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Corporate subsidies in Louisiana: few strings attached

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Posted by: Tim Mathis

While Gov. Bobby Jindal has sought to make government transparency a hallmark of his administration, a new report finds that Louisiana asks for little in return when it comes to corporations receiving multi-million dollar subsidies.

The report by the non-partisan research center Good Jobs First gave Louisiana a D+, finding that the costliest tax credits, exemptions, and cash rebates don’t include the kind of strict performance standards needed to ensure that quality jobs are being created for the money that taxpayers spend. Louisiana Economic Development is the state agency responsible for overseeing and administering economic development subsidies.

The study evaluated five programs that cost Louisiana taxpayers more than $1.1 billion annually in a state report card:

  • Three of five programs do not prohibit job-shifting. States receive zero economic benefit from subsidizing companies that create jobs by simply moving from one part of the state to another.
  • Four of five programs lack wage requirements. Simply creating jobs will not lead to a stronger economy. Those jobs must pay enough to support a decent standard of living, and create economic ripple effects. Without wage requirements, the subsidies can result in jobs that pay workers so little that they must rely on social safety net programs such as Medicaid, food stamps, or the Earned Income Tax Credit.
  • Four of five programs have no health-care requirement. Although most people get health insurance from their employer, that percentage is declining. Subsidized workers unable to afford their own health insurance may fall onto the rolls of Medicaid, thus negating any positive economic benefits.

The programs with the fewest strings attached include Motion Picture Investor Tax Credits and Purchases of Manufacturing Machinery and Equipment Exemptions. Neither program has wage or health care requirements. Neither program requires a minimum duration for the jobs they create. This is especially problematic for film tax credits, which subsidize employment episodes with productions that average 4 to 6 months in length.

Fortunately, Louisiana policy makers already have a good model on which they can base future reforms. The Quality Jobs Program lives up to its name (receiving a 93 a maximum possible score of 125), providing cash rebates and investment tax credits to industries such as bioscience, manufacturing, information technology, environmental technology, exporters, or businesses located in low-income areas. Qualifying companies must create at least five new full-time jobs, provide health insurance and pay their employees living wages. However, even programs that require job creation and other quality standards can set the bar too low. Louisiana needs to hold every dollar accountable, to ensure subsidies promote good jobs that lead to a stronger economy over the long term.

Fewer than half of the programs required job creation and other standards for workers at subsidized companies such as competitive wages or health care coverage.

“If a company can simply move an existing job and call it ‘new,’ that’s not job creation,” the report said. “If the workers at a subsidized company get such low pay and benefits that they must rely on Medicaid and food stamps, few would consider that ‘economic development.’”

 

April Institute Teaches Public Policy and Advocacy for Nonprofits

Monday, March 28th, 2011

The Louisiana Association of Nonprofit Organizations (LANO) will host a two-day institute in Baton Rouge, April 6-7, featuring local and national experts in public policy, advocacy and coalition building for nonprofit groups.

The event will take place at the Louisiana State Museum, 660 North 4th Street, starting at 9 AM on Wednesday, April 6 and concluding Thursday at noon with a tour of the State Capital. Cost for the institute, including break refreshments, is $25 for LANO members and $75 for the general public. Online registration and a full schedule are available at http://www.lano.org/.

“A nonprofit’s mission can absolutely depend on its ability to form effective coalitions, communicate with policy makers and navigate our political process,” said LANO President and CEO, Ann S. Williamson.

According to LANO, nonprofits are vital players in Louisiana’s public policy arena.Nonprofits provide expertise and direct service to citizens on issues including poverty, education, healthcare, public safety and environmental protection.

The institute will open with keynote speaker Robert Mann, noted political journalist and Manship Chair in Mass Communication at Louisiana State University. Mann will speak on the state’s current political landscape and its effects on philanthropy and the nonprofit sector.

Edward Ashworth, Director of the Louisiana Budget Project, will close Wednesday’s program with a session on how Louisiana’s current fiscal crisis threatens nonprofit and public services. “This story begins and ends with public policy,” said Ashworth.“Decisions made in the Capital City literally determine the fate of nonprofits and those they serve. You’ve got to be here—and be heard—to make a difference.”

Dr. Alison Neustrom, Director of Research at the Baton Rouge-based Public Affairs Research Council will provide nonprofit context to current political redistricting. Panel discussions on funding public policy, neighborhood advancement and strategic communications will offer a unique forum for nonprofit professionals to interact with key funders, communicators and policy makers.

The 2011 Public Policy Institute is presented by LANO and the Louisiana Disaster Recovery Foundation, with additional support from Coventry HealthCare of Louisiana and the Louisiana State Museum. For more information, contact Ashley Herad at ashley@lano.org or 225.929.5266 ext. 222.

Subsidizing Big Business in Louisiana

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Posted by: Tim Mathis

A new report from Good Jobs First, a national policy center that promotes corporate and governmental accountability in the area of economic development, placed Louisiana at the top of the list for having one of the costliest and most ineffective tax exemption programs in the country. Louisiana’s Industrial Tax Exemption program exempts manufacturers from property taxes on expansions and investment projects for up to ten years. This causes a significant loss in revenue for local parishes across the state that affects their ability to fund services such as education, human services, and transportation infrastructure.

According to the most recent report from the Louisiana Board of Commerce and Industry, Industrial Tax Exemptions awarded in 2010 are estimated to cost Louisiana over $946 million over the next ten years. In 2009, Louisiana awarded exemptions worth $745 million and in 2008, over $614 million. That means that over a three-year time span, more than $2.3 billion in potential revenue has been lost in return for the creation of 7,256 potential new jobs.

The most recent report, dated August 2010, identified 592 companies and corporations across the state that qualified for the exemption. These companies employ over 206,128 jobs and created 2,537 new jobs. Louisiana consistently awards these ten-year property tax breaks for dozens of multi-national industrial giants that have little need for state subsidies.

Ten Companies that Benefited from Louisiana’s Industrial Tax Exemptions in 2009

Company Name New Jobs Created

Estimated Ten-Year Property Tax Exemption

Coca-Cola Bottling Company

10

$               17.5 million
Conoco Phillips Company 0 $               4.6 million
Dow Chemical Company 0 $               10.2 million
Exxon Mobile Corporation 0 $               17 million
Folgers Coffee Company 30 $               4.3 million
General Motors Corporation 0 $               18.6 million
International Paper Company 0 $               33 million
Marathon Petroleum Company 0 $               15.6 million
Proctor & Gamble Manufacturing 5 $               4.1 million
Shell Chemical Company 0 $               9.8 million

The current fiscal crisis in Louisiana is an excellent opportunity for legislators to reform Industrial Tax Exemptions. Bringing transparency and oversight to the program would go a long way to solving our revenue shortfall this year and for many years to come.



TOPS and Go Grants: Louisiana’s Financial Aid Programs Reward Too Much Mediocrity and Provide Too Little for Those in Need

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

For Louisiana to grow and prosper, we need more people to attain the skills needed to participate in a competitive economy. Those skills generally require some form of a postsecondary education, whether at a technical college, community college, or a four-year university. Unfortunately, many Louisiana students cannot afford the cost of tuition at these institutions without some form of state support.

Through its TOPS program, Louisiana has been a leader in providing financial aid to higher-education students. However, due to policy changes in 1998, TOPS was transformed from a need-based program to a merit-based program, with much of the money going to those who need it least. Spending on need-based aid is considerably out of line with that of other states. The recently enacted Go Grant program, designed to provide more need-based assistance, has been chronically underfunded.

Full report and press release attached…

Budget Cuts: No Neighborhood Left Behind

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010

Posted by: Tim Mathis

Friday’s Senate Finance Committee Meeting provided further evidence that state budget cuts will have far reaching effects in Louisiana. Right now, Louisiana has the highest incarceration rate and is number one in violent crime in the country. To meet the challenge of reducing these figures, the Department of Public Safety and Corrections is working with $47 million less than last year and faces another $151 million cut in next year’s budget. According to Secretary LeBlanc, 78 percent of the prison population needs drug treatment and nearly half of those released eventually return to prison. Future cuts will jeopardize programs that provide drug treatment, probation and parole, and GED education. These programs keep our neighborhoods safe by helping prior offenders to play a productive role in society.

Another presentation by the Secretary of the Department of Children and Family Services detailed recent cost saving measures in spite of the fact that over 75 percent of the budget comes from the federal government. Future cuts may severely limit services for Louisiana’s neediest. The agency is charged with an important mission, providing 839,513 individuals with food stamps, overseeing 34,000 children in child care, ensuring timely payments of $30 million in child support, investigating 1,075 child abuse cases, and overseeing 4,200 foster children. In the past four years, food stamp recipients increased by 37 percent. Despite this growing need, DCFS is reducing the number of offices around the state from 165 to 110 and has eliminated 329 positions, many responsible for providing direct services to clients. In this case, maintaining funding is not a matter of fiscal responsibility. Reducing such services can, literally, be a matter of life and death, especially among the thousands of low-income children and families in Louisiana.