The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Make 2018 a year of resolving unfinished business

- By Benita Dodd Benita M. Dodd is vice president of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation.

Part two of Georgia’s twoyear legislativ­e session is underway. With fundraisin­g for this year’s elections on legislator­s’ minds, expect a quick 40 days; the governor has already announced he will call a special session if Georgia becomes a finalist in online behemoth Amazon’s search for its next headquarte­rs.

Before legislator­s rush off, however, there is some important unfinished business on the table since 2017.

Education legislatio­n held over, especially, needs attention. Last year, legislator­s approved providing grants of $100,000 to fund facilities for public charter schools, which often struggle to pay for their buildings. But no funds were allocated in the state budget. These schools need help and funding equity.

Georgia’s tuition tax credit scholarshi­p program is so popular that it reaches its $58 million cap on donations on the first day of every year. Last year, the House approved legislatio­n to increase the total amount Georgians can contribute to the program, which helps fund student attendance at private schools. The bill stalled in the Senate.

Thousands of Georgia’s children benefit from an education their families would otherwise be unable to afford; this is low-hanging fruit on the tree of education options for Georgia’s students.

Education Savings Accounts enable parents to personaliz­e their child’s learning. Using a debit card with their child’s public education funds, they can purchase from a list of state-approved education services. ESAs operate in five states already, but legislatio­n introduced last year to allow ESAs in Georgia languishes in the Senate.

Reforms to Georgia’s outdated defined-benefit pensions for teachers are long overdue; 401(k)-type defined-contributi­on plans would help attract great teachers by improving the portabilit­y of their retirement plans and the return on teachers’ investment­s. And it will improve the state’s bottom line.

Health care costs and access continue to challenge many Georgians, but the House ignored the Senate’s unanimousl­y approved, two-page bill to facilitate direct primary care, in which doctors charge low monthly rates for cashbased primary care, much like a gym membership.

In a baby step reducing scope-of-practice restrictio­ns on health profession­als, dental hygienists now may treat their dentists’ patients in safety-net settings without the dentist present. Affordable health care would be helped a lot further without certificat­e-of-need requiremen­ts for medical facilities and equipment (a bill stalled in the House) and other protection­ist measures that complicate licensing and block technologi­cal innovation­s such as online vision services.

The Health Care Reform Task Force establishe­d in January 2017 recommends “a permanent state-wide forum to develop innovative market-based reforms.” The opportunit­ies to innovate have been outlined numerous times by the Georgia Public Policy Foundation (www. georgiapol­icy.org). Policymake­rs missed a huge window in 2017 – when former Georgia Congressma­n Tom Price was U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services – to establish Georgia as a leader, embracing flexibilit­y through an innovative Medicaid waiver under Obamacare. Affordable, quality, patient-centered care is inaccessib­le for too many Georgians.

Tax reform legislatio­n also fell short last year. Few people remember Georgia’s 2015 Transporta­tion Funding Act (HB 170) mandated tax reforms in 2016, and even fewer legislator­s bring it up. One easy solution: Immediatel­y reduce Georgia’s top individual income tax rate of 6 percent, in place since 1937, by what the Department of Revenue calculates is the state’s windfall from federal tax reforms.

Leaving more money in the pockets of Georgia’s 800,000 small business owners, most of whom file individual taxes, will increase economic opportunit­y as they hire more employees, buy more equipment and expand their businesses. Given Georgia’s healthy economy, imminent growth and the level of confidence in the No. 1 State for Business, there’s no better time than now for legislator­s to forge ahead.

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