American Legion hosts candidate forum

MILLERTON — American Legion Post 178 hosted its first candidate’s forum for this election season on Thursday, Oct. 4, with Republican David Byrne, state assemblyman candidate for the 106th District. The term is for two years. The American Legion has offered all local candidates an opportunity to present their platform to the public, and for the community to ask questions.Byrne, 32, grew up in Red Hook. He is a West Point graduate, United States Army officer, and works as a solar energy representative and real estate entrepreneur.“I am running primarily because I want to keep this area more livable for families, senior citizens and young people,” said Byrne. “I want to make it more attractive to small businessmen, women as well as farmers.”Byrne said that New York state had a net loss due to outward migration during the last census period of 1.5 million people — the highest in America. Byrne said that elected officials in Albany don’t like to mention this, but he sees it as a significant problem, which is why he is running. Attendees of the forum asked Byrne questions about high taxes in the state. “We have the highest local taxes as a percentage of income in America,” said Byrne. “I just ran the numbers for Dutchess County and it was ranked 42nd of 3,033 counties in America in terms of local taxes as a percentage of income. That puts us in the top 0.3 percent. It’s hard for people to understand , but people feel pressure as homeowners.”Byrne discussed what he called the unfairness of the MTA payroll tax, which many at the forum called a burden. Byrne said the MTA tax is unfair because it is structured so it rests on the shoulders of the people upstate, who pay for downstate expenses. Although a majority of the payroll tax has been repealed it is still on the books, affecting some hospitals and county government in Dutchess County, according to Byrne.Other taxes Byrne addressed include state income tax, sales tax, federal income tax, social security and Medicaid/Medicare.“In total each one of you is paying about 50 to 60 percent when you total up all of these various taxes,” said Byrne. “That’s significant because a lot of people don’t understand the impact of that, and that’s the pressure they feel and why they are moving away.”Byrne also discussed concerns raised about school district budgets. He said that increased revenue isn’t going to improve the situation for school districts struggling under the 2 percent tax cap and the unfunded mandates being pushed by the state.“I could show you a list of the 151 mandates that are imposed on school districts; 80 percent are unfunded mandates pushed by the state,” said Byrne. “We are asking the schools to be more efficient with taxpayer dollars, but the real question is can we alleviate some of the mandates the state has been pushing down without paying for it? Unfunded mandates and the relief of unfunded mandates are critical in reducing our taxes, our spending and state debt.”There were about 20 people from the community as well as members of the American Legion in attendance at the forum. The evening sparked lively discussions as local residents voiced their questions, concerns and fears about living in the region.Post Historian Sean Klay expressed why candidate forums in the local community are so valuable. “One of the concerns that the American Legion has nationally speaking is that overall the American voter’s participation is very low compared to other Western democracies. By promoting events like this, hopefully we are engaging or getting the voters to engage in the election process, so they exercise their right to vote.”Byrne will face Democrat Didi Barrett for the 106th Distict seat on Tuesday, Nov. 6.

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