report, the demand for recycled tires isn’t high enough to make recycling profitable, and Colorado has the largest stockpile of old tires in the nation. Ritter’s actions exacerbate the problem. Worse, though, his raid on the waste tire fund created what is essentially a new tax on tires.

The Colorado high court disagrees, saying, in essence, that as long as revenue from a fee goes into the fund for which it was intended, it’s still a fee, regardless of what it’s spent on. Additionally, the court says that because the revenue is already in the state coffers, it’s not new revenue if it is moved to the General Fund. Using the court’s rationale, the Legislature could charge a fee to, say, offset damage to state roads from large pickup trucks and SUVs. It could then raid that fund to pay for capital improvements or maintenance to public school buildings.

Any way you slice it, that’s underhanded and a breach of the public trust.

 The Mullarkey Majority’s semantic shenanigans - playing fast and loose with the letter of the law, the very Constitution they are sworn to support and uphold - have aided and abetted numerous underhanded, unconstitutional legislative sleights of hand and breaches of the public trust.

DON’T LET THEM GET AWAY WITH IT!  Exercise your rights (while you still have them) - hold the unjust justices of the Mullarkey Majority accountable to the Colorado Constitution and the rule of law.  Exercise YOUR right to vote “NO” on retaining the four unjust justices of the Mullarkey Majority (Justices Michael Bender, Alex Martinez, Nancy Rice, and Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey) who need YOUR approval to continue taking away your rights: your right to have policy decided by elected, accountable legislators (not unelected judges); your right to vote on tax increases; your right to defend your homes and business from seizure by rapacious governments; and your right to enjoy the benefits of the rule of law, not rule by activist, agenda-driven “justices.”  Support Clear The Bench Colorado with your voice (Sound Off!), your contributions, and “NO” vote on retaining these unjust justices in 2010!

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