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  • Hollow, flashy schemes do anything but help economy

    Fresno Bee (California)
    August 20, 2007 Monday
    FINAL EDITION



    Hollow, flashy schemes do anything but help economy

    Dan Walters Bee Capitol Bureau


    When John Garamendi segued from state insurance commissioner to
    lieutenant governor this year he found himself in a duty-free zone.

    The lieutenant governor's only real job, as someone sagely observed,
    is to check the newspaper each morning and assure himself that the
    governor is still alive. His unspoken task is to garner media
    attention and thus position himself to run for governor, although
    only one lieutenant governor in recent memory made that happen and
    voters recalled him.

    The last time a governor tried to help a lieutenant governor move
    upward was when Ronald Reagan appointed Ed Reinecke to the job nearly
    40 years ago and then created an " Economic Development Commission"
    with Reinecke as chairman and securing the space shuttle project its
    mission.

    Reinecke became enmeshed in scandal and was forced to resign, but the
    Economic Development Commission remained alive, embraced by his
    successors as a source of patronage and a vehicle for gaining public
    attention even though it has not generated any economic development
    that anyone has ever catalogued.

    True to time-dishonored tradition, Garamendi claims that he has
    "revitalized" the Economic Development Commission and will make it
    into a force for economic progress. Current cost: $651,000 a year.

    If nothing else, it illustrates the hapless quality of the state's
    fitful efforts at spurring business investment. Governors and other
    politicians are forever promoting schemes they say will enhance the
    state's economy and create oodles of new jobs.

    They are piled one upon the other with little coordination or review,
    many surviving simply because no one has enough guts to give them the
    merciful deaths they deserve.

    A few years ago, the state's overseas trade offices were shuttered --
    but there's an effort in the Capitol to keep the one remaining
    outpost, albeit privately financed, in Armenia, open. Why? It's
    merely a sop to Southern California's politically influential
    Armenian-American community.

    The various tax breaks targeted to specific communities and/or
    industries are especially egregious.

    One of the costliest is the two-decade-old "enterprise zone" program
    under which communities offer tax breaks for investment that
    supposedly helps low-income people. Last January, the Los Angeles
    Times detailed how enterprise zone "vouchers" only rarely help the
    poor, more often benefit the wealthy and are sold by cities to firms
    far removed from their borders.

    The Franchise Tax Board is questioning the legality of some vouchers
    and the Legislature has adopted some modest reforms, while extending
    the life of existing zones.

    Instead of a cleanup, however, the Schwarzenegger administration is
    expanding use of enterprise zones and legislation to make it easier
    to create them is moving. Meanwhile, the Assembly has voted to punch
    more than a half-billion dollars in new loopholes into the state's
    already distorted tax laws.

    They never learn.

    Dan Walters writes for The Bee's Capitol bureau. E-mail:
    [email protected]; mail: P.O. Box 15779, Sacramento, CA 95852.
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