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Newspaper Archive of
Dayton Tribune
Dayton, Oregon
January 14, 1982     Dayton Tribune
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January 14, 1982
 
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PAGE 2-- THE DAYTON TRIBUNE -- DAYTON, OREGON -- THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1982 THE DAYTON TRIBUNE POST OFFICE BOX 68 TELEPHONE [503] 864-2310 Published Every Thursday It Dayton, Oregon An Independent Newspaper Establishe0 in 1913 George Meitzen, Publisher Second Class Postage Paid at Dayton. Oregon 97114 SUBSCRIPTION RATE -- IN ADVANCE In Oregon, 1 Year ............................ $3.50 Outside Oregon, U.S., 1 Year ..................... $4.00 Outside U.S.. 1 Year ............................. $4.75 Send Payment to Dayton Tribune, Box 68, Dayton, Ore. 97114 ,'v~l~/~b ~ i~ MEMBER ~llOregon i MA ~ NA L l|ill Newspaper I VE N P~PER ~-~unO~ll 1).4 YTON HERALD... [Continued from page one] DIED On Monday evening, Jan. 16, 1893, at his home near McMinnville, James S. Hibbs, aged 65 years, At the residence of his mother Mrs. Isabella Carter, in Dayton, Jan. 8th, 1893, at 9:15 o'clock a.m,, of membraneous croup, Jamie Carter, aged 10 years, 4 months and six days. A.M. PEERY, Dealer Real Estate and Collector Dayton, Ore. J. H. FLOWER Attorney at Law --and-- Notary Public Practices in State and Federal court WM. M. BAMSEY Attorney and Counsellor at Law A general Law business transacted Rooms 6 and 7, Union Block, McMinnville J.E. MAGERS Attorney at Law McMinnville, Ore. A. P. MORSE House, sign and carriage painting Paper hanging and decorating Hard Oil Finish a specialty. All work warranted. L. BRADLEY The Dayton artist Does first class work at the lowest living prices. Crayons in the best style of the art. A.G. COX Undertaker Newberg, Oregon ACCOUNTING Auditing and Income Tax Services JIM D. CRAWFORD, C.P.A. FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 472-3058 or 864-2131 941 N. Adams McMinnville SALEM SCENE. . . By Jack Zimmerman NEXT SPECIAL SESSION: LONG OR SHORT OF IT Oregon's record-setting 61 st Legislative Assembly appears likely to establish yet another new mark. It adjourned its regular biennial session last Aug. 2 after posting new records for length and cost of regular sessions. And it met again for roughly eight hours Oct. 24 to conduct the shortest special session on the books. Those same lawmakers come together in Salem again beginning Monday, Jan. 18, for what some observers believe may become the longest special session ever recorded. On the surface at least, forces dictating a lengthy meeting certainly outweigh circumstances that would produce a brief gathering. This second special session of the current Assembly (matching the frequency record set by the 37th Assembly back in 1933) was forcast even before the regular session adjourned. And everyone knows the main reason; the economy stinks and the budget is out of whack. The economy is so bad in fact, estimated tax revenues to pay for expenditures granted during the regular session are about $240 million short. The state constitution requires that revenue and spending must• match, so Gov. Vic Atiyeh has called on the Legislature to make necessary adjustments. All by itself, this adjustment process could take longer than the 23 days consumed by the longest special session in 1967. The economy that generates tax revenue has been generating less than anticipated for many months ~ so long that state spending repeatedly has been curtailed by both the Governor and Legis- lature. Carving another $240 million from already sparse-by-comparison expenditure cuts deeply into many services long enjoyed by Oregonians during balmier days. Gov. Atiyeh last week announced his plan to balance the budget. In essence he is asking lawmakers to accept a reduction in basic school support of $16.3 million produced by enrollment declines, cuts of $28.1 million and $11 million for higher education and Community Colleges, respectively, another cut of $68 million from Human Resources, $10 million from the Emergency Fund and $13.6 million from other state agencies. On the revenue side he proposes a one-shot speed-up of payment by employers of employe withholding taxes that would generate $73.3 million this biennium. He would boost beer and wine taxes to bring in $3.6 million, anticipates another $17.4 million from more aggressive collections of delinquent taxes and pick up the balance of some $98.5 million through adjustments of liquor inventory, operating expenses and the restoration fund. He advocates some.$3.7 million in additional spend- ing to collect those delinquent taxes, bolster economic development and restore some positions on the de- pleted State Police force. Altogether, the Atiyeh package would produce $242 million with an ending balance of $31.4 million. Reaction to his proposal has been swift. Minority Republicans are only lukewarm. Majority Democrats and most organized labor- along with Higher Education and Human Resource advocates ~ object strenuously. Although far from unified, opponents generally advocate additional revenue increases in place of Atiyeh's spending cuts. Most prominent are a personal income tax surcharge and an increase in corporate income taxes. A 3% general sales tax has been mentioned, also. Still another idea would involve overhaul of the state's current massive property tax relief program -- representing some $189 million earmarked for the 6 pack, 12-oz. A&W Root Beer FRESH -- HOT POPCORN .... 8 FLAVORS Ice Cream Cones plus deposit ... $1.49 25c & 49c scoop dbl scp. 45c 70c PG E Pay Station • Hours: 7-11 Every Day --7-12 Friday & Saturday ,-,)=,-BILL'S MARKET-- -- i LAFAYETTE i MACY & SON Funeral Directors MACY & SON handle all details and arrangements... at a time when worrisome details can be so difficult for you. Serving since 1903 MACY & SON Fu.,,, DIRECTORS 2nd & Evans McMinnville 472-6151 National Selected Morticians Member by Invitation ,, % ,,,,. SUBSCRIBE NOW =~,oO~a,:,,~ Keep Up With What's ~,= Happening in Your Area G\,~~. NAME .......................... Mailing Address ............................... City .......................... Zip ............... Send $3.50 for a I ~;" one-year subscription to I I THE DAYTON TRIBUNE Box 68 co,~e~,x~,~ : ,~#~ Dayton, Oregon 97114 ~,v- I t ..... 7,~ balance of the biennium. Gov. Atiyeh's plan asks some $20 million of it by eliminating relief to homeowners earning more than $50,000 annually. ~ Other plans would cut relief to an even greater degree, distributing the balance to offset the need for the withholding tax speed-up, further spending cuts and other taxes. Unraveling the tan4gle of proposals and achieving a consensus in both House and Senate could take several weeks. Meanwhile, other legislation will come up and could prove time-consuming. Already anticipated is a package to revamp the Veterans' Home I,oan program, a measure to modify jurisdiction of the Energy Facility Siting Council and an Economic Recovery Program. House Judiciary and Labor Committees are expected to attempt introduction of still more bills. All the foregoing presages a lengthy meeting. Forces that could accelerate the process involve the fact three of fi~ur property tax initiative petitions have passed their ballot title test and are being circulated -- and, just plain politics. Circulation of property tax limitations could pressure lawmakers to leave the property tax relief program alone. But political considerations are likely the greatest deterrent to an extra-long special session. At least a dozen current Assembly members hope to seek higher office and want to garner good campaign materia', during the special session. Most members of the House and about half the Senate are similarly concerned about re-election. It takes money to run election campaigns and law prohibits lawmakers from soliciting campaign con- tributions when they're in session. With filing deadline tbr the primary election looming on March 9, would't you want to wind up deliberations in a hurry and raise the money necessary to win on May 187 WHO'S WHO IN OUR SHOPPING AREA 1981 IF YOU CANNOT FIND IT IN DAYTON, THESE CONVENIENT BUSINESS HOUSES WILL BE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU Shuler & Simmons Organs & Pianol 1571 N. Hwy 99W McMinnville Town Shopping Center 472-66~ Flowers Phone 472-2123 Flowers With Sentiment 103 South Baker McMtnnville, Oregon NORTH VALLEY DENTURE CENTER Denture Savings OoMu~o Ropeln R~dlglol Fu~ Set $1Sm I,~l.~ IJ~.m EI¢I~ SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY SACK 613 E. First Newbef9 538-9330 DAYTON TRIBUNE ERICKSON'S AUTO PARTS Cars -- Trucks -- Tractors Repairs -- Welding -- Steam Cleaning union SERVICE STATION Men-Sat., 8 am-6 pm LAFAYETTE -- 864-2241 KROHN'S Appliance Center WASHERS ~ DRYERS -- FREEZERS REFRIGERATORS -- DISHWASHERS "'All tt~e brands that you know and trust"!!t SALES SERVICE 315 E. 1st, Newberg 538-3613 s~