Tuesday,
March 22, 2005
Reform Groups Urge State to "FIX THE ZONES" or
Let the Program Sunset on March 31 as Scheduled
Environmental, human services and budget watchdog groups joined
together today to call upon state leaders to fix the state's Empire
Zones Program and released an 11-point plan designed to end the abuse,
corruption and favoritism inherent in the current administration of the
program. The groups estimate that the state could save approximately
$100 million per year in much needed revenue, if the program is
reformed.
Members of the Economic Development Conference Committee seem to have
reached a consensus today on expanding the Empire Zone program to
include 12 new Zones throughout the state. The Committee members were
silent however on what reforms, if any, they are proposing to make the
Zones program more accountable.
The Zones program is currently scheduled to sunset on March 31, 2005.
The reform groups believe that the programs shortcomings are so great
that it should NOT be renewed without real reforms.
"In its current form the Empire Zone Program has encouraged
businesses to leave New York's urban areas to locate in undeveloped
rural areas. This wastes state and local investments in infrastructure,
wastes natural resources, wastes state tax dollars and hurts our
cities," said John Stouffer, Legislative Director for the Sierra Club -
Atlantic Chapter.
New York's Empire Zone Program was originally created in 1986 to
focus on promoting job growth in economically distressed communities.
And the programs benefits were greatly increased in 2000 to increase its
ability to achieve that end. But an administrative change in the
program's rules in that same year, allowed for a boundary amendment
process that all but ended the program's targeting. According to the
Fiscal Policy Institute's Frank Mauro, "In recent years, the program has
become a game of `We bring the zone to you.' The Zones program's
powerful incentives are now being used
indiscriminately to subsidize favored businesses in areas of the
state that are relatively well off while similar businesses in similar
areas of the state pay taxes at the state's regular rates. How can New
York State justify maintaining a tax system in which businesses whose
operations are the same in all material respects are paying taxes under
what amounts to substantially different tax codes?"
"The eleven reforms we are suggesting will create an empire zone
program that helps rather than hurts New York's economically distressed
communities and one that conserves our tax dollars as well as our
natural resources," said Stouffer.
Others expressed concerns that the program has moved far from its
original intent of helping distressed cities throughout the state
attract new businesses. "If the zones program's extremely deep tax
discounts are made available for those who want to develop in
greenfields or set up shop in the plushest of suburban office parks,
then how in the world can those incentives ever be effective in the
revitalization of the areas of the state that are truly characterized by
pervasive poverty, high unemployment and economic distress," stated Ron
Deutsch, Executive Director of SENSES.
The Luther Forest proposal in the towns of Stillwater and Malta in
Saratoga County is a prime example of how the Zones program is being
used to subsidize sprawl. This "Field of Dreams" approach of "if you
build it they will come" is being undertaken by the Saratoga Economic
Development Corporation. Bob Radliff of Saratoga County stated, "By
providing Empire Zone benefits to this massive and inappropriate
project, New York State taxpayer's will be encouraging the abandonment
of our urban cores, while subsidizing the destruction of open space and
inducement of uncontrolled sprawl in Saratoga County. Smart growth
principles apparently do not apply when we let industry dictate the
future of our region. Empire Zones are powerful economic development
tools -- they should be used to solve the Capital Region's most pressing
needs."
"In this era of multi-billion state budget deficits and moribund
upstate economies, it is essential to ensure that public funds invested
in job creation produce the intended results. The first five years of
the Empire Zones have fallen woefully short of revitalizing inner city
neighborhoods. Instead they have all too often been used to divert
essential public resources to the political powerful and well-connected.
The Governor and Legislature need to dramatically overhaul the Empire
Zones and other economic development program to protect our tax dollars.
The proposals we have outlined today are a small but critical step in
restoring integrity to this program," said Mark Dunlea, Associate
Director of Hunger Action Network of New York State.
The 11-Point Plan to Reform The Zones
The state law authorizing the Empire Zones program should NOT be
renewed without real reforms including:
1. implementing full, annual disclosure of the benefits received and
the jobs provided by each participating business.
2. strengthening rather than weakening the program's focus on the
state's neediest areas by prohibiting zone designations in areas other
than census tracts that meet economic hardship criteria and immediately
adjoining census tracts in the same community. Similarly, the extension
of existing zones boundaries into areas other than census tracts meeting
economic hardship criteria should be eliminated.
3. ending the current annual boundary amendment process (the "we
bring the zone to you" approach) that has opened the operation of many
of the state's zones to favoritism and corruption.
4. halting the benefits going to businesses that used
re-incorporation and other ruses to get into the program.
5. tightening the program's certification requirements to ensure that
firms that violate (or have, in recent years, violated) labor, health
and safety, environmental or other important statutory safeguards are
not certified to receive zone benefits; or, if they are already
certified, that they lose such certification
6. requiring the Commissioners of Labor and Economic Development to
hold well-advertised and timely public hearings on all proposed business
certifications, all contested de-certifications and all proposed
boundary amendments. (Note: Hearings on boundary amendments are
currently required but the Commissioner of Economic Development views
this requirement as being met by the hearings held by local legislative
bodies on the local laws making those boundary amendments. Public
hearings are not currently required on business certifications and
decertifications.)
7, requiring that all of the tax breaks and other benefits available
to participating firms be based on the number and quality of the jobs
actually created. (NOTE: Some but not all of the program's benefits are
currently tied to the number of jobs actually created.)
8. strengthening the program's job quality standards and the
application of these standards to all zone benefits. (NOTE: Under
current law employers are eligible for an enhanced wage credit [$3,000
as opposed to the ordinary $1,500 wage credit] for a targeted employee
who is paid an hourly wage of at least 135% of the minimum wage for more
than half of the period involved.)
9. limiting the total amount of all tax benefits available "per
employee," in any given year, to the lower of (a) $10,000 or (b) 20% of
the total of the wages paid to the employee involved and the health
insurance premiums paid on behalf of such employee.
10. apply de-certifications for cause to all periods beginning with
the earliest documented date of the infraction on which the
de-certification is based and require that any benefits received during
such period by a decertified firm should be subject to mandatory
repayment.
11. ensure that the program promotes revitalization of the State's
existing cities, towns and villages, efficient use of municipal services
and avoids the environmental problems associated with unplanned sprawl
development, by limiting zone designations and boundary revisions to
areas that are served by public sewer or water infrastructure,
previously developed areas, or brownfields.