Archive for the ‘Blank Slate Media’ category

A Cuomo political comeback? – By George J. Marlin

March 20, 2024

The following appeared on Monday, March 18, 2024, in the Blank Slate Media newspaper chain and on its website, theisland360.com:

It appears that former Gov. Andrew Cuomo is taking steps to re-enter public life.

Following his successful 2006 comeback strategy that led to his election to the New York attorney general post, Cuomo’s public activities are managed in a methodical way.

First there was the 2023 publication of “What’s Left Unsaid: My Life at the Center of Power, Politics and Crisis” by Cuomo’s longtime top aide, Melissa DeRosa.

The most important chapter is the epilogue. DeRosa exposes the shoddiness of the accounts of Cuomo’s accusers and the reports released by state Attorney General Letitia James and the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Despite public threats, DeRosa points out, not one of the accusers has sued Cuomo and five district attorneys have cleared him of any wrongdoing.

Next, Cuomo has been reaching out to constituencies that have remained loyal to him, particularly African-Americans.

Just last week, he appeared at the Mount Neboh Baptist Church in Harlem. In his talk, the New York Post reported he made this humorous comment: “I want you to know as a matter of full disclosure, I am a Catholic. Catholics basically believe the same teaching that Baptists believe. We just do it without rhythm. But we try. We are not as without rhythm as some of our Jewish brothers and sisters.”

Cuomo has also been writing op-ed pieces on pressing public issues.

In a December 12, 2023, in a Wall Street Journal essay titled “Migrants and the Urban Death Spiral,” he declared “the federal government sets immigration policy. It is outrageous to make cities shoulder the cost.”

“Forcing cities to pay for a migrant crisis that they have no business managing,” he added, “is government malpractice. Cities are already struggling and in crisis.”

Two weeks later, in a Post opinion piece, Cuomo went after the governor and the state Legislature for failing to address the migrant “right to shelter” issue in New York City.

“They have the state constitutional authority,” he wrote, “to establish policies such as defining who has a right to shelter, what that entails and who is responsible for the cost. The Legislature could end the current confusion and court cases by establishing a uniform migrant (and homeless) policy for the state.”

Cuomo went on to take a shot at New York City’s state legislators: “Ironically the majority … are from New York City, so they are unfairly burdening their own constituents by imposing the cost on city taxpayers alone.

This year, Cuomo has focused his attention on the MTA’s congestion pricing plan.

While Cuomo concedes he approved the congestion tolls in 2019, he does not believe the MTA should commence the program at this time.

In the Post on March 12, he answered MTA critics who accused him of flip-flopping.

Citing the depressing facts that the city “still hasn’t recovered from COVID,” “office occupancy is still only at 48.5%,” and “mass transit is still operating 29% below pre-pandemic levels,” he concluded that the MTA “must seriously consider if now is the right time to enact it.”

Cuomo asked: “What impact will an additional $15 entry surcharge have on New York City’s recovery in this moment—when the migrant crisis, crime, homelessness, quality of life and taxes are all pressing problems?”

The MTA should address his concerns before imposing the congestion toll on struggling commuters.

In the public arena, Cuomo is coming across as a “liberal with sanity”—a rare species in New York.

And many taxpayers may clamor for just such an elected leader, one who will stand up to the extreme leftist ideologues in the state Legislature or the City council.

So, if Cuomo is eyeing another run, will he take on the state’s hapless governor in 2026 or the city’s hapless mayor in 2025?

In my judgment, running for mayor is the better of the two.

In a gubernatorial primary, Cuomo and Hochul could cancel one another out, thus, permitting a radical to win with a 34% plurality.

In a mayoral primary, however, Cuomo could patch together a winning coalition of working-class whites, browns and blacks. He may even pick up the support of Upper East Side liberals who have had it with Mayor Eric Adams.

With the political knives out for Adams, 2025 may be the year for Cuomo to be the “Comeback Kid.”

Gov. Hochul’s Budget Gimmicks – George J. Marlin

March 5, 2024

The following appeared on Monday, March 4, 2024, in the Blank Slate Media newspaper chain and on its website, theisland360.com:

In a column I wrote in January, I was pleased to point out that Gov. Kathy Hochul “appeared to acknowledge the state’s deteriorating fiscal condition.” The proof of her concern was in her proposed $230 billion budget that called for a modest increase in spending of $3.7 billion.

Then there was Hochul’s extraordinary pledge to protect taxpayers’ “hard-earned money from politicians who want to raise your taxes.”

I, for one, found Hochul’s budgetary proclamation most refreshing. Perhaps she finally realized that there can be dire consequences if the state government does not halt runaway spending.

Unfortunately, however, the governor’s public embrace of sound fiscal policies is nothing more than play acting.

Why, you ask?

Well, as always, the devil is in the details. And the analysis of Hochul’s budget proposal performed by the office of State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli reveals that it is loaded with ill-considered fiscal gimmicks that on the surface give the illusion of responsible stewardship.

Here’s a summary of the comptroller’s findings:

First, the report states that New York’s “structural budget gap is projected to worsen over the next few years.” Accumulated deficits are expected to hit $20 billion between fiscal years 2025-2026 and 2027-2028.

Next there is the issue of the state’s reserve funds. While state statutory reserve funds have increased to $6.3 billion, there are $13.2 billion set aside as “informal reserves” for “economic uncertainties.”

The informal reserves can be spent at any time on favored projects or causes because they are under the governor’s “discretionary control.” The report notes, “There is no statutory basis for such designated funds and no accompanying guidelines or restrictions or deposits, balance levels, how or when the funding can be used or replenished.”

Very convenient, don’t you think?

This financial gimmick will permit the government to expend state dollars beyond the modest increase in spending she announced in January to much fanfare. Don’t be surprised if a significant portion of those discretionary reserves are used to pay for migrant services.

With recurring spending growing faster than recurring revenue, the governor is using an egregious gimmick to coverup the budget’s structural imbalance: “one shot revenues.” There are $14 billion in “non-recurring resources” that will be expended to balance the budget.  The utilization of “one shots” only augments the out year budget deficits.

Then there is the governor’s scheme to “obfuscate the state’s true debt burden.”

The budget circumvents the state’s debt cap “by utilizing a loophole in the New York Debt Reform Act.” It “misleadingly portrays the Gateway debt [authorized up to $2.85 billion currently estimated at $1.4 billion] as if it is not a part of the state’s direct debt burden.” The Gateway project will expand Northeast Corridor rail travel between Penn Station and Newark.

DiNapoli’s analysts also identified approximately $3.4 billion in spending that is exempt from a competitive procurement process and from the comptroller’s contract oversight authority. “These proposed changes,” the comptroller rightly observes, “reduce transparency, competition, and oversight over a significant amount of taxpayer supported state spending.”

To put it more bluntly, the governor can approve without any oversight billions in contracts to cronies and donors to her campaign treasury.

Finally, there’s the comptroller’s not so rosy outlook on the state economy.

While the national labor force has recovered from COVID, the state has not.

With New York not expected to return “to pre-pandemic employment until the second half of 2026,” this plus the ongoing loss of middle- and upper-class taxpayers to low tax states will the comptroller concluded, “continue to pose a risk to the New York economy and in turn its revenue.”

The governor’s talk about being fiscally responsible is merely empty rhetoric. Hochul’s budget is anything but balanced and the in balance will surely grow after the far-left Legislature finishes with it.

If history is a guide, Gov. Hochul will likely surrender to the demands of legislators to spend more on pork projects and on special interests.

Like many of her predecessors, Gov. Hochul is using sleight-of-hand fiscal tricks to finance her budget, leaving New York’s dwindling number of taxpayers to foot the bill.

Albany’s Wasteful Tax Breaks – By George J. Marlin

February 19, 2024

The following appeared on Monday, February 19, 2024, in the Blank Slate Media newspaper chain and on its website, theisland360.com:

Since the turn of the century, New York has granted huge tax cuts on in-state movie and TV production—a cause favored by media companies, studio owners, producers and movie labor.

Here’s a list of the tax credit programs which are targeted at the entertainment industry and the year they were enacted:

  • Empire State Film Production Tax Credit (2004)
  • Empire State Film Post – Production Tax Credit (2010)
  • NYS [TV]Commercial Tax Credit (2007)
  • Empire State Musical and Theatrical Tax Credit (2015)
  • NYC Musical and Theatrical Tax Credit (2021)

These enormously generous programs have cost taxpayers a whopping $7 billion in subsidies since 2004. In effect, taxpayers have picked up the tab for “30% of qualified production costs for movies and TV shows made in the Empire State.”

When the tax credits were first proposed in the state Legislature, advocates argued that Connecticut and Louisiana and other states had lowered taxes on movie production and were stealing business from the Empire State.  Leading Hollywood types explained that while they loved New York State, movie production is a business and they have to focus on the bottom line.

The question now is: Are taxpayers getting a return on these giveaways to the entertainment industry?

Well, the good news is Section 108, Article 8, of the New York State Tax Law requires the Department of Taxation and Finance to hire an outside expert to conduct a “comprehensive analysis of each tax credit, tax deduction, and tax incentive under New York tax law that relates to increasing economic development” to determine the effectiveness of these programs

Such a report on the entertainment industry, performed by the investment advisory firm PFM Group, was posted without any fanfare on the Finance and Tax Department website in January.

And taxpayers should be grateful that E.J. McMahon, of the Empire Center think tank in Albany, picked up on the 360-page analysis and revealed its dismal findings.

Here’s a summary of PFM’s study prepared by the Empire Center:

  • The Film Production credit “does not provide a positive return to the state.”
  • “It is highly likely…that much of the economic activity [attributed to the tax credit] would occur without it.”
  • Television and movie production would have happened regardless of the tax breaks because of New York’s “prominence in U.S. culture.”
  • The jobs subsidized by the credit are “high paying” and thus create “enduring value,” but “it is likely that the production credit will never ‘go away’ in the sense of leaving behind a stable, job growth industry absent the credit.”

“Based on objective weighing of the cost and benefits,” PFM concluded, “the film production credit is at best a break-even proposition and more likely a net cost to New York State.”

However, these failed tax breaks, E.J. McMahon warned, “are likely to be ignored by the Hochul administration and the Legislature’s Democratic super majorities. The taxpayer giveaway to Hollywood East enjoys strong support from a politically powerful, deep-pocketed constellation of producers, actors, labor unions, and real estate interests enriched by the subsidy.”

In my judgment, the government should abolish such companies’ specific economic subsidy programs and use the cash freed up to lower the cost of doing business in the state for all businesses—cut the corporate income tax, lower the cost of Workers’ Comp and reform the Wicks Law, which prohibits the government from using general contractors and thereby inflating construction costs.

The state should stop trying to guess which industries and companies will be winners and losers; it isn’t good at making those calls. The entertainment industry should make decisions on its own after the government performs its proper role of creating a business environment conducive to investment and job creation and providing the transportation and other infrastructure necessary for the state to compete.

The MTA Mess – George J. Marlin

February 5, 2024

The following appeared on Monday, February 5, 2024, in the Blank Slate Media newspaper chain and on its website, theisland360.com:

The MTA is a mess. It is plagued by incompetent management, never-ending project cost overruns, declining services and ridership, crumbling infrastructure, sweetheart union deals, and rampant fare and toll evasion.

One year ago, for example, the governor, local pols, and MTA bigwigs gave themselves high-fives at the opening of the new Grand Central Madison station.  They boasted they did a great job building that marvel of engineering.

What they failed to mention was that the plan to route LIRR commuter trains into Grand Central was approved in 2001 and was to be completed in 2009 at a cost of $4.3 billion.

But, thanks to MTA ineptness, the project was completed 13 years late and cost a staggering $13 billion.

The bungling of capital projects is not unusual for the MTA.

Take the construction of the Second Avenue subway. On the drawing board since 1929, it was finally announced in 2004 that a piece of the plan, 8.5 miles of track with 16 stations, would be completed by 2020.

Thirteen years later, after spending $4.6 billion, the MTA opened, to much hoopla, only 1.5 miles of the subway line. The construction cost more than four times as much as similar new lines in Amsterdam, Berlin, Paris, and Tokyo.

Another problem that impairs the MTA’s bottom line: fare and toll evaders.

The MTA has admitted that subway fare evasion (i.e.: people jumping over turnstiles) cost the agency $690 million in 2022. While the numbers for 2023 are not yet available, the MTA revealed that in the second quarter of 2023, 11% of commuters did not pay, and in the third quarter it jumped to 14%. The MTA expects the total 2023 figure will top $700 million.

What was the MTA solution to curtail turnstile evaders? New subway station “Fare Beater Gates”—that are not working as intended.

MTA Chairman Janno Lieber, after conceding that there are flaws in the gates installed at three stations, said, “We might, in retrospect, have chosen a different model.”

How lame is that?

Then there are the bridge and tunnel toll evaders.  Newsday has reported that “drivers hid, obstructed, or otherwise faked the recording of plates to sneak out of paying 224,000 tolls per month last year at MTA crossings.”

To offset huge cost overruns, rampant fair and toll evasion losses, the MTA’s Hail Mary pass to raise additional funds for much-needed improvements: congestion pricing.

Congestion pricing, which is scheduled to commence later this year, was not approved to help the environment. It was created to collect lots of money. The last thing the MTA wants is less traffic in Midtown Manhattan.

It is projected that the MTA will collect from drivers entering Manhattan south of 60th Street at least $1 billion annually. (A study released by Congressman Josh Gottheimer claims the take could hit $3 billion.)

A billion dollars in annual collections can pay principal and interest on about $15 billion in long-term borrowing.

And that money is sorely needed to maintain and upgrade the transit system, let alone finance boondoggles like the Second Avenue subway.

A report, released by Comptroller Tom DiNapoli on February 1, 2024, “estimates repairs needed from 2025 through 2029, the period covering the MTA’s next capital program, to be released later this year, will cost at least $43 billion, not including the expansion and new priorities to address accessibility, resiliency, and sustainability.”

The report concluded: “With the urgent need to increase ridership, boost revenue, and secure its future, the MTA cannot afford delays in upgrades and repairs that will improve the transit system.”

Wishful thinking? Considering the MTA’s dismal record, I’m not optimistic the agency has the ability to address the comptroller’s recommendations in a timely or financially responsible fashion.

Ultimately, it is the commuters who will bear the brunt of the MTA’s incompetence. They will have to pay higher tolls and fares to endure worsening services, increasing transit delays and deteriorating infrastructure.

New York’s Days of Wine and Roses are Over – By George J. Marlin

January 23, 2024

The following appeared on Monday, January 22, 2024, in the Blank Slate Media newspaper chain and on its website, theisland360.com:

In his first annual State of the State address to the Legislature on January 7, 1975, Governor Hugh Carey said, “In the very simplest of terms, this government and we as a people have been living far beyond our means.”

He went on to say that “now the times of Plenty, the Days of Wine and Roses, are over. We were in the lead car of the roller coaster going up and we are in the lead car coming down. So, we must first recognize the immediate burdens we inherit. There is responsibility enough to go around for all. But if we would master our fate, we must first acknowledge our condition.”

Carey went on to master the fate of New York and saved the state from insolvency and the City of New York and the Urban Development Corporation from bankruptcy.

Fifty years later, the question is will Gov. Hochul have the mettle, like Carey, to say, “the days of wine and roses are over” and to master the fate of the state by bringing government spending in line with reality?

In her January 8 State of the State address, Hochul appeared to acknowledge the state’s deteriorating fiscal and social conditions.

Unlike previous years, she did not promise huge increases in spending to placate every left-wing interest group. She even made this admission: “I can actually understand why some people feel the sun is setting on the Empire State.”

The governor noted that tens of thousands have been exiting New York to live in states that happen to have lower taxes, cheaper housing and better job opportunities.

To curb the outflow, Hochul promised to protect taxpayers’ “hard-earned money from politicians who want to raise your taxes.”

That’s an incredible statement from a governor who has surrendered time and again to tax-and-spend legislators.

Next, the governor conceded that the crime issue is real and not merely a talking point of her 2022 Republican opponent, Lee Zeldin.

“Safety at the grocery store, the synagogue, the subway,” Hochul said, “is always top of the mind.” Thieves who “brazenly tear items off shelves and menace employees,” she admitted, “are not only driving many out of business [but] these attacks are nothing less than a breakdown in the social order.”

Hochul added, “I say: no more! The chaos must end…Let’s back our businesses and workers with the full force of the law and punish those who think they can break the rules with impunity.”

My goodness. The tough-talking Hochul sounds like a MAGA Republican.

But will she follow through by fighting to repeal the lax bail and discovery laws that permit offenders to continue roaming the streets? That remains to be seen.

One subject she failed to address—the sanctuary city crisis. In New York City, Mayor Eric Adams has spent over $2.5 billion this past year to service migrants. And he projects spending more than $11 billion during the next two fiscal years. Such spending is not sustainable. The city’s declining tax base cannot absorb these costs without dramatic cuts in essential services.

To manage this glaring omission, the governor’s damage control squad said the issue would be dealt with in the state budget that was subsequently released January 16.

The $233 billion proposed budget increases spending by a modest $3.7 billion. Despite projected deficits over the next three years totaling $15 billion, there are no spending cuts. The governor could not find one dime of wasteful spending.

As for migrant aid, the city will receive $2.4 billion. Focusing on the issue, Hochul rightly noted “companies won’t do business in New York if there are thousands of people sleeping on the streets or the quality of life is dramatically impacted because the city is forced to cut essential services. We must support the City of New York in this moment to avoid these disastrous effects and to protect our economy and state revenues in the short-term and the long-term as well.”

Defending her budget, Hochul said, “we can’t spend like there’s no tomorrow because tomorrow always comes.”

That’s all well and good. However, Hochul’s real test will be whether she restrains radical legislators who have called for a $40 billion tax increase to fund their spending schemes.

I hope she has the mettle to do so.