BRAD CAIN
BRAD CAIN of the Associated Press:
Anti-tax activists, business groups and others are ready to
mount a campaign to force a statewide vote on the $733 million tax
package. The Democratic-led Legislature, with Kulongoski's backing,
passed the tax hikes to protect schools and other state services
from cuts.
Oregon GOP Chairman Bob Tiernan said Kulongoski is putting
off signing the bills so opponents have less time to gather
petition signatures needed to put the tax hikes on a January
ballot.
"To manipulate the system and delay this process would rob
the people of Oregon of their opportunity to participate in the
process," Tiernan said.
But a Kulongoski spokeswoman said the tax measures are among
300 bills that still need legal review before the governor can act
on them.
"We take the time to review every bill that comes to the
governor's desk. We're not playing games here," Jillian Schoene
said Thursday.
No signature gathering can begin until Kulongoski signs the
measures. By law, the governor has until Aug. 7 to act on bills
passed by the 2009 Legislature, which adjourned Monday.
The measures raising income taxes on corporations and
upper-income Oregonians will take effect 90 days after the
Legislature's adjournment, unless petitions with 55,179 signatures
are filed with the state by Sept. 25 to force a statewide election.
If Kulongoski were to wait until Aug. 7, the last possible
day, to sign the bills, opponents would have fewer than 50 days to
round up those signatures.
Tiernan, the state GOP chief, said Kulongoski owes it to
Oregonians to sign the tax increases immediately and not "burn up
valuable time in an effort to disadvantage citizen efforts to refer
the taxes to voters."
However, a leading advocate of the tax increases said there's
no reason for Kulongoski to go out of his way to make the
opponents' job easier by immediately signing the bills.
Charles Sheketoff of the Oregon Center for Public Policy said
Kulongoski has already announced he's going to campaign vigorously
for the tax package, and that "it's not in his interest to give
opponents more time" to try to block it.
"The governor has a whole bunch of bills he has to review,"
Sheketoff said. "I don't know why he should feel obligated to
accommodate those who are going to fight this."
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