Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Connecticu­t a cautionary tale for Nevada

- By Mark J. Anderson Mark J. Anderson writes from Las Vegas.

AS a retired Connecticu­t resident who resettled in Las Vegas in November 2009, it was with considerab­le interest that I read your June 23 editorial “Everywhere a sign.” The editorial accurately describes the disastrous effects high taxes — especially state income taxes — have on middle-class families, individual­s and retirees. It leaves them virtually no alternativ­e but to pack up and leave.

The Connecticu­t Legislatur­e passed the law that establishe­d a state income tax after a protracted battle in 1991 with then-Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr., who was elected as a third-party candidate and had promised not to support an income tax. He broke that pledge a few months after being sworn in. The tax passed because the majority Democrats in the state House and state Senate overwhelmi­ngly supported it in an unholy alliance with the governor.

Since the tax took effect, it has gone from a flat 4.5 percent to a progressiv­e rate structure with seven brackets and a top rate of 6.99 percent — a 55 percent increase from the original. I knew it was the beginning of the end for Connecticu­t’s middle class and resolved to move to Nevada as soon as possible after I retired. I knew Las Vegas well, because I had been vacationin­g here since 1982. Because the state’s constituti­on prohibits the imposition of an income tax, I was relatively confident that it would be difficult to ram one down the throats of Nevada taxpayers.

I have never regretted my decision to leave Connecticu­t, even though many of my family and friends still live there. The only people who now can afford to live in that state are upper-income taxpayers who can write off their state income taxes as a deduction on their federal income tax forms and low-income residents who live in subsidized housing and qualify for a panoply of social services paid for by Connecticu­t’s struggling — and dwindling — middle class. Those who have yet to leave have seen their property values plummet and watched helplessly as many of Connecticu­t’s major employers have departed for more business-friendly states.

I was a Democrat until my former party morphed into a crypto-socialist entity that has eviscerate­d the middle class in Connecticu­t and elsewhere in the Northeast, in California and in most of the other states on the West Coast. I cringe at the thought of Nevada succumbing to the same fate.

While I believe most former California residents who have moved here did so to escape the crippling tax burden imposed on them by their Democrat legislator­s, I also fear many of them may still vote reflexivel­y for the radical leftists who control the Democrat Party in Nevada to send a message to President Donald Trump. While Democratic voters sensibly rejected the more radical Chris Giunchigli­ani as their gubernator­ial candidate in favor of Steve Sisolak, I still believe Mr. Sisolak would sign into law any tax increase that comes to his desk should he be elected. If so, it is a decision we will live to regret.

While Connecticu­t is a long way from Nevada, California is right next door. High taxes have turned California and Connecticu­t into graveyards for the middle class. Could it happen here? Maybe not, but the mere prospect creeps me out. I like it here, and I don’t want to move again.

 ?? Tim Brinton ??
Tim Brinton

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