Last night she also made clear that another option she would favor as mayor would be more of the same untamed corporate sweetheart deals that Karl Dean has become a rock star at ginning up while benignly ignoring North Nashville:
By turning this parking lot into a permanent [Bridgestone] fixture in the Nashville skyline, we are moving Nashville forward .... We are going to keep 1,100 Nashville jobs, but we are going to add 600 new jobs in Nashville with an average salary of $93,000 in which it increases our tax base for schools, for transportation and for public safety .... Let's be clear this is not a corporate giveaway.
Ms. Barry went on to soft-pedal one of the more alarming aspects of Dean's deal: Bridgestone can lay-off up to 20% of the 1,700 people it promises to deliver without losing its tax-free status with Metro. She said that "if Bridgestone fails to deliver" 1,700 jobs by the end of 2020, Metro can "claw back" a fraction of the taxes owed. But Bridgestone is still given leeway to shed 20% of this workforce and still be exempt from property taxes. The Bridgestone boosters are not being entirely honest about the risks of this deal. As one reporter put it, "Council members stayed away from discussing any possible downside to the Bridgestone deal."
The Orwellian dimensions of council supporters' comments about the Bridgestone deal are staggering. Bridgestone is not obligated to create any new permanent jobs. The company is praised for importing 600 out-of-state employees, but it can shed over half of the 600's filled positions and still keep its tax break. Supporters also tout Bridgestone's pledge to donate $150,000 to Metro schools. $150,000. That's it. They're getting a $56,300,000 hand-out from Nashville, and they're only pledging $150,000 to our schools, which I assume they can claim on their tax returns. Yet, in CM Barry's words, "this is not a corporate giveaway."
Another Orwellian moment was CM Barry's claim that the new Bridgestone building would be a permanent fixture in the Nashville skyline. Backing her up, CM Erica Gilmore said the HQ would "forever change" the skyline. The only real constant with regard to buildings in Nashville is that older ones are torn down to make room for newer ones, regardless of the history or need to preserve what is important to people here. Anyone who claims that there is permanence in Nashville's built environment is acting misleadingly and dishonestly. A new building downtown may be here for a long time, or it may give way to some future capital project subsidized by the mayor and ballyhooed by a blustery council.
Megan Barry is right about one thing. The new Bridgestone HQ is going to be a fixture, permanent or not, on the Nashville skyline that many will be able to see. Many in North Nashville who will never have the opportunity at any possible living wage jobs Bridgestone might catalyze will see it, too. And that is as close as they are going to get to the sense of entitlement downtown. The Bridgestone HQ sits on a far horizon for most of those who work their livings in this town. Average North Nashvillians will not be enjoying those $93,000 jobs even if the projected taxes on them eventually trickle down here and there like crumbs from the master's table.
And Megan Barry will continue to minimize the growth-induced plight of working people as "growing pains" that are somehow necessary when a city barters away its corporate tax base due to the Courthouse terror that companies might plead poverty and abandon it.
I dislike the fact that corporate donations come into the equation and discussion. You highlight the amount as one issue.
ReplyDeleteThe more important issue is that government should not be "pay for play." Tax break, no tax break...the transaction should be evaluated on its merits and should not be swayed by what is, essentially, a history of off-the-books giving. That the donations may be stopped is, of course, possible.
Our government should not encourage a tiered system based on voluntary contributions to favored groups.
What if Bridgestone donated $150,000/year to the Country Music Marathon? The National Baptist Convention? Friends of Warner Park? McCabe Little League? Catholic Charities?
Who are you to decide which charities are worthy of extra consideration in the political process?
I am a taxpayer and a stakeholder in Metro services--funded by the Metro budget--who has been asked to consider the merits of the Bridgestone funding package, which is said to have a number of benefits, one of which (as listed by boosters) is the donation to Metro Schools.
ReplyDeleteI did not dig that proposed donation up. It was offered for consideration as a virtual quid pro quo in order to mute opposition. You might consider going after the boosters instead of me.
Otherwise, I considered it on the merits within the context of the proposal, and it came up wanting in my book.
I guess that's who I am.
Poor writing by Anon above, who was me. I know who you are. If you re-read and replace "you" in the last sentence with "our government," it reads as intended.
ReplyDeletemea culpa
Megan Barry is tied to the same giveaway fairies as Karl Dean. I'm not sure who is behind the curtain, but it obviously that they are pulling Megan Barry's strings. If she is elected mayor, we will see the same good ole boys (and maybe a few good ole girls) screwing the taxpaying citizens just like Dean did,
ReplyDeleteAnd with Colby Sledge running for Council, it will be more of next generation Dean's boys at the helm. The fairgrounds will be on the auction block again, you can bet your paycheck.
Wish some real ordinary citizens with true respect for the people would run for mayor and council. Otherwise, we are back to where we started.