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View Full Version : Forget about the governor’s slush funds



RandomGuy
04-01-2016, 09:54 AM
Texas’ biggest corporate welfare program is one you’ve probably never heard of — and it’s growing every year.

At a time when the Legislature can spend months scrapping over $100 million for pre-K, when $55 million to air-condition Texas prisons is a nonstarter, corporations such as Exxon and Dow Chemical need only ask and Texas hands them billions.

Speaking in low voices and idly watching their fishing lines, a handful of men and women mingle on a secluded pier at the southern tip of Texas. Drivers rush past on the highway above, east toward the discount shops and beach bars of Port Isabel and South Padre Island, or west to the shrimp shacks and shipbreakers at the end of the Brownsville Ship Channel. Here, in between, are acres of wetlands, the tidal flats of the Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, where a cast of songbirds and raptors shuffles in and out with the seasons. A quarter-million ducks stop by every November. There’s also a population of ocelots, small enough to count, driven in by encroaching development.

Soon, this pier could sit at the heart of a great new industrial district, the likes of which the Rio Grande Valley has never seen. Sprawling facilities will receive natural gas from the Eagle Ford Shale, convert it to liquid form and ship it to Latin America, Europe and Asia, where it commands a higher price. Five liquefied natural gas (LNG) exporters have lease agreements here on the ship channel. Three of them, including Annova LNG, have filed plans with federal regulators. Annova wants to build its terminal just across the channel from this pier. Tankers capable of holding 40 million gallons of LNG would chug in from the Gulf, ease into a dock and fill up from storage tanks the size of tall buildings.

...

Last summer, Annova came to the Point Isabel Independent School District, which includes Port Isabel and South Padre Island, to ask for a $120 million tax break for its new terminal. So the activists made their case to the school board, too — but this time, as they learned, the stakes were much higher.

...

Property taxes are the largest source of funding for Texas public schools, and big industrial projects can add lots of new money to the school system quickly. Annova’s LNG terminal alone would be worth more than the tax base of one-quarter of Texas school districts. Companies pay most of their tax bill to the local school districts. For certain big projects, though, districts can forgive most of that sum using the Texas Economic Development Act, a 15-year-old program that’s often known by its place in the tax code, Chapter 313. That program actually makes it worthwhile for school districts to give away millions in tax revenue.

Under the law, if a school district grants a tax break for a desirable new project, the state is obliged to cover the difference. The cost of the deal comes out of the state budget. In its application to Point Isabel ISD, Annova said its terminal would be valued at $1.4 billion, but wanted the school district to pretend for the next 10 years that it was worth just $25 million. The tax break, Annova told the district, would be “a key component” in its decision to build. In fact, as local activists learned, the whole point of the Chapter 313 program was to lure business to Texas that might go elsewhere. If the school board rejected Annova’s deal, maybe the company really would pack up and leave. The school board vote, then, wasn’t going to be just another sternly worded resolution — it could be, locals hoped, the Achilles’ heel that could kill the project for good.


...

When board members returned to announce their decision, the vote was unanimous: The district rejected Annova’s application. “The community has spoken,” one board member announced, “and we affirmed.” The crowd cried and cheered. One of them sent a poem to the local newspaper casting the victory in epic terms: “I was with that big group of villagers / When we finally wiped out the vampires.”

While some board members shared the activists’ environmental concerns, board president Mickey Furcron says that, for him, the vote was a matter of expediency. He didn’t relish the thought of hearing an environmental horror story every time he opened a new board meeting. A few million wasn’t worth that much to the schools, he said, and anyway, even if he disagreed, “we have a responsibility to represent the wishes of our constituents.”

If the deal truly was necessary to bring Annova to town, local residents hoped, then the board’s rejection would keep the company out. But within a day, Annova announced that even without the break, it planned to press ahead with its terminal on the ship channel. For once in the life of the Chapter 313 program, a community dared to call a company’s bluff. As it turned out, Annova didn’t need the handout after all.

--------------------------------------

Left out a lot.

Basically, a lot of companies are asking for, and getting, lots of tax breaks that Texas is footing.

One has to wonder at the actual benefit to the state, given record corporate profits in the US.

https://www.texasobserver.org/chapter-313-texas-tax-incentive/

boutons_deux
04-01-2016, 10:13 AM
BigCorp's corruption of govt is total, effectively a wealth transfer from taxpayers to BigCorp.

pgardn
04-01-2016, 10:23 AM
Surprised our governor did not attempt to influence the board members in some way. I would love to have some interviews with the board members to reveal how much, and what type of pressure was applied.

"Damn, it looks like TEA is gonna find your district as having violated a number of rules..."


The school board members should request a picture of Abbott and each member holding up a cup for saving the State money. I bet Abbott would be happy to furnish that request with a red ribbon ceremony.

As an aside: Before 313, NISD in San Antonio was "compelled" to give Fiesta Texas and Seaworld tax breaks. By the city of San Antonio. These places did spawn resorts and jobs. But I have never seen a study provided.

boutons_deux
04-02-2016, 08:27 AM
How a public trust fund helps Texas cities host the NCAA Final Four


Everything is bigger in Texas — even the sporting events.

It's no coincidence that this year's Final Four tournament is held in Houston; the state has, since the passage of a 2003 statute, aggressively courted major events using public funds. It even set up a trust fund that cities can tap into when they want to host a large event. Houston has put $8.4 million (http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/texas/article/Texas-pays-2-7M-for-WWE-s-WrestleMania-32-6691717.php) from it toward this weekend's NCAA men's basketball national semifinals and championship.

What Texas does is an anomaly, as many cities opt for tax hikes (http://www.indystar.com/story/news/2015/04/01/much-cost-final-four-indy/70806958/) to raise their own funds for large events. And spending this public money is controversial among economists, who see it as an unwise use of taxpayer dollars. But it does mean that a disproportionate number of NCAA men's basketball championships now happen in the Lone Star State.
https://cdn3.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/i8y6_ENuSq_8pobizXITXM3V1Bg=/1200x0/filters:no_upscale()/cdn0.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/6275393/final_four_locations_map2.jpg

Why Texas has hosted more recent Final Fours than anywhere else

Texas cities hosted just two NCAA Final Fours between 1985 and 2004.

But in 2003, the state tried out a novel financial strategy (https://fmx.cpa.state.tx.us/fm/statewise/archive/rules_attraction_10.php) for cities to use public funds to attract and finance sporting events. It became the only state (http://www.sao.texas.gov/reports/report.aspx?reportnumber=16-001) to set up public trust funds for its cities to use to attract major events.

Using public money to pay for sports stadiums and major events like the Olympics isn’t new. But Texas does something different: It lets cities apply to use a pot of money that the state maintains, in order to host a big event.

The Major Events Trust Fund, as it's called, is different from other programs because it sets aside a portion of state money for the cities to use to cover the costs of hosting huge events. Other cities might have to raise taxes or find other ways to pay for the events, while cities in Texas can receive enormous sums of money without having to do so.

Texas maintains a list of events that these funds can be put toward, which includes everything from the NCAA Tournament to a World Cup soccer game, Elite Rodeo Association world championship, or the X Games.

http://www.vox.com/2016/4/2/11347208/ncaa-final-four-houston-2016-march-madness

tlongII
04-02-2016, 02:20 PM
Texas’ biggest corporate welfare program is one you’ve probably never heard of — and it’s growing every year.

At a time when the Legislature can spend months scrapping over $100 million for pre-K, when $55 million to air-condition Texas prisons is a nonstarter, corporations such as Exxon and Dow Chemical need only ask and Texas hands them billions.

Speaking in low voices and idly watching their fishing lines, a handful of men and women mingle on a secluded pier at the southern tip of Texas. Drivers rush past on the highway above, east toward the discount shops and beach bars of Port Isabel and South Padre Island, or west to the shrimp shacks and shipbreakers at the end of the Brownsville Ship Channel. Here, in between, are acres of wetlands, the tidal flats of the Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, where a cast of songbirds and raptors shuffles in and out with the seasons. A quarter-million ducks stop by every November. There’s also a population of ocelots, small enough to count, driven in by encroaching development.

Soon, this pier could sit at the heart of a great new industrial district, the likes of which the Rio Grande Valley has never seen. Sprawling facilities will receive natural gas from the Eagle Ford Shale, convert it to liquid form and ship it to Latin America, Europe and Asia, where it commands a higher price. Five liquefied natural gas (LNG) exporters have lease agreements here on the ship channel. Three of them, including Annova LNG, have filed plans with federal regulators. Annova wants to build its terminal just across the channel from this pier. Tankers capable of holding 40 million gallons of LNG would chug in from the Gulf, ease into a dock and fill up from storage tanks the size of tall buildings.

...

Last summer, Annova came to the Point Isabel Independent School District, which includes Port Isabel and South Padre Island, to ask for a $120 million tax break for its new terminal. So the activists made their case to the school board, too — but this time, as they learned, the stakes were much higher.

...

Property taxes are the largest source of funding for Texas public schools, and big industrial projects can add lots of new money to the school system quickly. Annova’s LNG terminal alone would be worth more than the tax base of one-quarter of Texas school districts. Companies pay most of their tax bill to the local school districts. For certain big projects, though, districts can forgive most of that sum using the Texas Economic Development Act, a 15-year-old program that’s often known by its place in the tax code, Chapter 313. That program actually makes it worthwhile for school districts to give away millions in tax revenue.

Under the law, if a school district grants a tax break for a desirable new project, the state is obliged to cover the difference. The cost of the deal comes out of the state budget. In its application to Point Isabel ISD, Annova said its terminal would be valued at $1.4 billion, but wanted the school district to pretend for the next 10 years that it was worth just $25 million. The tax break, Annova told the district, would be “a key component” in its decision to build. In fact, as local activists learned, the whole point of the Chapter 313 program was to lure business to Texas that might go elsewhere. If the school board rejected Annova’s deal, maybe the company really would pack up and leave. The school board vote, then, wasn’t going to be just another sternly worded resolution — it could be, locals hoped, the Achilles’ heel that could kill the project for good.


...

When board members returned to announce their decision, the vote was unanimous: The district rejected Annova’s application. “The community has spoken,” one board member announced, “and we affirmed.” The crowd cried and cheered. One of them sent a poem to the local newspaper casting the victory in epic terms: “I was with that big group of villagers / When we finally wiped out the vampires.”

While some board members shared the activists’ environmental concerns, board president Mickey Furcron says that, for him, the vote was a matter of expediency. He didn’t relish the thought of hearing an environmental horror story every time he opened a new board meeting. A few million wasn’t worth that much to the schools, he said, and anyway, even if he disagreed, “we have a responsibility to represent the wishes of our constituents.”

If the deal truly was necessary to bring Annova to town, local residents hoped, then the board’s rejection would keep the company out. But within a day, Annova announced that even without the break, it planned to press ahead with its terminal on the ship channel. For once in the life of the Chapter 313 program, a community dared to call a company’s bluff. As it turned out, Annova didn’t need the handout after all.

--------------------------------------

Left out a lot.

Basically, a lot of companies are asking for, and getting, lots of tax breaks that Texas is footing.

One has to wonder at the actual benefit to the state, given record corporate profits in the US.

https://www.texasobserver.org/chapter-313-texas-tax-incentive/

Payroll taxes.

Winehole23
04-03-2016, 02:51 AM
Payroll taxes whut?

Winehole23
04-03-2016, 02:55 AM
what did you think the question was, tlong?

tlongII
04-03-2016, 05:21 AM
Why do you think any corporation gets tax breaks to locate at a particular place?

boutons_deux
04-03-2016, 06:12 AM
Why do you think any corporation gets tax breaks to locate at a particular place?

"studies have shown ..." that tax breaks and subsidies by states, localities to BigCorp almost NEVER are paid back by revenues from the recipients.

tlongII
04-03-2016, 12:24 PM
"studies have shown ..." that tax breaks and subsidies by states, localities to BigCorp almost NEVER are paid back by revenues from the recipients.

What studies?

boutons_deux
04-03-2016, 12:34 PM
What studies?

Strait from Oregon: "Do Your Own Research" -- WC

boutons_deux
05-08-2016, 01:07 PM
State sitting on millions owed to crime victims

AUSTIN (KXAN) -- While most people are familiar with unclaimed property that one can search and access from the Texas Comptroller’s website (https://mycpa.cpa.state.tx.us/up/Search.jsp), a KXAN Investigation discovered $22 million that actually belongs to Texans are sitting in state coffers and little is being done to make sure that money gets to its rightful owner.

The money comes from restitution payments ordered in criminal cases from courts across the state.

If someone is arrested and charged for committing a crime against you, anything from breaking into your house or crashing into your car while driving drunk, chances are, the court will require the criminal to pay you money for damages or injuries you may have.

But, many crime victims are never called to appear in court and are unaware they have money coming to them.

State law requires the courts to notify you, but in some cases that person may never see the money.

KXAN obtained a list of crime victims Travis County says it can't find to give them their money. However, we found it's pretty easy.

http://kxan.com/investigative-story/state-sitting-on-millions-owed-to-crime-victims/