ASPCA4EVER
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Strapped cities review corporate tax breaks
Many are enacting 'clawback' provisions when job promises aren't kept
While Michigan has approved expanded tax credits in exchange for General Motors promise not to move its headquarters from Detroit, the city council has been talking about cracking down on tax breaks for GM and other major employers.
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Dave Chidley / AP
updated 3:02 p.m. CT, Sat., Jan. 2, 2010
CHICAGO - Cash-strapped communities have a message for corporations that promised jobs in return for tax breaks: A deal's a deal.
As the economy sputters along, municipalities struggling to fix roads, fund schools and pay bills increasingly are rescinding tax abatements to companies that don't hire enough workers, that lay them off or that close up shop. At the same time, they're sharpening new incentive deals, leaving no doubt what is expected of companies and what will happen if they don't deliver.
"We will roll out the red carpet as much as we can (but) they are going to honor the contract," said Brendon Gallagher, an alderman in DeKalb, Ill., where Target Corp. got abatements from the city, county, school district and other taxing bodies after promising at least 500 jobs at a local distribution center.
So when the company came up 66 workers short in 2009, Target got word its next tax bill would be jumping almost $600,000 — more than half of which goes to the local school district, where teachers and programs have been cut as coffers dried up.
The newfound boldness comes from communities and states that have long bent over backward to lure companies and jobs by offering abatements and other incentives — to the tune of an estimated $60 billion a year in the United States, according to the Washington-based economic development watchdog group Good Jobs First.
The willingness to write — and enforce — the "clawback" provisions comes even as companies across the country struggle and against a broader backdrop of governments getting tough on business practices.
<story source>
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34665699/ns/us_news-life
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Ain't it about TIME...HOLY BAT CRAP BATMAN
Yea for the little people...quit giving those fat cats all of those tax breaks
Many are enacting 'clawback' provisions when job promises aren't kept

While Michigan has approved expanded tax credits in exchange for General Motors promise not to move its headquarters from Detroit, the city council has been talking about cracking down on tax breaks for GM and other major employers.

Dave Chidley / AP

updated 3:02 p.m. CT, Sat., Jan. 2, 2010
CHICAGO - Cash-strapped communities have a message for corporations that promised jobs in return for tax breaks: A deal's a deal.
As the economy sputters along, municipalities struggling to fix roads, fund schools and pay bills increasingly are rescinding tax abatements to companies that don't hire enough workers, that lay them off or that close up shop. At the same time, they're sharpening new incentive deals, leaving no doubt what is expected of companies and what will happen if they don't deliver.
"We will roll out the red carpet as much as we can (but) they are going to honor the contract," said Brendon Gallagher, an alderman in DeKalb, Ill., where Target Corp. got abatements from the city, county, school district and other taxing bodies after promising at least 500 jobs at a local distribution center.
So when the company came up 66 workers short in 2009, Target got word its next tax bill would be jumping almost $600,000 — more than half of which goes to the local school district, where teachers and programs have been cut as coffers dried up.
The newfound boldness comes from communities and states that have long bent over backward to lure companies and jobs by offering abatements and other incentives — to the tune of an estimated $60 billion a year in the United States, according to the Washington-based economic development watchdog group Good Jobs First.
The willingness to write — and enforce — the "clawback" provisions comes even as companies across the country struggle and against a broader backdrop of governments getting tough on business practices.
<story source>
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34665699/ns/us_news-life
*************************
Ain't it about TIME...HOLY BAT CRAP BATMAN
Yea for the little people...quit giving those fat cats all of those tax breaks
