For that matter, the Association thinks these functions are already in danger:
[Juno Beach Police Chief H.C. "Skip"] Clark said police departments across the state have already had to make budget cuts as the result of the Legislature's mandate last year that cities roll back taxes. Some departments have frozen open positions, eliminated officers at elementary schools and consolidated services.As they have throughout the fall, proponents of Amendment One are poo-pooing this idea:
"You're telling me the first thing they're going to cut is police and fire? I find that intellectually dishonest ... not being forthright with voters," said Senate Finance and Tax Chairman Mike Haridopolos, R-Indiatlantic.If faced with less revenue, Haridopolos said, city officials will have to prioritize their spending and "the basic responsibility of local government is police, fire and roads."In other words, police groups should stop worrying, because the cuts will come from other areas first. This is a dispiritingly narrow way of defending this tax cut: Haridoupolos is basically saying "why should you oppose something that doesn't hurt you?" Leaving aside the problem that police groups are saying their budgets have, in fact, been hurt already, that's not the way policy decisions should be made. It's not about whether you personally win or lose-- it's about whether the proposed change is the right thing to do.
Anyway, chalk up one more statement of opposition to the amendment...
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