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The Stimulus will lead America in the direction of Western New York
American Thinker ^
| February 18, 2009
| Michael Filozof
Posted on 2/18/2009, 7:46:43 AM by neverdem
If you want to know what President Obama's new style of government-led, Democratic Party economic and political policies will bring to the country, you need look no further than Western New York -- and what you'll see isn't pretty. Nearly every item in the Obama economic and political agenda -- from health care to taxes to unions to gun control to government schemes to spend money to "stimulate" the economy -- has already been tried here, but the region remains stagnant and moribund.
The economy of Western New York and the cities of Buffalo and Rochester are, for practical purposes, socialist. The private sector is nearly dead, government is the largest employer, and taxes and union membership are the highest in the nation. As a result, economic growth is nil, and the population continues to migrate to the Sun Belt at an alarming rate.
It would be an understatement to say that the region is a Democratic Party stronghold; "uni-party rule" is a more accurate description. Buffalo has not elected a Republican mayor since 1962. Party registration in Buffalo's Erie County favors the Democrats 150,000. Republicans have been reduced to a permanent minority here, and it's not unheard of for lifelong Democrats - former Erie County Executive Joel Giambra, for example - to switch party labels to Republican only after they could not obtain the Democratic nomination. The Democratic Party also controls the Governor's office and both houses of the State Legislature, along with 26 of the state's 29 House seats and both Senate seats.
Mere possession of a handgun, even in one's home, requires a government permit, which can take up to a year to obtain in some counties. The federal "assault weapons ban" which expired nationwide in 2004 -- but which President Obama promised to reinstate on a permanent basis -- has been codified into state law and remains in effect here.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, New York State has the highest rate of union membership in the country. Nearly 25% of the workforce here is unionized. Virtually all public sector employees here are unionized, and richly compensated as a result. In 2008, a Buffalo cop caused a stir by milking the overtime and seniority rules to earn nearly $200,000 in his last years on the job, enabling him to retire with a pension of $100,000 per year. Unionized city school district janitors can earn between $70,000 and $100,000 per year. In the private sector, bankrupt auto parts maker Delphi, a major employer in Lockport, is staggering under the weight of its union contracts, and American Axle recently closed a unionied facility in Buffalo.
The public sector dominates here. Data from the Census Bureau in 2004 indicated that there were 95,300 public sector employees in the Buffalo-Niagara Metropolitan Statistical Area out of a total labor force of 547,000; by comparison, only 66,400 were employed in manufacturing and 20,300 in "construction and mining." Only the category of "trade, transportation, and utilities" produced more private-sector jobs - 102,000 - than government.
In 2008, the three largest employers in Buffalo were all in the public sector. The State of New York employed 16,500, the Federal government 10,000, and the City of Buffalo 8,200. Of the top three private sector employers, two -- Kalieda Health with 10,000 employees Catholic Health Systems with 4,900 -- were hospitals, heavily reliant on state and federal aid. HSBC Bank, with 5,800 employees, rounded out the top three.
Health care remains a major employer in the region because the population is aging. Medicare and Medicaid provide substantial funding to the health-care industry. But Medicaid here is out of control. New York's Medicaid system the costliest in the nation, double that of California's. Medicaid here pays for just about everything. Several years ago a public outcry caused the state's Medicaid system to stop paying for Viagra for convicted sex offenders, but it continues to fund abortions.
Things are not much better in nearby Rochester. For decades Rochester was a company town, home of the once-mighty Eastman Kodak Co. But Kodak has been shedding jobs for three decades, and in 2006 the University of Rochester, a non-profit educational institution, surpassed Kodak as the city's largest employer.
The high rate of public employment requires a substantial tax burden to support it. A 2008 study by the Tax Foundation found that 8 of the top 10 counties in the nation with the highest property-tax burdens were in Western New York. Niagara County was ranked number one, Monroe County number two, and Erie County number seven. But residents here do not merely pay high property taxes; the combined state and county sales tax in Erie County is a staggering 8.75%, and the state levies an income tax that averages 5% as well. The state even demands that residents pay sales taxes on items purchased by mail or on the Internet and shipped into New York from other states. The state recently raised nearly 100 taxes and fees to meet this year's budget; even so, Gov. David Paterson is predicting a $15 billion budget deficit for next year.
The enormous sums of money flowing into government coffers gives politicians the means to dictate the terms on nearly everything. Almost nothing here is decided solely by market forces in the private sector. Political operatives spend public money at the behest of favored interest groups, and consequently nearly every idea for "economic development" involves some harebrained scheme carried out by socialist-type planning that invariably fails.
In 1978, Buffalo began construction on a light rail/subway system. The first portion of the system -- which eliminated auto traffic on Main Street -- was only 5 miles long and opened in 1984 at a cost of $500 million. The system flopped. Planned extensions of the rail line never materialized, and ridership dropped from 7.1 million on 1996 to 5.6 million in 2006. By 2008, even more public money was committed to re-opening Main Street to traffic.
In 2000, some were optimistic about private sector investment when Adelphia Communications Company announced plans for a $125 million office in downtown Buffalo. But by 2002 Adelphia, $2.3 billion in debt, went bankrupt and its principal owners, John and Timothy Rigas, were sent to prison on fraud charges.
The next plan, announced in 2004, was to commit $66 million in public money to entice hunting and fishing retailer Bass Pro Shops to build a 250,000 square foot outlet in downtown Buffalo. Advocates of the plan claimed that the store would bring 3 to 5 million people per year downtown and anchor an "economic revitalization." Nearly five years later, despite the commitment of tens of millions in taxpayer dollars, Bass Pro has not materialized.
Equally ridiculous schemes have been hatched in Rochester. Several years ago, city leaders somehow became convinced that residents of Toronto, a city of 5 million with major league sports, theater, and world-class restaurants, were just beside themselves with desire to come to Rochester, a city of 219,000 with minor-league sports and way off-Broadway entertainment. They solicited bids for companies to run a ferry operation across Lake Ontario, and guaranteed sums of public money to construct harbor facilities for the project.
The ferry was launched in June 2004 -- and went bankrupt by September. The chagrined leaders of the city then decided to use tax dollars to purchase the ferry at a bankruptcy auction for $32.5 million, and contracted with another company to operate the vessel. The project went belly-up for a second time in 2005, forcing the city to sell the vessel at a loss, and pay millions to fulfill other financial commitments related to the ferry.
More recently, a plan was announced in 2007 to commit $50 million in state funds to demolish existing structures in downtown Rochester, which would enable PAETEC Co., a telecommunications firm, to move its headquarters about 10 miles from suburban Fairport to downtown. But by 2008 PAETEC's stock dropped below $1 per share, and the company announced that it was losing millions and would cut more than 200 jobs, putting its new office building plans on hold.
Even the highly-touted "green energy" is present here: Niagara Falls has produced "green energy" for over 100 years, but it's heyday is long past. Today, hundreds of wind turbines dot the hills of rural Wyoming County, but they are not a significant source of either jobs or industry.
Despite these repeated gimmicks to stimulate economic growth, the private sector here has failed to prosper, taxes remain astronomical, and the public "votes with its feet." In 2008, Forbes magazine listed Buffalo as one of the top 10 "fastest dying cities." The previous year, Harvard economist Edward Glaeser wrote an article entitled "Can Buffalo Ever Come Back?" The subtitle was "Probably Not -- and the Government Should Stop Bribing People to Stay There."
Glaeser argued that decades of public spending -- on office towers, sports arenas, urban renewal, and the light rail system -- failed to halt Buffalo's population decline from a high of 585,000 in 1950 to under 290,000 today. The surrounding area has not fared much better; census data shows that the Buffalo-Niagara Metropolitan Statistical Area lost 51,000 people since 2000. Ditto for Rochester; the city's population fell from 328,000 in 1930 to 219,000 in 2000.
People who leave the area tend to head for the low-tax, pro-growth, right-to-work states of the Sun Belt, especially North Carolina and Florida.
But at least the people have someplace to go. If the Obama "stimulus" program replicates the same kind of heavy-handed political agenda and tax policies found in Western New York on a nationwide basis, where will the people go then?
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; US: New York
KEYWORDS: democraticparty; obama; porkulus; stimulus
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It sounds as bad as NYC.
1
posted on
2/18/2009, 7:46:43 AM
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
“...and the population continues to migrate to the Sun Belt at an alarming rate.”
taking their failed and poisonous ideology with them to ruin other areas.
2
posted on
2/18/2009, 7:51:03 AM
by
Ghost of Philip Marlowe
(The Stimulus Package: Preamble to the Democrat's new Declaration of In Dependence)
To: neverdem
Bass Pro shops did build a store about 100miles east of Buffalo...opened the year before IIRC......
NYS is a gorgeous state..unbelievable farm country and lots of trees as well, and wonderful eastern mountains, providing habitat for tons of deer and bear, and moose......
it used to be the numero uno state in apples and had vast cherry orchards and grape orchards and corn fields and dairy cows......
what has happened is that just as the article states...the public sector took over....Rochester and Buffalo and Binghamton have major public universities...we all know that a university based area is going to the leftists.....
well, I can't worry about it....I grieve for the state of my birth but if this is what they want, then there is nothing any of us can do....
3
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:08:45 AM
by
cherry
To: neverdem
Downstate Illinois is just as bad.
To: neverdem
Not where I live please. I have enough to deal with home grown idiots around here. Some of them think themselves conservative and are FLAMING LEFTISTS but don’t realize it.
5
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:11:22 AM
by
txnativegop
(God Bless America! (NRA-Endowment))
To: All
6
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:11:24 AM
by
Cindy
To: x_plus_one
As is the Northwest of IL, especially Freeport.
Sad as it is, I just moved out of NY and am now overseas on a one way ticket. I will make my money here and if, someday, people wake up, I will bring my brain back into America.
It just won’t be in NYC anymore, which should look like Buffalo in just a year or two.
7
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:21:13 AM
by
flushing_kenny
(One by one, I will stop the motors of the world)
To: cherry
Why would Bass Pro invest in a state that has such an anti gun, anti sportsman political troop?
I understand the state has some of the greatest outdoor settings. But it is unfortunate the government of the people, by the people, has ruined the opportunities for the people.
Stories from the rust belt. Lost opportunity. Poverty.
The industrial age was their glory. They ran off all the work. Such a shame.
8
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:33:24 AM
by
o_zarkman44
(Since when is paying more, but getting less, considered Patriotic?)
To: neverdem
Lots of cheap homes in Buffalo, and well before the housing bust. One of the cheapest cities in the country to live I’d read somewhere.
9
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:39:01 AM
by
Lexinom
To: Ghost of Philip Marlowe
Do you live in one of these areas? Have you tried making this point diplomatically to your liberal/transplant family & friends?
10
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:58:53 AM
by
NucSubs
( Cognitive dissonance: Conflict or anxiety resulting from inconsistency between beliefs and actions)
To: txnativegop
11
posted on
2/18/2009, 8:59:30 AM
by
NucSubs
( Cognitive dissonance: Conflict or anxiety resulting from inconsistency between beliefs and actions)
To: neverdem
To: neverdem
My property in NY lost 32% in vuluation this year.
13
posted on
2/18/2009, 10:15:46 AM
by
patton
(SPQA - the last, the least and the lost)
To: neverdem
14
posted on
2/18/2009, 10:23:10 AM
by
Renfield
(Turning apples into venison since 1999!)
To: cherry
I grew up just outside of Buffalo (Grand Island). Haven't lived there since 1977 (The year of the great blizzard). It WAS a great place to grow up. I haven't been back since my mom died.
Three things have killed New York: Taxes, Unions and DEMOCRATS (Incliding RINO Republicans).
To: neverdem
New York State is dead. It’s an economic backwater. I was able to get out from the East Aurora/Marilla area early last year and I won’t look back. What the government, AFSCME, and other public-sector unions have done is beyond criminal. There is absolutely no incentive to invest and grow there. While there’s still money in places like Buffalo and Rochester, it’s OLD money; nothing new is incoming. In NYS especially, politics (read: power) rules. Why anyone would knowingly go into an area like that is beyond me.
It’s a beautiful state (e.g., Finger Lakes, Letchworth St Park, etc) but it’s soon to be populated by nothing but teachers, cops, and toll-takers. I hope that these and other bleeders of the system let me know how it works out; it won’t be pretty.
16
posted on
2/18/2009, 11:47:30 AM
by
Smber
(The smallest minority is the individual. Get the government off my back.)
To: Ghost of Philip Marlowe
With all the NJ and NY folks looking at my house that’s on the market I wonder if anyone is staying up North that has any chance of getting out.
Many, but not all the transplants, want to ‘improve’ us backward hillbillies with the way they did things in their states of origin and rarely cease pointing out how stupid we sound and how ‘behind the times’ and racist we are. You’d think most folks would make an effort to fit into the environment they move into rather than keep the Civil War going.
To: neverdem
If you make the run up old route 7 from Binghampton to Albany, N.Y. across the southern tier, it is one of the most beautiful drives you can make especially in high summer.
It is also one of the saddest. All of the old towns along the route like Unadilla etc., are tired out, devoid of young people and are just kind of waiting for the end of all things. There is no energy there or hope for better things.
18
posted on
2/18/2009, 12:15:15 PM
by
Jimmy Valentine
(DemocRATS - when they speak, they lie; when they are silent, they are stealing the American Dream)
To: Ghost of Philip Marlowe
...taking their failed and poisonous ideology with them to ruin other areas...Amen from Florida.
19
posted on
2/18/2009, 12:23:49 PM
by
FReepaholic
(Diversity = .45 .357 .223 .38 ...)
To: whatshotandwhatsnot
I've seen what you're describing in my own neighborhood. I moved from New Jersey to Pennsylvania about 20 years ago. Since then it seems that the majority of people who have moved in come from either New Jersey or New York. At the time that I arrived 20 years ago the politics were predictably Republican and taxes were relatively low. That has changed dramatically. It's a damn shame because a lot of these liberals made a shambles of their former abodes with their failed socialist policies. Now they're trying to make the same “improvements” over here.
20
posted on
2/18/2009, 12:35:42 PM
by
RU88
(The false messiah can not change water into wine any more than he can get unity from diversity.)
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