nelsonmuntz
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THE TAX BREAKS HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH UCONN!
Yes they do.
THE TAX BREAKS HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH UCONN!
And are you really so dense that you can't find an obvious no strings attached example? How about the first round of TARP from Bush to the banks? That had zero strings attached. It was a capital infusion. They still can't account for where all the money went.
In your mind, tax breaks/loans tied to adding jobs over a very specific time frame is no string attached. Maybe you should do some research before you make statements that are blatantly false. The deal requires a minimum of 200 new jobs. There are other strings too, but the details will just confuse you. And the maximum amount of the deal is $24.7 million. I know those decimal points confuse you and you like to move them to suit your rants. But much like your inflated views of the new TV contract in 2011 and 2012, you missed the mark with how much this is costing the state versus its benefit. Just to be factually clear on the amounts involved:
Cigna, Bloomfield: $71 million
ESPN, Bristol: $25 million
NBC Sports, Stamford: $20 million
Alexion, New Haven: $51 million
CareCentrix, Hartford: $24 million
So the role of government is to take money from regular tax payers and give it to favored, connected, corporations?
By all means, provide me with evidence to support this.Yes they do.
You asked specifically for some proof that they work and he gave you exactly what you asked for. If you don't like this post, don't ask him for it.
There are so many holes in that link that is a waste of my and everyone else's time to have to respond to it. The "jobs" created are mostly temp jobs, and $300MM in state dollars for $1bn in total, one time expenditures is a terrible ROI for the state. In terms of tax dollars generated, it was probably about $100MM at most, maybe less. In other words, the state spent $3 for every $1 in tax dollars it generated from a bunch of temp jobs.
A total waste of money.
There are so many holes in that link that is a waste of my and everyone else's time to have to respond to it. The "jobs" created are mostly temp jobs, and $300MM in state dollars for $1bn in total, one time expenditures is a terrible ROI for the state. In terms of tax dollars generated, it was probably about $100MM at most, maybe less. In other words, the state spent $3 for every $1 in tax dollars it generated from a bunch of temp jobs.
A total waste of money.
The words that will go on Flipper's headstone "ESPN told us what to do."
Part of the problem is that for the most part Connecticut such a horrendous place to do business (taxes, regulations, transportation bottlenecks etc) that folks have become deathly (and in ESPN's case, irrationally) afraid of the few big businesses who have remained pulling up and leaving. I think understand that.
I'm not opposed to tax credits, etc. But, like bizlaw, I think businesses who do accept them have as much a responsibility to the state they accept them from as much as they do their shareholders.
Big-time college sports add to the quality of life in the state for many of us. A descent to MAC-level (or worse) will make it less desirable. It's intellectually insulting to hear ESPN repeat "we don't have anything to do with realignment" when the opposite is true. Ethically (and in this era, something that doesn't count for much), it's poor form for the neighbor with the 20,000 square foot house to ask me to help pay his property taxes or else he'll move and let the property decay.
That is a perfectly good question to ask. But, as you know, it is just as fair to ask it of each of the other 49 states, and it has little to do with the argument.
And don't forget the federal government. Cash for clunkers, Solyndra...dozens more.
I was as pissed at ESPN as anyone when everything started to come to the surface. As I look back at it now Ifeel that while ESPN did not go out of their way to favor UConn there is no evidence that they went out of their way to down UConn. I find the former acceptable. Had the latter actually taken place, I'd have a serious beef with them.
The federal government helping businesses is actually totally different than states helping businesses. Each state receives huge amounts of federal money. When they engage in this game, Americans are bidding against themselves to move businesses from one area to the other, with the unavoidable result that Americans are a net loser, if you exclude the businesses that take the money.
Wanted to strengthen the U.S.'s economy vis a vis China's, or Germany's, is a totally different issue.