Category Archives: North Carolina

It’s All Good ‘Til Someone Gets Hurt

Nice little Wall Street Journal article about the Carolina's varsity basketball players taking on all comers at the courts outside the campus dorms.  Pretty cool but I wonder how long it will last if one of the kids blows an ankle or knee while playing? 'Ol Roy might have something to say about it at that point.

Good News, Bad News for Tarheel State

According to these graphs the good news is that North Carolina has the most organic Christmas tree farms in America, but the bad news is that North Carolina has the fewest librarians per capita of any state in the 'ol US of A.  

By the way, how do you tell the difference between an organic Christmas tree farm and a non-organic Christmas tree farm?

Field Reporting from the Wilds of Greensboro

Former Charlotte mayor and '08 Republican gubernatorial candidate Pat McCrory spoke to my Rotary Club at lunch today.  He did a nice job, and during the Q&A he indicated that at this point he's definitely planning on running for governor again in '12.  Not exactly news, but if nothing else it has me already thinking about what should be an incredibly active campaign season over the next two years.

Dis-integration

The goings-on at the Wake County school board probably hit close to home in Forsyth County, what with our county's move to the zoned school choice (or whatever it's called) a while back.  That happened before we moved to Lewisville so I'm only personally familiar with the current system, and I have to say that as a family we're pretty happy with having our kids go to school just a few minutes down the road. That said, I don't necessarily think that neighborhood schools are better by default.

To help give you my perspective let me tell you that I grew up in Northern Virginia in the 70s and early 80s.  The first school system I was in, Fairfax County, at the time was evolving from rural to suburban, and even with busing there wasn't a lot of integration to be had. When I was in 7th grade my family moved to Arlington County, which was a much more urban area, and you really didn't need to do much to integrate because it just kind of happened naturally; racially mixed, middle class, wealthy and poor neighborhoods existed in every geographic school zone.  The one thing they did do is bus all the English as a Second Language (ESL) kids to one school so that they had all the ESL faculty in one place, and my middle school happened to be that school.  Oh, and the move happened in the middle of the school year so one Friday I got off the school bus from my 90+% white, middle class school and on Monday I got on a bus to go to a school that was probably less than 50% white, 50+% every other race you could name, and Lord knows what economic breakdown.  I learned more about people in the subsequent years in the Arlington County schools than I had before or have since.

So while I don't think you should discount the importance of community, and some of the inherent advantages of having kids go to school close to home, I also don't think you should discount some of the advantages of providing kids the opportunity to spend their days with a cross section of our society.  I'm not smart enough to have all the answers, but I do know that we need to make sure for our kids' sake that we make decisions with all of their best interests at heart.  I think that one of the reasons the Wake County board's move is creating so much controversy is that many folks think that might not be the case.  I'll leave it to the comedian to explain:

 

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The Word – Disintegration
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Early Nominee for Best or Worst Headline in 2011

The folks at the Winston-Salem Journal have generously provided us with an early nominee for the title of "Best or Worst Headline in 2011."  Whether you think it's bad or good depends on your tolerance for very bad puns:

Textile tycoon's death stiffs IRS a century after grandfather fought tax

Death. Stiff. Get it?

Ammo for Those of Us Who Hate the Incentive Game for Biz Recruiting

I'm going to state up front that until Congress legislates them out of existence the incentives that governments now routinely dangle in front of businesses in an effort to locate their operations in their state/county/municipality those inducements are a necessary evil.  I'm not going to sit here and say that my local/state reps are wrong for playing the incentive game because if they didn't play then we wouldn't be in the game at all. Still, I don't like the rules of the game at all and that's why when I saw this article from David Cay Johnston come across my feed reader I was most interested in reading it.

Johnston is reading a book called Investment Incentives and the Global Competition for Capital, a book that looks at what governments around the world are giving away in incentives, and he believes that the authors' estimate of $70 billion/year in giveaways by state and local governments in America is on the low side. Oh, and the Canadians and Europeans are doing a much better job minimizing the costs of these projects.  From the article:

"Estimating aggregate state and local subsidies in America is a difficult proposition because of the lack of transparency at all subnational levels of government," Thomas writes.

Thomas estimates American state and local government giveaways to business have grown to $70 billion per year. I am confident that his estimate is on the low side, for reasons that will become apparent.

While competition to give money to companies is a worldwide problem, the problem is much worse in the United States, Thomas shows. He estimates that American state and local subsidies to relocate existing businesses are six times the location subsidies in the 15 original EU members.

And here's Johnston's take on what's going on here in America:

But what takes the breath away is the increasing size of the welfare given big businesses as governments compete to shower gifts on companies with capital to invest, even when it means hardly any new jobs.

Back in 1967 I got onto the front page of my local weekly with my first exposé, which dealt with tens of thousands of dollars going to a building contractor that had bid low and charged high for a new county courthouse. Thomas showed that today's state and local welfare for businesses requires mechanized shovels to scoop up the cash, compared with spoons for the giveaway I wrote about 44 years ago.

Many investment incentives cover 30 to 45 percent of a factory's cost, Thomas showed. He said that the biggest recent American incentive had a net present cost of $734.3 million. That paid a fifth of the cost of a ThyssenKrupp steel mill that opened this year near Mobile, Ala. It turns out stainless and high carbon steel.

He gives our fair state of North Carolina a little attention in his pillorying of server farm deals which he points out generate very few jobs:

Then there are the North Carolina subsidy deals for Dell and Google, whose motto is "Don't be evil." Tar Heel state officials will not say what the total cost is, nor will the companies. They claim that letting loose the electricity discount figures would involve proprietary secrets.

Oh, please. Anyone in the server farm business can just look at the dimensions of the building and come up with a rough calculation of how much power it will use. Are North Carolinians dumber than Forrest Gump, or will they demand a full accounting?

It is curious how the government collects and discloses finely detailed data on how much tax money goes to the disabled, the poor, and the elderly, and to educate the young, but when it comes to welfare for big business, it just cannot seem to find the resources to gather and analyze the costs.

Strange, too, that many of these obscured, but gigantic gifts come through the good offices of politicians who pose as champions of the taxpayer and enemies of welfare, or at least of welfare for those who actually need it.

Here's the coup de grace for those of us who thought that perhaps Dell closed the 4-year old Winston-Salem plant because of a decline in the popularity of desktops:

Thomas tells how Dell moved a factory from Ireland to Poland in 2009 and then months later closed a four-year-old factory built in large part with North Carolina tax dollars. The Irish taxpayers gave €53.5 million to Dell, while North Carolina gave as much as $242 million. But when the Poles offered €54 million more, it was enough to get Dell to move about 1,900 jobs to Lodz. 

There's no mention of the claw back provisions that led to the city getting back a bunch of dollars (not all of them mind you), but it's still informative to see how we might be getting played.

Last point: I think the reason that NC appears so often in the article is that our state is being quite aggressive in pursuing businesses in an effort to replace the hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs its traditional manufacturing base has bled over the last 20 years.  And as I said at the beginning I think this is a necessary evil in the current environment, but that doesn't make it a smart way to govern in the long haul.

Happy Days Will Be Here Again. Eventually.

Wells Fargo economists say that the economy is improving (h/t to Ed Cone for the link), but that North Carolina has a very long slog in front of it in terms of job creation.  No surprise to anyone who's been paying attention, but interesting just the same:

North Carolina, which had become accustomed  to outperforming the national economy, has underperformed the nation for much of the past decade.  The unemployment rate, which had remained comfortably below the national unemployment rate from 1975 to 2000, has been at or above the national rate for the past decade. Moreover, job growth has been seriously lacking and nonfarm employment is actually lower today than it was at the tail end of the long 1990s business expansion…

North Carolina’s economy also appears to be  on the mend, although a surprisingly weak employment number for the month of November has raised some questions as to how much conditions have actually improved. Private sector payrolls had increased in 8 of the first 10 months of 2010, before plunging by a nation’s worst 11,500 jobs in November. On a year-to-date basis, private sector jobs are now roughly even with where they were one year ago, which is well off the 35,000 jobs we expected to be added this year…  

North Carolina is also facing more structural issues than the nation is. Not only is the state still reeling from the aftermath of the housing  boom, which has weighed on employment in construction and financial services, but it is also dealing with the ongoing restructuring of its industrial base. Manufacturers have eliminated 318,000 jobs across North Carolina over the past decade, with many of the losses occurring in the state’s smaller metropolitan and rural areas. When financial services, technology, tourism and construction were booming, many of these displaced workers could be absorbed in other jobs in the Triangle or Charlotte. Today, however, these industries are growing more slowly and displaced workers are remaining unemployed for longer periods of time…

Using Social Media to Brainstorm Changes for North Carolina’s Government

Former Forsyth County commissioner and NC State rep Ted Kaplan is using Facebook to share ideas on how to reduce the state budget.  He's posting one suggestion a day and thus far we have:

Day 1:Increase tuition rates by 24% (at $4,400 we are the lowest in the land) and reduce the number of years to get a bachelors degree to 3. There may be some summer work. In total the tuition increase won’t cost student's more (less room and board too) but will allow for more students to get degrees.

Day 2:Today’s proposal: To consolidate the admissions offices of the University System. Each applicant sends in one application to the UNC system with a list of preferred schools. The applicant will get back a list of schools which best fits the student. This would reduce the costs for applications. There will be exceptions , athletics and scholarships. The costs of eliminating each schools admissions office and funding a new universal admissions office will save over $30 million and reduce paperwork.

He received over 40 comments on day one and already today, day two, he has five comments. If I was a state leader I'd be considering this as a method of getting some constituent feedback.