Showing posts with label sales taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sales taxes. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 08, 2014

Think Before Taxing Poor Additional 17%

October 8, 2014, 7:00 a.m.

October 9: Added, below, are comments regarding this blog essay/column posted to the Press-Citizen's online version of the column, and Facebook mentions of the column. They conclude with an emailed comment from a reader, and Nick's response to it. Below that are two comments from present and former Johnson County officials: an excerpt from Supervisor Rod Sullivan's Sullivan's Salvos, and a comment posted directly to this blog essay/column from former Auditor Tom Slockett.

On the Local Option Sales Tax, Think Before You Vote

Nicholas Johnson
Iowa City Press-Citizen
October 8, 2014, p. A11

My response to the dueling sales tax columns on the Oct. 6 opinion page? Think before you vote. That’s all I ask.

Income inequality is as American as apple pie. The wealthy get the largest slices. So it has always been.

The 18th Century sentiment, “Those who own the country ought to govern it,” is attributed to John Jay, our first Supreme Court Chief Justice. It didn’t just burst forth as a talking point from today’s conservative rightwing corporatists or Fox News.

We’re familiar with the results from Washington. One family owns more than do 40 percent of the American people combined. The increased value since the 2008 bank fraud has gone to the upper one percent -– including those very bankers too big to jail.

What we and the media lose with our focus on Washington is that the same forces are playing out in state capitals, county courthouses, and city councils.

It would be hilarious if it was not so inhumane.

Why does the City Council tell us we need this sales tax increase? To make up for lowered property tax receipts, they say. And what are they going to do with the additional sales tax receipts? Why, use at least 40 percent of them to lower property taxes even further.

Read that a second time before you go on. Can you imagine what Jon Stewart would do with that one?

Landlords’ apartments that the occupants don’t own will now be taxed as if they did, with lower taxes for landlords. Guess how those savings will be divided between reductions in rents and increases in landlords’ profits.

The rich become ever-richer because the tax laws are rigged. The wealthy have lower rates on profits from investing money than the working poor have on pay for investing physical effort.

Those who have to spend every dime they earn are the ones hit hardest by the sales tax. (That’s why the quickest way out of the recession in our 70-percent consumer-spending economy would have been to flow money through their hands rather than the wealthy.) [Photo credit: Ehrenreich, Nickel and Dimed.]

Don’t be fooled by this increase of “a penny,” or “one percent.” For the math-impaired, an increase from six percent to seven percent is closer to a 17 percent increase.

Be aware we are playing Washington’s game right here in Iowa City. The Council is offering you a deliberate scheme to shift even more money from Iowa City’s working poor to its upper middle class and rich. Washington’s conservative corporatists would be proud.

[Illustration credit: Working Poor Families Project.]

You see, this is not just tax breaks for the rich -– which it also is. It’s worse. It’s Robin Hood in reverse: further enriching our local well-off by actually taking money out of the pockets of those most in need.

Before you vote to take 17 percent more from those suffering the most, consult your head, your heart, your conscience, your God. Is that who you are? Is that who you really want to be?
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Iowa City resident Nicholas Johnson maintains the website fromdc2iowa.blogspot.com.

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Comments Regarding this Blog Essay/Column

From comments posted to the the Press-Citizen online version of the column:

Mary Murphy, Iowa City, Iowa

Thanks for writing this. I’d like to have seen everyone think more creatively about how to conserve funds before asking for more. Is every capital project truly necessary? For example, my sense is construction work to raise Dubuque St. (IC’s Gateway project) will be far more disruptive than any flooding of Dubuque and cost the taxpayers an enormous amount—Only $10.5 million of its estimated $51 million plus cost will be covered by grants and the rest will be paid for by local option taxes, general obligation bonds, and wastewater operations revenues. If this project was set aside, other compelling projects like creating a secondary access to the Peninsula and extending Foster Road to Prairie Du Chien could be done at a fraction of the cost. Extending Foster Road would also create an alternative access to the downtown to and from the Dubuque St. I-80 exit in the event of future flooding on Dubuque St. Sure Dubuque St. would need some maintenance dollars spent on it; however, not $51 million plus dollars. As another example, Johnson County could work with Iowa City staff to use more consersation bond money to develop parks and trails within Iowa City (saving Iowa City some money), especially since Iowa City voters helped pass the bond. See http://www.icgov.org/site/CMSv2/file/finance/budget/FY15/Adopted/CapitalProjectFunds.pdf for a list of Iowa City’s capital projects.

Mona SpeaksforthePoor Shaw

Nick, you nailed this to the wall. Thank you.

Thomas J. Gill, Coralville, Iowa

But it's only a Penny!, Great editorial, Thank-You

From comments posted to a Facebook notification of the column:

Phil Specht

On the other hand reducing the sales tax and replacing it with a transaction tax covering all movement of money would save the poor and tax where the "willie sutton" wealth is made.

Steve Hanken

Damned straight it would, Phil.

From Mona Shaw's Facebook share of the Facebook post:

Nicholas Johnson nailed this one to the wall. Johnson County, just don't vote for this. It's wrong. It's flat out wrong.

Lynda Waddington

What's the alternative? (Have not yet read Nic's piece.)

Tim Weitzel

The alternative is to not tacitly approve of tax cuts to the wealthy by approving additional regressive taxes that will most affect the poor. There are alternatives to the issue of affordable housing and budgeting for roads is a choice made between staff and city council.

Lynda Waddington

Due to state property tax reform, which included moving multi-family dwellings off commercial roles and to residential roles (bet no one has seen a reduction in rent), Iowa City is facing between $37 & $50 million revenue shortfall. Not saying LOST [Local Option Sales Tax] is answer, just that options for city government are limited.

Tim Weitzel

I'm aware of the limitations on revenue for local government. However, taxing the poor disproportionately greater to make up the shortfall seems highly counter intuitive. The argument has been made that most people won't even notice the difference in an extra 1% but those who are low income will notice. I guarantee it. Tough budget choices are part and parcel of running local government.

And, as a reader's email:

Just finished reading your guest opinion in today's Press-Citizen, and I both agree and disagree with what you wrote.

I agree with your description of our governmental landscape as unfair. Sometimes grossly unfair. Just off the top of my head is the reality that sales tax and Social Security tax both require significantly greater percentages from poor than from the rich. In the meantime, in between time, ain't we got fun.

I agree we have a flawed government, because it was designed and is now operated by flawed people. Someone once said we have the worst possible form of government.....except for all the others.

For instance, it wasn't infinate wisdom that our governor-for-life and tag-along legislature used to determine that buildings filled with rental apartments aren't actually commercial properties.

Where I disagree is your contention that we shouldn't use flawed governing tools, even though they're the only funding tools available. When cities -- especially those such as Iowa City and Ames with tons of apartment buildings -- are stripped of tax funding by the millions, they're forced to use the only alternative sources of funding realistically available at the present time.

Thus, my head and my heart and my conscience will vote in favor of the local option tax. About God, I believe he must have a sense of human, so he's out there somewhere laughing himself silly at what fools these mortals be.

And by the way, percentages and statictis do sometimes fall into the category of damn lies. It's correct that one penny is just one percent of a dollar. But it's also correct that one penny can represent a nearly 17 percent increase.

The whole situation is somewhat modified by the fact that all of us flawed people have at least modest control over what retail itejms we purchase, and important items such as groceries and medicdal items aren't included in the local option taxes.

As usual, I find your writing enjoyable and provocative. And what an uninteresting world this would be if we all agreed on everything."


And Nick's Reply to the reader's emailed Analysis:

You've indicated where you disagree with my contentions. Where I disagree with yours is the assertion that a 17% hike in taxes paid by the poor is "the only alternative source of funding realistically available at the present time." It's a sentiment also expressed in a letter on the Press-Citizen's opinion page this morning [October 9], James Conger's "Hold Your Nose and Vote 'Yes' on Sales Tax", p. A9. He writes, "The local option sales tax . . . is one of the only options available to . . . say[ing] goodbye to services that now serve the poor and the elderly."

Why is it that you, he, and undoubtedly many other local residents, immediately leap from "we need other sources of revenue" to "let's either raise taxes on the poor or cut their services"?

Not only do I believe there are many alternative ways to fund a City's legitimate governmental functions that I'll briefly discuss in a moment -- including expenses that can be cut as well as alternative sources of revenue -- I also believe that some of those alternatives are so unambiguously morally reprehensible (a category that, for me, includes taxes on the poor) that they should be off the table from the beginning of any discussion.

As now-Vice President Joe Biden once told me, "There are some things worth losing an election for."

Similarly, when it comes to budgets, revenue decreases, and cost cutting, whether for government, for-profit or non-profit corporations, I believe we retain moral as well as fiscal obligations to address the human consequences.

"Revenue is needed" was the justification offered by UI's athletic department for entering into contracts with the gambling and alcohol industries. As I said at the time, "Once 'revenue is needed' becomes your polestar, your moral compass begins to spin as if on the North Pole."

"Revenue is needed" was the reason a high school principal once gave me -- and a gathering of dentists concerned about what they called "Mountain Dew mouth" -- for keeping sugar-drink-dispensing vending machines in his high school. He had to do it, he said, in order to pay for the scoreboard for the football field. I said to him, "We've now established that you are willing to assign a higher priority to revenue for a football scoreboard than the health and welfare of your students. Apparently you do not feel constrained to avoid ways of raising money that will be harmful to them, including in this instance ways that are known to increase their rates of obesity, diabetes, and tooth and gum disease, among other medical conditions. That being the case, freed of such constraints, have you given thought to other even more lucrative, though harmful, revenue possibilities -- such as, say, a teenage prostitution ring?" Of course, it wasn't a serious proposal, but it made the point. Half the crowd applauded and laughed, the other half booed.

I'm really troubled by the knee-jerk, first reaction, when government expenses loom, or revenues decline (often, as in this instance, to cover tax cuts for the wealthy), "Well, I guess we'll just have to impose tax increases on the poor, or cut their programs."

That's really the beginning and end of the point I'm trying to make.

Given the sales-tax-increase advocates' conviction that there really are no other alternatives, however, let me list a few. Others might be even more undesirable, even bordering on the illegal. But we are not looking for a "good" alternative solution; we're looking for the "least worst" solution. And from my vantage point anything would be "least worst" than increasing taxes on the poor.

The first place I'd start would be for the City to limit the expenditure of the property tax revenue it does have to historically traditional, public, governmental services and functions. If it would stop providing gifts of substantial amounts of cash, "forgivable loans," tax deferrals, and redirecting dedication of tax revenues to specific for-profit developers and other private businesses, a significant portion of the problem would disappear. See, "TIFs: Links to Blog Essays" and this morning's column by Peter Fisher, "If Lucky's Getting Lucky, What About the Taxpayers?, Iowa City Press-Citizen, October 9, 2014, p. A9.

Sources tell me there are inefficiencies, and cuts in staff, programs and projects, within the City's budget that could also help cover some of the revenue decline.

Corporations and governments confronting budget cuts sometimes simply postpone previously budgeted maintenance, repair, renovation and construction projects -- if they are not essential to prevent death, disease, or injury. For example, the University's College of Pharmacy wanted to begin construction on a new building this year; the project has been postponed. Raising Dubuque Street might be an example of a project that could be postponed by the City.

Increases in fees could be focused on the upper middle class rather than the poor -- fees for building permits, trash taken to the City's dump, water and sewer, weekly trash pickup, and whatever else the City now charges for. It might even charge downtown bar owners for the cost of City employees' Sunday morning clean up of the vomit outside their businesses, and other goods and services provided downtown merchants. It might even cancel the program that enables downtown businesses to spruce up their storefronts at taxpayer expense.

Bear in mind, I'm not advocating any of these alternatives. I don't have to. I'm just making a point about the role of the ethical, moral, philosophical -- and for some, religious -- values that ought to be in play when a government decides that increasing taxes on the poor is its only alternative. This brief list of untested alternative possibilities is only provided for those who insist there are none.


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Rod Sullivan, Sullivan's Salvos
"More Sales Tax"
July 1, 2014, issue; emailed June 26, 2014

[Supervisor Rod Sullivan, a member of the Johnson County Board of Supervisors, publishes a newsletter he calls Sullivan's Salvos. You may request a (free) subscription by emailing him at RodSullivan@mchsi.com. His views on sales tax are especially relevant both because of his official position and the experience and knowledge that position provides. This excerpt from Sullivan's Salvos is republished here with his permission. -- N.J.]

As many of you know, I am a bit of a wonk when it comes to taxes. My interest in this area has led to some strongly held opinions against sales taxes. Here are a few reminders as to why increasing our reliance on the sales tax is NOT a good idea.

Regressivity This means that the poor pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes than do the wealthy. Sales taxes are the most regressive taxes. Income taxes are the most progressive taxes.

In 2003, a person with an income of $90,000 paid 3.2% of her income in taxes. A person earning $19,500 paid 11.1% of her income in taxes.

Relative to income, the poor pay twice what the middle class pay, and nearly 5 times the amount the wealthy pay. Even with exemptions, sales taxes hit the poor hardest.

Who are the poor? 31% (215,855) of the children in Iowa live in low-income families. 10%(70,857) of the children in Iowa live in poor families. Most of the people living in poverty in Iowa and elsewhere are children. There are more poor women than poor men. Plus we are talking poverty here, which is a much higher threshold than free and reduced price lunch.

Children are the poorest segment of our society. I will quote one of my favorite authors, Jonathon Kozol: “Charity is no substitute for economic justice.”

You cannot raise money for human services and believe they will make up for the damage done by a local option sales tax. Governmental agencies cannot improve their budget situations on the backs of the poorest of the poor. The needs of the poor will outpace any and all services that they have helped to fund.

In the Iowa City Community School District, parents and kids at Twain, Wood, and Hills pay a higher percentage of their income in sales taxes than parents and kids at Wickham, Lincoln, and Shimek. Does this make sense?

Wealthy services not taxed The services of accountants, attorneys, and stockbrokers are not subject to sales taxes. These and many other services (advertising, consulting, etc.) used primarily by the wealthy and by large corporations go untaxed. In addition, property taxes are deductible, while sales taxes are not.

Sales Taxes versus Property Taxes “Sales tax proponents frequently use the argument, “Sales taxes are better than property taxes.” First off, this is untrue. This argument is akin to saying, “Drinking is better than smoking, so we need more smoking.” Neither tax option is good for the poor.”

Sales taxes versus property taxes is a red herring The point is not which is worse, sales taxes or property taxes. The point is that BOTH hurt the poor unfairly. We need to create a more fair system of taxation, and we need to do so creatively. Sales & property taxes are not the only two options available. People who claim these are the only options are being shortsighted. We need to challenge our legislators to allow for greater local use of income taxes. This is the fairest way to finance local governments, and should be part of the mix.

What about renters? Rent includes the landlord¹s expenses plus profit. But there is no profit if there is no renter. So depending upon the market, the landlord can adjust her rent as much as she wishes, so long as the unit remains leased. Most landlords raise rents when they can, regardless of taxes. Most try to squeeze out maximum profit. This is supply and demand and will happen REGARDLESS of taxes. Supply and demand drives the rental market-nothing else. This is a fact, and economists of all stripes have backed this up. So before you E-mail me disagreeing with this fact, talk to a damned economist!

Another flaw in this argument is assuming that landlords are somehow entitled to no less profit than they are currently receiving. Owning property is an investment. People are not forced to own ¬ they can invest in CDs, gold, or the stock market. If your investments are not profitable, sell.

Programs that use relative wealth as a measure of eligibility (such as Medicaid) always include resources (property). It is not enough to have low income; you must also lack other resources, such as property. This is because the net worth of a property owner far exceeds that of a renter. Renters have less real assets. Under a sales tax, renters pay the same as their counterparts with real assets.

What about “outsiders”? Won¹t they help pay? People who live outside of Johnson County pay about 20-25% of the taxes collected. These are by and large not people from Chicago, however, but commuters who purchase goods on the way home.

I cannot, in good conscience, support a shift of the tax burden to people who have less money. What's more, I have trouble saying that a person earning$25,000 should pay more tax just because she lives in Williamsburg, Riverside, West Branch, Mount Vernon, Tipton, etc. Especially when the local wealthy would be let off the hook at her expense. It is critically important that we think of our middle and low-income neighbors who commute to this County.

In addition, there are “outsiders” who pay property tax; they are absentee landowners. Most of the buildings in downtown Iowa City are owned by people who live outside of Johnson County. Coral Ridge Mall, Proctor and Gamble, Regency Trailer Court, numerous student apartments, and thousands of other properties are owned by entities that do NOT call Johnson County home.Substituting sales tax for property tax lets these absentee landlords off the hook. Others will pay for the roads and services that add value to their properties.

Doesn¹t everyone else impose a higher sales tax? Yes. Currently, only Johnson County has no Local Option Sales Tax. When you are the only (or one of the only) counties that does something, you are either doing something very well or doing something very poorly. I believe Johnson County has been doing very well by choosing not to impose this tax.

Theological arguments I just happen to buy into a worldview that those who are able need to help those who are not. It is a basic organizing principle of any society, for one thing. Most major world religions subscribe to the idea of helping the poor.

I hold to a viewpoint (influenced by Christian doctrine) that says, “The last shall be first and the first shall be last”; “Do unto others”; “That which you do to the least among you, you do to me”; “The meek shall inherit the earth”; “Charity shall cover the multitude of sins”; “You cannot serve both God and wealth”; and “A rich man has a better chance of putting a camel through the eye of a needle than getting into Heaven.” Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and most major religions share similar doctrine when it comes to caring for the poor first. If you think I am making these up, consult your own religious authority.

I prefer to follow this lead rather than doing more to comfort the comfortable.

# # #

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Updates: Wellmark, Sicko, Gambling & Conference

July 12, 2007, 6:00 a.m.

July 11, 2007, 7:00, 8:00 a.m. (See "Reason Rules," and "Marcus Theatres/Sicko," below, for today's mini-essays)

July 10, 2007, 7:00 a.m.; 3:50 p.m.


Updates: Wellmark, Sicko, Gambling, Fairness, Sales Tax & Resources Conference

Yesterday [July 9] I said I was going to swear off blogging and get some work done -- primarily for want of any news worthy of commentary. One day later, as if to take up my challenge and prove to me that they can find news related to the subjects tracked by this blog, the papers are full of it again today [July 10]. No lengthy essays from me. But you'll at least want the links to the updates.

Wellmark: "Well then, if you're not going to accept our money we're just not going to give you the money. So there!"

[July 12] Marvin Pomerantz, an exceedingly generous benefactor of the UI and other Iowa institutions and projects, a former Wellmark board member, chair and prime mover of the College of Public Health Capital Campaign Committee, says he is "embarrassed" by the rejection of the Wellmark offer to purchase the name of the College in perpetuity for $15 million.

With respect, I think to the extent there is any embarrassment felt by Pomerantz, lead Wellmark director John Colloton and Wellmark CEO John Forsyth -- all involved in this proposal -- it is an embarrassment of their own making. When Forsyth says, as he has, that Wellmark did not envision that its effort to buy the name of the College "would spawn the negative reaction" that it has it indicates either (1) a lack of prior research and consultation or (2) an arrogant sense of entitlement that Wellmark's money should enable it to buy anything, along with a willingness to steamroller over opposition he knew would be there. It's an embarrassment that they thought of the idea; that they went ahead with it; and that they've reacted with such a petulant "I'm taking my marbles and going home" display. Those are the things that make this fiasco embarrassing. What the College did in rejecting the proposal is in no way embarrassing.

On the other hand, there's something the University does need to address. That's Pomerantz' comment that "we think they [the UI administration and faculty] were making rules up as they went along." I have no way of knowing what happened. I wasn't there. But I wouldn't be surprised if Pomerantz is dead on about that assertion.

As I wrote in Nicholas Johnson, "More on 'The Name Game'" in "Name Game & Other Moral Dilemmas," July 4, 2007:

What's happening, as I see it, is but a tiny sub-set of a much larger, looming challenge that I wrote about in an earlier blog entry. Nicholas Johnson, "Greed, Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption" in "Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption," June 26, 2007.

Our so-called "public universities" (increasingly "private" in terms of operating budgets and escalating tuition and other student expenses) are in a period of transition -- although to what is not altogether clear. I wrote about these alternative futures in a Press-Citizen op ed. Nicholas Johnson, "Where Are We Going? Who's Going With Us?" Iowa City Press-Citizen, June 19, 2007.
The issue here is not whether corporations and business are "bad." We are surrounded daily with evidence to the contrary provided by everything from the start-ups of our youngest entrepreneurs to our oldest and largest corporations.

The issue is whether we wish to maintain a sanctuary anywhere in our society from the values and pressures of profit maximization -- churches, national parks, what was created to be a "non-commercial" radio service and is now larded with commercials? The academy does seem to be well into a similar transition from a cloistered sanctuary for the free education of students to a corporate-sponsored and administered jobs training program (from which the banks prosper with the interest on the student loans necessary to pay the ever-rising tuition). Because it is a transition we may well be, as Pomerantz suggests, "making rules up" as we go along.

As I discuss in "Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption," linked above, the issues go well beyond the naming of universities, colleges, buildings -- indeed, anything large enough to hold a plaque. I won't repeat here that list of potential issues confronting our new UI President, Sally Mason. But if we are, in fact, making up the rules as we go along I would humbly suggest that we pause a moment to think through with deliberation the issues and the policies that we wish to pursue rather than continue to wander down a road littered with the kind of improvised explosive devices that we've just seen triggered.

(And while we're doing it, the Press-Citizen's thoughtful editorial this morning [July 12] to the contrary notwithstanding, consider the possibility that it does not necessarily follow that a red hot solution to the Wellmark naming controversy would have been to take the money but not name the building -- even if that option had been available, which it never was. It is the taking of the money (in some circumstances, including this one) that creates the conflict of interest. The naming of the building for the corporate donor only advertises one's willingness to engage in such conflicts, one's having finally swapped one's ethics for money after, as Shaw put it, "haggling over price." Editorial, "Wellmark Should Give a True Gift to Health College," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 12, 2007.

And see, Brian Morelli, "Pomerantz resigns from college committee; Former Wellmark director 'embarrassed' by rejection of plan," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 12, 2007, p. A1; Diane Heldt, "Pomerantz Leaves UI Fundraising Committee; Major UI Donor Upset Over Handling of Wellmark Gift Offer," The Gazette, July 12, 2007, p. A1.

[July 11] Rekha Basu, "U of I Shows Healthy Respect for Its Good Name," Des Moines Register, July 11, 2007 ("The University of Iowa's school of public health deserves a great big bouquet of roses for proving that not everything is for sale, especially not its name. . . . The fact is, insurance industry goals can be at odds with public-health ones. (Go see "Sicko" if you have any doubt about that). Promoting public health doesn't always line up well with the profit motive in health care. . . . It's too bad Wellmark can't respect the integrity behind the college's decision and has chosen, instead, to take its marbles and go home. . . . [because] withholding the money says it was essentially looking for an ad buy rather than wanting to make a gift. No one needs reminding of the extent to which corporations already run most facets of American life, from the chain newspaper to the chain restaurant to the sports stadiums and arenas that already trumpet the big names in corporate America.")

Alan Jensen, "Lower insurance premiums better than naming rights, The Gazette, July 11, 2007, p. A4 ("If Wellmark Blue Cross Blue Shield has $15 million to give the University of Iowa for naming rights, they can most certainly cut our health insurance premiums.")

Brian Morelli, "Wellmark withdraws $15M offer; Official: We will wait for UI community to support naming rights," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 10, 2007

Wellmark executives, still looking for a college where everyone will know their name, have been singing the old "Cheers" theme lyrics: "Sometimes you want to go/Where everybody knows your name,/and they're always glad you came./You wanna be where you can see,/our troubles are all the same/You wanna be where everybody knows/Your name."

"What we've got here is failure to communicate." Two quotes in The Gazette's version of this story tell a lot about the growing gap between the perspective of the academy and that of the corporate world -- a gap that President Sally Mason will confront the moment she sets foot on the Pentacrest.
"traditional and outdated precepts" John Forsyth, CEO, Wellmark, in email to Jim Merchant, Dean, UI College of Public Health: "I would submit that the real challenge for academic leaders like you is to create a mind-set of leading and embracing change . . . over traditional and outdated precepts such as the need to separate academic from commercial interests."

Interim President Gary Fethke: "I regret that the discussion of this generous donation failed to focus on the substantial benefits of corporate partnerships for our students, faculty and staff."
Diane Heldt, "Wellmark Withdraws $15 Million Naming Offer; Insurance Company Says Negative Reaction to Gift Not Envisioned," The Gazette, July 10, 2007, p. A1.

Maria Houser Conzemius, "At This Point it Seems That, 'They're All in it Together,'" Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 10, 2007 (whether presidents live on Church Street in Iowa City, or Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, there seems to be a common expectation from elites regarding their behavior)

Editorial, "Wellmark's Gift Had Too Many Strings Attached,"
The Daily Iowan, July 11, 2007, and Stephen Schmidt, "Wellmark Rescinds $15 Million Offer," The Daily Iowan, July 10, 2007.

Marcus Theaters' "broad commercial appeal" makes Iowa City's residents "Sicko"

The Press-Citizen's editorial page has two items regarding "Sicko" this morning. One is Editorial, "Film's Delay to City Hurts Its Health Care Image," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 11, 2007.

The other presents one of the usual industry attacks on Michael Moore and his film, Brett Skinner, "Canada's 'Sicko' Care," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 11, 2007. Skinner says, for example, "Michael Moore is not interested in . . . facts. He makes fictional films."

For a sample of the kind of point by point by documented point response Moore and his supporters can make to such libelous charges, see "'Sicko Truth Squad Sets CNN Straight," July 10, 2007.

And don't miss James Clay Fuller, "Sicko: Commenting on the Commentaries," Twin Cities Daily Planet, July 10th, 2007 5:26 am ("Apparently there is a rule in corporate journalism that every mention of [Michael] Moore and his films . . . must contain at least two snide observations about his . . . attacks on rich and powerful but somehow –- in the eyes of the corporate journalists -- defenseless people such as the chairman of General Motors, and, if you can slide it in, Moore's physical appearance" -- all from a journalist who says he's never met or communicated with Moore).

If you'd like to watch CNN's slashing, false attack on "Sicko," and Moore's on-camera response (the piece to which the "truth squad's" textual analysis relates), here it is:


Kathryn Fiegen, "Residents Must Wait to See Sicko," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 10, 2007 (theater monopolist executive says, "Marcus Theatres' primary business is to show films with broad commercial appeal." Why does this sound so reminiscent of the instructions a major advertiser once gave the radio networks regarding the programs it sponsored: "There will be no material that may give offense, either directly or by inference, to any commercial organization of any sort"?)

Iowans' Gambling Losses Increase Someone's "Economic Growth" -- Just Not Ours

Rod Boshart, "Casino revenue hits $1.32 billion; New venues fuel 14.9 percent increase in fiscal 2007 figures," The Gazette, July 10, 2007, p. A1.

Fairness Doctrine

Editorial, "Beware of 'Fair' in Talk on the Air,"
The Gazette, July 10, 2007, p. A4.

Reason Rules on Tax Shift Onto Poor: 85% Vote "No" on "Yes to Destiny"

A little-noticed story in last Saturday's Gazette caught my eye. It was a report of a town-meeting-type exchange between Senator Chuck Grassley and some of his West Branch constituents. One asked him, "Would you rescind your authorization of the war?" Another "deplored the inequity of the 15 percent capital gains tax" (reduced from 20%) compared with ordinary income tax rates. A third commented regarding import protections for fertilizer companies -- driving up prices. "It's unfair that farmers are expected to sell their crops on a global market but cannot buy their fertilizer on a global market." Grassley's answers. (1) No. (2) "He defended the lowered tax, saying it expanded the nation's economy . . .." (3) "Grassley took notes." Marlene Lucas, "East Iowans Question War, Taxes; Grassley Defends Policies, Takes Notes," The Gazette, July 7, 2007, p. B2.

This morning's Register reports that, notwithstanding the near-unanimous support of the Des Moines business community's elite, their willingness to put $700,000 of their mouths where their money is, and the overwhelming coverage and editorial support they had from the area's dominant newspaper, the proposal to shift their property taxes to the backs of the sales-tax-paying poor was rejected by 85% of the voters. Jeff Eckhoff and Melissa Walker, "Three counties, one voice: ‘No;’ Only 15% support multipurpose, business-backed levy; Special vote gets unusually high turnout; Ecstatic foes of plan hope lopsided result buries idea for good," Des Moines Register, July 11, 2007

Yesterday (see Morelli's story, linked above within this blog entry) we read Wellmark CEO Forsyth's comment regarding his efforts to put the company's name on the College of Public Health, ""Neither Wellmark BlueCross and BlueShield nor Wellmark Foundation envisioned that their [gift and naming proposal] would spawn the negative reaction that has been reported in news media,' John Forsyth wrote to James Merchant, dean of the College of Public Health on Friday."

UI's athletic program and other administrators were seemingly also taken by surprise earlier at the adverse reaction to the use of the Iowa Fights song and the University's name and setting for an Iowa Lottery television commercial encouraging increased gambling by Iowans.

And so were the board members of the University of Iowa Community Credit Union who were so confident the members would just go along with the new name they enthusiastically accepted from a high-paid corporate consultant, "Optiva," that they didn't think it necessary to check with the members first.

There are two observations I'd make about these stories. (1) The gap between the lives, interests, understandings, concerns and opinions of the wealthy, corporate ruling elites in this country, and those of the 90% of all Americans who suffer at their hands, is growing even faster than the gap in their campaign-contribution-provided incomes and those of the rest of us. (2) There seems to be an upswing in the willingness of the 90% to do something about the uninformed and unfeeling overreaching by those elites. That can only be healthy for America in the long run.

Resources from Resources for Life Conference Now Online

I earlier mentioned "Resources for Life." Presentations at the Resources for Life Conference, held in Iowa City July 7 and 8, are now in streaming audio available here (scroll down to "200707" and then "Resources for Life Conference 07-07-07" and then click on a presenter's name).

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Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Name Game & Other Moral Dilemmas

July 4, 2007, 6:00, 7:00 a.m. [addition of links and excerpt from "Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption"], 8:35 a.m. [addition of "Other News" links], 3:10 p.m. [addition of links to photos of Coralville 4th of July parade (in "Other News" section)]

More on "The Name Game"

Yesterday morning, on reading the Press-Citizen's page one story that the University of Iowa was seriously considering the unprecedented step of naming one of its colleges after a corporation, I made an effort to think through some of the issues this raised in my mind. The blog entry on the subject ended up with 11 categories of issues involved in "The Name Game" surrounding the naming rights to universities, their colleges and buildings. Nicholas Johnson, "Wellmark's College of Public Health" in "The Corporate College of . . .," July 3, 2007.

By this morning it was obvious that I was not the only one who was concerned. Governor Culver, Board of Regents member Bob Downer, and numerous others were raising some of the same points that I had blogged about yesterday, reported in page one stories in the local press. E.g., Brian Morelli, "Possible Naming Raises Concerns; Some Fear Conflict of Interest with Wellmark, College," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 4, 2007, p. A1.

State29, apparently blogging on these issues about the same time that I was, came up with a similar analysis -- although, as always, expressed in much more colorful language. State29, "Enron Field," July 3, 2007.

What's happening, as I see it, is but a tiny sub-set of a much larger, looming challenge that I wrote about in an earlier blog entry. Nicholas Johnson, "Greed, Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption" in "Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption," June 26, 2007.

Our so-called "public universities" (increasingly "private" in terms of operating budgets and escalating tuition and other student expenses) are in a period of transition -- although to what is not altogether clear. I wrote about these alternative futures in a Press-Citizen op ed. Nicholas Johnson, "Where Are We Going? Who's Going With Us?" Iowa City Press-Citizen, June 19, 2007.

Faculties, funded by grateful legislatures and protected by tenure, used to debate issues such as whether it was still necessary to require all Ph.D. candidates to exhibit some fluency in Latin and Greek. Most professors probably did not know -- and would have seen little reason why they should -- anything about their university's taxpayer-funded budget (aside from their own salary).

Today, an ever increasing number of faculty are (a) employed without thenure, and (b) required to personally raise part or all of their own salary and supporting expenses. There's not much talk about Greek and Latin requirements in that environment.

But these are changes for which many faculty -- and those among them functioning as deans -- are ill prepared. Not only do they not have experience, or hold degrees in, "business," they (like the public-policy-driven aspiring young politician) probably did not spend their early years honing a passion to become, and then spend a significant portion of their lives as, a major fund raiser.

We are familiar with the "conflicts, cover-ups and corruption" in business. When State29 headlines his blog entry about the Welmark College of Public Health "Enron Field" it's a shorthand we all immediately understand.

Indeed, there are some who would suggest that "business ethics" is an oxymoron. Notwithstanding our business schools' courses in the subject the scandals continue to fill the pages of our newspapers, the reports of our congressional hearings, and provide grist for feature films. (Michael Moore's "Sicko" is only the latest in a long line.) See, Nicholas Johnson, "'The Corporation' and the Search for Agreement," October 1, 2004 (reflections and suggestions following a UI College of Business viewing, and discussion, of the film "The Corporation").

But the business community has some awareness of the inherent conflict of interest it confronts on an hourly and daily basis. The recent reports regarding products from China -- from pet food, to human medicine, to children's toys to automobile tires -- are reminiscent of our own history of business (not all of it ancient history). Off-shore tax havens, outsourcing manufacturing, reducing quantities while increasing prices, pumping up stock prices with "creative accounting," raiding pension funds, cartels and price fixing among competitors -- the examples are endless.

It is said, "You get what you measure." And when all you measure is what falls to the bottom line (and bounces back in the form of ever-increasing stock prices) there is a great temptation to let moral and ethical values fall as well.

Unlike the business community -- and ironically in some ways -- the academy is much less experienced, sophisticated or reflective about such moral dilemmas. Moreover, we're handicapped -- as are the clergy and many politicians -- with the genuine belief that, because we, our mission and goals are so pure of mind and spirit and set apart from worldly matters, anything we do is of necessity equally pure and commendable. Those in business, by contrast, are aware of the moral and ethical pitfalls. They may choose to ignore ethical issues and focus only on maximizing ever-increasing profits, but at least they are aware of what they are doing. They know what the ethical standards are; they know what they're doing.

Academics often do not.

To help explain, let me repeat some of what I wrote in "Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption." At the time, of course, I had no idea the University of Iowa would ever actually consider selling off the name of a college, or building, to a corporation. I was merely writing about the kinds of potential conflicts of interest, and tough ethical and moral dilemmas our new President, Sally Mason, will necessarily find herself having to address. The discussion helps to set "The Name Game" in the context of a range of ethical dilemmas. Here's an excerpt:
The story illustrates another problem with greed. Once money becomes the sole coin of the realm, and the need for profits is replaced with ever-increasing pressure for ever-increasing profits, conflicts of interest become ever more difficult to resolve ethically.

Years ago magazines aimed at women said little to nothing about the fact that the number of women dying from lung cancer was increasing, ultimately surpassing the number dying from breast cancer. Editors knew the story, they knew lung cancer's relationship to increased cigarette consumption by women, they knew manufacturers were targeting women -- and doing so in significant measure with the ads the companies were running in their magazines. But they needed the advertising revenue and, well, "women probably aren't interested in reading those stories anyway."

The NCAA wants to distance itself from sports gambling, and the gambling industry generally, in every way possible. It expressly forbids association with gambling casinos at NCAA events or in its advertising. It highly recommends that NCAA schools follow the same practice. It has written the UI athletic program with regard to its partnership with the Riverside Gambling Casino. And yet our football program tries to rationalize the gambling partnership while refusing to do anything about it.

This morning's Daily Iowan reports, Ashton Shurson, "Mason, Barta Set to Work Together," The Daily Iowan, June 26, 2007, that our new president has paid proper respect to the athletics program and its director. The story quotes Interim President Fethke as saying, "You have to respect the athletics director's opinion and point of view and trust that person."

Fethke's "respect" was so substantial that he's never (so far as I know) said anything critical in public regarding the NCAA's slap in our face about our gambling partnership with the Riverside Casino. Will the leadership that Mason brings include the ethical, moral and legal issues this relationship raises -- or will she continue the deafening silence from Jessup Hall on the issue because, after all, the athletic program is increasingly responsible for raising its own money, they have to get it where they can, and a university president must show "respect" to the athletic director?

Universities are not immune from the pressures that in corporate American can produce an Enron, or the political pressures that produce a U.S. Congress that simply can't "afford" to stand up to the pharmaceutical industry. Mason has been advised that as much as one-third of her time should be spent in fund raising. Clearly it's a major part of what she has been hired to do, a major part of the "performance" that can produce an extra $50,000 a year under her contract.

As such, she -- like every other big university's president -- will be subjected to similar pressures as the editor who must decide whether s/he can "afford" to run an essential story that will cause a loss of advertising revenue, an athletic director who must weigh the advice (and standards) of the NCAA against the revenue that can come from the gambling industry, or a politician in need of campaign contributions deciding how to vote on a measure that will clearly help her constituents but cause a special interest group to cut off her funding.

How will she decide whether to accept a major contribution from a donor who wants a faculty member fired (or hired), or a program established that is antithetical to the university's mission?

We've already stopped naming colleges and buildings for scholars and started naming them for donors. Are there any limits? The CEO of Home Depot gave $200 million to the Atlanta museum. Would we, for an equivalent amount, become "The Home Depot University of Iowa"? What if Larry Flynt would offer $300 million if we'd change the name to "Flynt University"? (After all there's a "Stanford University" and a "Duke University" -- named for a guy who made his money from tobacco.) Why not a "Flynt University"? We need his money as much as Barta needs the gambling industry's money.

What about a corporation that is willing to underwrite a multi-million-dollar research program -- so long as it gets a disproportionate share of the benefits from what it produces?

How candid should she be about, or should she even acknowledge at all, a potential scandal that could deal a blow to fund raising?

The question is not whether she will confront such conflicts. Of course she will. It goes with the territory in an age in which what used to be educational institutions with public support have developed more in common with for-profit corporations. The question is how she will respond to them. These conflicts often involve shades of gray. The more profitable choice can often be rationalized in some way -- as Barta tries to do with gambling money.

How many bars are there within walking distance of the campus -- 40? They are so profitable -- and therefore so politically powerful -- that the City Council seems incapable of doing anything meaningful to curb students' binge drinking. Well, who are these customers anyway? They are students. The University's students. Our students. At a time when the University is in need of every source of income it can find, when it issues lucrative monopoly contracts to Coca Cola (so it can raise its prices) notwithstanding the product's health impact on students, why just wink at the profits from binge drinking when the University could be sharing in them? With a little ingenuity I think the University could be pulling in the lion's share of that money with its own entertainment venues. Something to think about.

I imagine that even President Mason cannot now imagine the choices -- the potential conflicts, cover-ups and corruption -- she will have to confront or how she will resolve them.

This morning's Register story illustrates how "just a little harmless doctoring of the promotional literature" is not only morally wrong, but can backfire. If those putting comments on that Register story represent the majority they may be, that may just be "all she wrote" on the sales tax for the wealthy.

The University's story? That's yet to be written.
Nicholas Johnson, "Greed, Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption" in "Conflicts, Cover-Ups and Corruption," June 26, 2007.

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Other News:

Pictures of the Coralville Fourth of July Parade, with emphasis on presidential candidates (listed alphabetically by last name, Democrats and then Republicans) and other elected officials, separated by shots of other floats and scenes.

Note: As always, The Gazette's stories can be found at its main Web site.)

The Fourth of July: Speaking Truth to Power

Leonard Pitts, Jr., "America is at War With Itself," The Gazette, July 4, 2007 ("it seems to me it is not the people who make America great, but America that has made the people great -- [the idea of America] the idea of American exceptionalism")

And thanks to The Gazette for reminding us, today, of the full text of the Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776, The Gazette, July 4, 2007, p. A7 -- the ultimate speaking of truth to power that made possible the birth of our nation.

Senator Biden's and Clinton's Visit

Here are the photos on my Picasa Web site for the Senator Biden event July 2, and Senator Clinton event July 3.

As always, John Deeth is the best (most thorough) source for political events. See John Deeth, "Biden Time on the Ped Mall," July 2, 2007, and "Clinton and Clinton Live at U Iowa," July 3, 2007 (with photos -- better than mine).

Rachel Gallegos, "Clintons visit Iowa City; Hillary Clinton talks health care, education in campaign stop," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 4, 2007

James Q. Lynch, "Former First Lady Ready to Lead, Clintons Tell I.C.," The Gazette, July 4, 2007, p. A1.

Thomas Beaumont, "Clinton Says Her Campaign Has Recovered from Slow Start," Des Moines Register, July 4, 2007.

Wellmark College of Public Health

Brian Morelli, "Possible Naming Raises Concerns; Some Fear Conflict of Interest with Wellmark, College," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 4, 2007, p. A1.

Diane Heldt, "Wellmark College at the UI?; Plan to put corporate name on school in exchange for gift prompts concern," The Gazette, July 4, 2007, p. A1.

Greg Thompson, "Some New Names for Other UI Departments," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 4, 2007.

State29, "Enron Field," July 3, 2007.


Our "Destiny"? Shifting Taxes From the Wealthy to the Backs of the Poor

Melissa Walker, "'Destiny' to hurt poor the most, economist says; Those living on fixed incomes spend more of their money on taxable goods, they say," Des Moines Register, July 4, 2007.


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[Note: If you're new to this blog, and interested in the whole UI President Search story . . .

This blog began in June 2006 and has addressed, and continues to addresses, a number of public policy, political, media, education, economic development, and other issues -- not just the UI presidential search. But that is the subject to which most attention has been focused in blog entries between November 2006 and June 2007.

The presidential search blog entries begin with Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search I," November 18, 2006. They end with Nicholas Johnson, "UI Held Hostage Day 505 - Next (Now This) Week," June 10, 2007 (100-plus pages printed; a single blog entry for the events of June 10-21 ("Day 516"), plus over 150 attached comments from readers), and Nicholas Johnson, "UI Hostages Free At Last -- Habemas Mamam!," June 22, 2007.

Wondering where the "UI Held Hostage" came from? Click here. (As of January 25 the count has run from January 21, 2006, rather than last November.)

For any given entry, links to the prior 10 will be found in the left-most column. Going directly to FromDC2Iowa.Blogspot.com will take you to the latest. Each entry related to the UI presidential search contains links to the full text of virtually all known, non-repetitive media stories and commentary, including mine, since the last blog entry. Together they represent what The Chronicle of Higher Education has called "one of the most comprehensive analyses of the controversy." The last time there was an entry containing the summary of prior entries' commentary (with the heading "This Blog's Focus on Regents' Presidential Search") is Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search XIII -- Last Week," December 11, 2006.

My early proposed solution to the conflict is provided in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search VII: The Answer," November 26, 2006.

Searching: the fullest collection of basic documents related to the search is contained in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search - Dec. 21-25," December 21, 2006 (and updated thereafter), at the bottom of that blog entry under "References." A Blog Index of entries on all subjects since June 2006 is also available. And note that if you know (or can guess at) a word to search on, the "Blogger" bar near the top of your browser has a blank, followed by "SEARCH THIS BLOG," that enables you to search all entries in this Blog since June 2006.]

# # #

Sunday, July 01, 2007

Gambling, Taxes and Cats

July 1, 2007, 8:00, 10:15 a.m. [times reflect additions to the entry -- for the benefit of those few individuals who check back occasionally during the day -- as well as reflecting the fact that what is called "life" occasionally interrupts blogging]

A number of stories today -- with links and commentary to come: "the beat goes on" (with President Sally Mason's public relations pieces behind us, today is Ken's turn; but when will we learn the true life stories of their three cats?); Iowa's economic future looking up (today is tax shift day and with one more gambling casino now open can Iowans' prosperity be far behind?); Des Moines' voters smarter than Iowa City's (poll indicates 17% hike in sales tax shift from rich to poor seemingly understood for what it is by residents).

# # #

The Gazette gives two stories equal billing on page one below the fold this Sunday: Diane Heldt, "Other Half of Mason Team Has His Own Plans for UI; Hopes teaching, writing background Will Serve Him in IC," The Gazette, July 1, 2007, p. A1; Orian Love, "Ready to Roll: Waterloo Welcomes Isle Casino," The Gazette, July 1, 2007, p. A1 (both available here).

The Gazette notes in its editorial that Iowa City voters were willing to increase their sales tax by 20% notwithstanding that neither they nor the school board had a clue how the money was going to be spent. (It was ostensibly a "school infrastructure local option" sales tax, hence "SILO"). Editorial, "Changes? A Penny for Your Thoughts," The Gazette, July 1, 2007, p. A7.

Meanwhile, thank goodness, the Press-Citizen is able to report that the tax will have no effect on the availability of SHOPPING as locals' primary leisure time activity, not to mention treatment for depression and contribution to Americans' mounting debt. Rob Daniel, "New Tax to Go Into Effect Today; Most Shoppers Say They Are Undeterred," Iowa City Press-Citizen, July 1, 2007.

However, in Des Moines, it may not be the "Destiny" of those who don't own property to accept a shift of tax payments from property owners onto the backs of the poor. Apparently they've fallen for "trust me" one time too many. The current poll indicates that, by 61% to 32%, potential voters are saying "No" to "Yes to Destiny." Melissa Walker and Jonathan Roos, "'Destiny' Faces 2-to-1 Opposition; A Poll Finds a Lack of Confidence in Public Officials to Spend the Money in the Best Interests of Residents," Des Moines Register, July 1, 2007, p. 1A.

And Rekha Basu uses "Destiny" as but one example of why the "liberal" and "conservative" labels have become virtually devoid of meaning and utility. Rekha Basu, "Political Labels Not So Clear Now," Des Moines Register, July 1, 2007, p. OP3. Her other examples include immigration reform, single-payer universal health care, environmental protection, and government spending. (I'm not going to repeat how she builds her case for each; if you're interested click on the link and read the column; it's not that long.)

General semanticists make the point that what we say, and the way we say it, is more a function of how the product of our various sensory apparatus is processed into speech by the electro-chemical soup inside our skulls than it is truly reflective of anything going on outside our skins.

They also refer to what they call "purr words" and "slur words." Some words are designed to (at least in part) invoke more of an emotional than an analytical response. They are sometimes used deliberately for that purpose -- in advertising or political speeches, say. And sometimes they've become so common that a speaker may use them without reflecting on their emotional content.

In any event, it seems to me that is what has now happened to "liberal" and "conservative." They have ceased to be very descriptive of anything, and certainly not very helpful in analyzing public policy issues -- for the reasons Ms. Baku points out, and more.

They tell you very little regarding the public policy being discussed -- indeed, very little about the person being described. All they really tell you is that, coming from some people, the charge of "liberal" (like the derogatory terms used for Italians, Hispanics, African-Americans, Jews and others) is that the speaker disagrees with the proposal, or the person, being so described. (Ditto for "conservative" coming from others.)

As Ms. Basu concludes, "each of us needs to carefully examine the issuesbeneath the labels to see who really wins and loses."

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Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Conflicts, Cover-ups and Corruption

June 26, 2007, 7:40 a.m. [times reflect additions to the entry -- for the benefit of those few individuals who check back occasionally during the day -- as well as reflecting the fact that what is called "life" occasionally interrupts blogging]

I'm going to try to attend Governor Bill "What Makes You Think You Can Be President?" Richardson's event this morning (10:30, Iowa City Public Library, Meeting Room A), and if blogger John Deeth is not there to cover it (in which case he will leave nothing more to be said about it) provide you a little commentary. He stopped by the Register's editorial board yesterday and received for his efforts what I would consider a very upbeat, favorable column. See, Andie Dominick, "Richardson packs jokes, thick resumé," Des Moines Register, June 26, 2007

Meanwhile . . .

Greed, Conflicts, Cover-ups and Corruption Yesterday I used a movie line in describing the central Iowa campaign to increase the sales tax -- and use the revenue to lower the property taxes of businesses and other property owners: "Greed is good." Nicholas Johnson, "'Greed Is Good' - Poverty? 'Yes, It's Your Destiny,'" June 25, 2007. It was a commentary addressing, I guess one would have to say, the morality of the wealthy using their economic and political power to shift the cost of government services (many of which benefit them disproportionately anyway, e.g., infrastructure, TIFs, tax forgiveness and other incentives) from themselves onto the backs of those least able to pay. Note, not incidentally, that an increase in sales taxes from 6 cents to 7 cents is not a "one penny" increase; it's a nearly 17% increase -- being advocated by the very folks who are usually supporting candidates who campaign on "cutting taxes" (by cutting programs not benefiting the wealthy).

Yesterday the comments on the Register's story included those complaining that the paper had become an advocate for the tax hike and that its "news" stories ought to be on the opinion page. No one will be saying that today. [There are 12 comments as of 8:00 a.m. One of the better, earlier comments, has for some reason been removed. None supports the tax-hike-shift proposal.] See, Jeff Eckhoff, "Woman denies she touted 'Destiny'; I don't even pay property taxes, Urbandale senior asserts," Des Moines Register, June 26, 2007. The story details efforts of the tax-hike-and-shift backers to misrepresent the proposal (mentioning that it will cut property taxes without mentioning it will increase sales taxes), and in the main story in the piece, using the photo of an 82-year-old woman who has long lived in apartments and pays no property taxes, along with a "quote" she never uttered, to advance their campaign.

(Wondering what State29 thinks about all of this? I'll be you can guess. State29, "The Project Destiny Scam," June 26, 2007.)

The story illustrates another problem with greed. Once money becomes the sole coin of the realm, and the need for profits is replaced with ever-increasing pressure for ever-increasing profits, conflicts of interest become ever more difficult to resolve ethically.

Years ago magazines aimed at women said little to nothing about the fact that the number of women dying from lung cancer was increasing, ultimately surpassing the number dying from breast cancer. Editors knew the story, they knew lung cancer's relationship to increased cigarette consumption by women, they knew manufacturers were targeting women -- and doing so in significant measure with the ads the companies were running in their magazines. But they needed the advertising revenue and, well, "women probably aren't interested in reading those stories anyway."

The NCAA wants to distance itself from sports gambling, and the gambling industry generally, in every way possible. It expressly forbids association with gambling casinos at NCAA events or in its advertising. It highly recommends that NCAA schools follow the same practice. It has written the UI athletic program with regard to its partnership with the Riverside Gambling Casino. And yet our football program tries to rationalize the gambling partnership while refusing to do anything about it.

This morning's Daily Iowan reports, Ashton Shurson, "Mason, Barta Set to Work Together," The Daily Iowan, June 26, 2007, that our new president has paid proper respect to the athletics program and its director. The story quotes Interim President Fethke as saying, "You have to respect the athletics director's opinion and point of view and trust that person."

Fethke's "respect" was so substantial that he's never (so far as I know) said anything critical in public regarding the NCAA's slap in our face about our gambling partnership with the Riverside Casino. Will the leadership that Mason brings include the ethical, moral and legal issues this relationship raises -- or will she continue the deafening silence from Jessup Hall on the issue because, after all, the athletic program is increasingly responsible for raising its own money, they have to get it where they can, and a university president must show "respect" to the athletic director?

Universities are not immune from the pressures that in corporate American can produce an Enron, or the political pressures that produce a U.S. Congress that simply can't "afford" to stand up to the pharmaceutical industry. Mason has been advised that as much as one-third of her time should be spent in fund raising. Clearly it's a major part of what she has been hired to do, a major part of the "performance" that can produce an extra $50,000 a year under her contract.

As such, she -- like every other big university's president -- will be subjected to similar pressures as the editor who must decide whether s/he can "afford" to run an essential story that will cause a loss of advertising revenue, an athletic director who must weigh the advice (and standards) of the NCAA against the revenue that can come from the gambling industry, or a politician in need of campaign contributions deciding how to vote on a measure that will clearly help her constituents but cause a special interest group to cut off her funding.

How will she decide whether to accept a major contribution from a donor who wants a faculty member fired (or hired), or a program established that is antithetical to the university's mission?

We've already stopped naming colleges and buildings for scholars and started naming them for donors. Are there any limits? The CEO of Home Depot gave $200 million to the Atlanta museum. Would we, for an equivalent amount, become "The Home Depot University of Iowa"? What if Larry Flynt would offer $300 million if we'd change the name to "Flynt University"? (After all there's a "Stanford University" and a "Duke University" -- named for a guy who made his money from tobacco.) Why not a "Flynt University"? We need his money as much as Barta needs the gambling industry's money.

What about a corporation that is willing to underwrite a multi-million-dollar research program -- so long as it gets a disproportionate share of the benefits from what it produces?

How candid should she be about, or should she even acknowledge at all, a potential scandal that could deal a blow to fund raising?

The question is not whether she will confront such conflicts. Of course she will. It goes with the territory in an age in which what used to be educational institutions with public support have developed more in common with for-profit corporations. The question is how she will respond to them. These conflicts often involve shades of gray. The more profitable choice can often be rationalized in some way -- as Barta tries to do with gambling money.

How many bars are there within walking distance of the campus -- 40? They are so profitable -- and therefore so politically powerful -- that the City Council seems incapable of doing anything meaningful to curb students binge drinking. Well, who are these customers anyway? They are students. The University's students. Our students. At a time when the University is in need of every source of income it can find, when it issues lucrative monopoly contracts to Coca Cola (so it can raise its prices) notwithstanding the product's health impact on students, why just wink at the profits from binge drinking when the University could be sharing in them? With a little ingenuity I think the University could be pulling in the lion's share of that money with its own entertainment venues. Something to think about.

I imagine that even President Mason cannot now imagine the choices -- the potential conflicts, cover-ups and corruption -- she will have to confront or how she will resolve them.

This morning's Register story illustrates how "just a little harmless doctoring of the promotional literature" is not only morally wrong, but can backfire. If those putting comments on that Register story represent the majority they may be, that may just be "all she wrote" on the sales tax for the wealthy.

The University's story? That's yet to be written.

# # #

[Note: If you're new to this blog, and interested in the whole UI President Search story . . .

This blog began in June 2006 and has addressed, and continues to addresses, a number of public policy, political, media, education, economic development, and other issues -- not just the UI presidential search. But that is the subject to which most attention has been focused in blog entries between November 2006 and June 2007.

The presidential search blog entries begin with Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search I," November 18, 2006. They end with Nicholas Johnson, "UI Held Hostage Day 505 - Next (Now This) Week," June 10, 2007 (100-plus pages printed; a single blog entry for the events of June 10-21 ("Day 516"), plus over 150 attached comments from readers), and Nicholas Johnson, "UI Hostages Free At Last -- Habemas Mamam!," June 22, 2007.

Wondering where the "UI Held Hostage" came from? Click here. (As of January 25 the count has run from January 21, 2006, rather than last November.)

For any given entry, links to the prior 10 will be found in the left-most column. Going directly to FromDC2Iowa.Blogspot.com will take you to the latest. Each entry related to the UI presidential search contains links to the full text of virtually all known, non-repetitive media stories and commentary, including mine, since the last blog entry. Together they represent what The Chronicle of Higher Education has called "one of the most comprehensive analyses of the controversy." The last time there was an entry containing the summary of prior entries' commentary (with the heading "This Blog's Focus on Regents' Presidential Search") is Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search XIII -- Last Week," December 11, 2006.

My early proposed solution to the conflict is provided in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search VII: The Answer," November 26, 2006.

Searching: the fullest collection of basic documents related to the search is contained in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search - Dec. 21-25," December 21, 2006 (and updated thereafter), at the bottom of that blog entry under "References." A Blog Index of entries on all subjects since June 2006 is also available. And note that if you know (or can guess at) a word to search on, the "Blogger" bar near the top of your browser has a blank, followed by "SEARCH THIS BLOG," that enables you to search all entries in this Blog since June 2006.]

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Monday, June 25, 2007

"Greed is Good" - Poverty? "Yes, It's Your Destiny"

June 25, 2007, 7:15, 9:00 a.m. [times reflect additions to the entry -- for the benefit of those few individuals who check back occasionally during the day -- as well as reflecting the fact that what is called "life" occasionally interrupts blogging]

Three items this morning:

Here's the latest in our "corporatized government" effort to "rob from the poor and give to the rich" -- the central Iowa "Yes to Destiny" campaign. I guess that means, "Yes, suck it up and accept it; your destiny is to continue to make us richer." All you can give the backers credit for is their lack of hypocrisy. There's no pretense of the "SILO" suggestion that "we're doing it for the kids." The stated purpose of the proposed sales tax (aside from some spare change) is to transfer local taxes from those who own property to those who can't afford to; a sales tax the purpose of which is to reduce property taxes. No duplicity here; they tell you, straight out, as Michael Douglas' character Gordon Gekko put it in the 1987 movie "Wall Street," "Greed is good." Before you read the story, read the comments (three as of this morning [now 14 by 11:50 a.m.]). Those writers are "right on." You'll find their comments at the bottom of the screen for Donnelle Eller, "Venues approach 'Destiny' plan as lifeblood," Des Moines Register, June 24, 2007.

More on indoor rain forests, attractions and economic development. John Carlson had a column yesterday about the Iowa Speedway in Newton and the "Iowa Corn Indy." John Carlson, "Iowa Corn Indy 250 revs up town that's seen tough times," Des Moines Register, June 24, 2007. Auto racing is one of the fastest growing attractions in the country, and it brought 35,000 people to Newton. I suspect the town would rather see a replacement for the 2000 Maytag jobs it's lost than 35,000 one-day tourists. But it's a real accomplishment, and congratulations to Newton!

It's another example of some of the economic realities regarding attractions as revenue-generating tourist attractions in Iowa. Gambling, auto racing, rock concerts, and football (and not necessarily in that order) are what bring out the crowds. Newton had roughly the same number of visitors in one day as the Old Capitol, Iowa Hall, or Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and birthplace have in an entire year.

Quasi-educational attractions serve a real purpose (including school children's tours), need and deserve our support -- private and public. But according to the best economists (and experience of other Iowa attractions) something like the proposed Pella indoor rain forest, a quasi-educational attraction at best, will never generate the fans that a winning Hawkeye football team can -- let alone the 1.5 million visitors yearly the promoters have sometimes predicted. (That's a number that would require every man, woman and child in Iowa, from new born babes to the terminally ill, to visit the place and pay the full admission fee every two years for the entirety of their lives. It's just not likely to happen -- especially once located a long drive off of Interstate 80.)

Finally, face it, Iowa is not a "tourist destination" for most Americans. That's not to say we shouldn't create more parks, trails and greenbelts. We should. For our own benefit if nothing else. (Costa Rica devotes more of its land area, 25%, to parks than any other country on earth. For Iowa, that would be the entirety of nearly 25 of our 99 counties. Instead, Iowa is one of, if not the, bottom states in the U.S. for percentage of land in parks and forests.) But our beautiful (to me) farms and prairie grass preserves will never compete for tourists with the national parks, skiing and mountain climbing in the Rockies; the beaches of the East and West coast states; Caribbean cruises; the urban attractions of New York, San Francisco and Las Vegas; or foreign travel.

Fortunately, they don't need to. To our agricultural and manufacturing base, the new ideas and start up corporations from our Regents' universities and entrepreneurial centers, we are now adding the alternative energy sources of biomass, wind and hydro. The 35,000 good paying, full time jobs they are capable of creating will, in the long run, do far more for Iowa's economic development than 35,000 racing fans sitting in bleachers in Newton for one day -- "not that there's anything wrong with that."

UI Prez Search and Executive Compensation. The Des Moines Register runs as an Associate Press Story this morning, "Mason's pay bump at U of I may affect her state peers," Des Moines Register, June 25, 2007. And see in that connection, Nicholas Johnson, "Executive Compensation" in "Prez Mason & Now What? - Life Goes On," June 23, 2007.

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[Note: If you're new to this blog, and interested in the whole UI President Search story . . .

This blog began in June 2006 and has addressed, and continues to addresses, a number of public policy, political, media, education, economic development, and other issues -- not just the UI presidential search. But that is the subject to which most attention has been focused in blog entries between November 2006 and June 2007.

The presidential search blog entries begin with Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search I," November 18, 2006. They end with Nicholas Johnson, "UI Held Hostage Day 505 - Next (Now This) Week," June 10, 2007 (100-plus pages printed; a single blog entry for the events of June 10-21 ("Day 516"), plus over 150 attached comments from readers), and Nicholas Johnson, "UI Hostages Free At Last -- Habemas Mamam!," June 22, 2007.

Wondering where the "UI Held Hostage" came from? Click here. (As of January 25 the count has run from January 21, 2006, rather than last November.)

For any given entry, links to the prior 10 will be found in the left-most column. Going directly to FromDC2Iowa.Blogspot.com will take you to the latest. Each entry related to the UI presidential search contains links to the full text of virtually all known, non-repetitive media stories and commentary, including mine, since the last blog entry. Together they represent what The Chronicle of Higher Education has called "one of the most comprehensive analyses of the controversy." The last time there was an entry containing the summary of prior entries' commentary (with the heading "This Blog's Focus on Regents' Presidential Search") is Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search XIII -- Last Week," December 11, 2006.

My early proposed solution to the conflict is provided in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search VII: The Answer," November 26, 2006.

Searching: the fullest collection of basic documents related to the search is contained in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search - Dec. 21-25," December 21, 2006 (and updated thereafter), at the bottom of that blog entry under "References." A Blog Index of entries on all subjects since June 2006 is also available. And note that if you know (or can guess at) a word to search on, the "Blogger" bar near the top of your browser has a blank, followed by "SEARCH THIS BLOG," that enables you to search all entries in this Blog since June 2006.]

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Saturday, June 02, 2007

UI Held Hostage Day 497 - Search Schedule

June 2, 2007, 7:30 a.m., 8:25 a.m., 9:45 a.m., 2:20 p.m. (response to comment on Search involving Provost Hogan, and link to Erin Jordan's story; addition of UI Budget and Sullivan on Sales Taxes)

As reported here yesterday, there will be on-campus interviews of the UI presidential candidate finalists the week of June 11. Today's stories reveal some more details of those visits -- along with a couple of significant quotes from Regents President Michael Gartner.

Meanwhile, the Press-Citizen's suit against the Regents for their alleged violations of Iowa's open meetings law during Search I has raised a significant issue for the judge.

The UI's budget from the Regents for next year appears to be exactly as Regents COO Gary Steinke has characterized it: "complicated."

And we may add an excerpt from Johnson County Board of Supervisors member Rod Sullivan regarding sales tax issues, and possibly a report and photos from a gathering yesterday of and for the prestigeous Iowa Policy Project.

Links and commentary will be added throughout the morning.

UI President Search: Campus Visits Details

The present plan is that Monday through Friday the week of June 10 each of five finalists will spend one day, in turn, on campus. They'll arrive the evening before their day, spend the day visiting with, mostly, university administrators, have an open public session from 3:45-4:45, one-half hour of which will be devoted to their "vision" for research universities, and depart the morning of the next day.

What happens next is not clear. The Regents may be around on the 15th and 16th, and may not. Even if they are, would this mean that whoever is interviewed on Monday, and returns home Tuesday, would fly back on Saturday? Those details are yet to come. Gartner has said they don't want to "rush." Given that they will be well beyond "UI Held Hostage Day 500" there's little risk of that.

Gartner says "I certainly want them [Regents' interviews of candidates] open and public." Most significant, he preceded that statement with, "I'm just one vote, but . . .." That is a major, major change from his speaking as if he were the entire Board of Regents. I think the guy is entitled to a lot of credit for both statements.

The candidates' names have not been, and will not be, revealed until their arrival -- although The Gazette has learned and passed along to its readers that two are university presidents and three are provosts. Gartner and Steinke have volunteered that even they don't know the names. Apparently no reporter has asked Search Committee II Chair, Dean David Johnsen, why he is refusing to reveal their names now, and he has not volunteered an explanation. As I've discussed recently in this blog, that makes no sense to me whatsoever.

The net result of this approach is that the Regents, University and Iowa City communities, the media, and Search Committee II itself, will have access to significantly less information about these five finalists. There are severe limitations to how much information any individual can gather about a candidate -- from the Internet, friends and acquaintances around the world -- during five 24-hour periods one right after the other. There will be virtually no time for comparing notes with others. This is especially so if one is gainfully employed during that week, or has other things to do than devote each full day to research while also attending meetings. And even if that kind of time is available it will be no small task to try to keep all of this straight in one's head.

Search Committee II is welcoming input from those in the University, and Iowa City community, who participate in this process. (As Erin Jordan reports this morning, "The search committee plans to post an online evaluation form for people to give input on the candidates." See link below.)

But most of that input -- which could have been truly informative and useful had we been told the candidates names today and had time to do some meaningful investigation -- will necessarily consist of little more than the most superficial responses on the basis of scripted interviews and responses and the candidates' appearance and demeanor while on their best behavior.

And for what? Search Committee II has represented that the reason for secrecy is that it would be a devastating blow to the reputation of a sitting university president or provost if it were to become known that they would willingly stoop to consider becoming president of the University of Iowa. I not only disagree with that judgment, I find it insulting. But accepting it as true, of what conceivable benefit could it be to a candidate -- whose name will become public a week from now anyway -- that their name continue to be a matter of such national security classification until then?

The cost of this additional week's clandestine operation is clear: We will all know far less about each of these candidates than what we would have come to know had the media, bloggers and all interested parties had this additional week to do some research, investigation, and interviewing of knowledgeable sources.

In any reasonable benefit-cost analysis one must consider both benefits and costs. We know the costs. What are the benefits? And what is the basis for believing that those benefits will exceed, and be well worth, those costs? I guess we are never to be told.

See, Diane Heldt, "Finalists Visit UI the Week of June 11; Open Forums Planned for 5 Who Are Vying to be UI President," The Gazette, June 2, 2007, p. 1A; Brian Morelli, "5 UI search finalists to visit campus; Committee to keep identities secret until candidates arrive," Iowa City Press-Citizen, June 2, 2007, p. 1A; Erin Jordan, "U of I to Name Top Candidates Prior to Visits," Des Moines Register, June 2, 2007.

ADDED ITEM: Normally I don't respond to the comments others attach to this blog. That's not out of disrespect (though it's sometimes as a result of lack of time); quite the contrary: I just think folks have a right to say what they want in response to my blog entries (within the outer ranges of decency) without having to deal with my constant rebuttals. But there is one that is attached to this blog entry that I am about to embed here. It's from an "Anonymous," so I haven't a clue who wrote it. And, while I share Anonymous' enthusiasm regarding Mike Hogan (in fact, I put the case last fall that the Regents should simply have picked him to start last July 1), I am equally clueless as to the merits of Anonymous' concerns and theories regarding Search Committee II members' motives. My rule of thumb is that speculating about others' motives is often neither fair nor fruitful -- though I occasionally fail to heed my own advice on that score.

Thus, as is sometimes the case in entering evidence in a trial, I offer the followng Anonymous comment not as evidence of the truth of its author's speculation (some of which is challenged by the very next comment (also Anonymous) which follows it), but as evidence of another downside from Search Committee II's continuing to hold the names secret. It is something that had not, frankly, occurred to me this morning. It turns out that an additional consequence of Search Committee II's not revealing the five names at this time not only could contribute to, but as this Anonymous comment indicates has contributed to, rumors and speculation (at least from this Anonymous) regarding the Committee's motives:
Why would the committee not want to reveal the identities of the finalists in advance of the interviews? Imagine that a rumor now circulating is true: that a very popular internal candidate, Provost Michael Hogan, is NOT among the five finalists!!!! Unbelievable!!! With the committee's approach to not releasing the finalists' names, the truth of that rumor (which indeed seems to have "legs") cannot be confirmed,nor officially publicly revealed, until the evening prior to the fifth day of interviews, when the last candidate's name finally will be revealed under the committee's current approach. To confirm only at that late date that Hogan is indeed not among the finalists leaves precious little time for a wildly supportive campus to recover from shock and then mobilize opposition to yet another tainted search. What possible reason could the committee have to include three provosts from other universities but NOT to include the UI's number two administrator from this campus? Hogan is the most popular and competent provost the UI has had in years, and he has an intimate understanding of the issues facing the UI today! He could hit the ground running, after an all too long and detrimental interim without a permanent president. Does the committee again have ulterior motives? Have people again been bought off--this time at the search committee level? Is the committee afraid of allowing Hogan to interview on campus because of the strength and power of the campus support for Hogan? Do they fear that Hogan, who was the top candidate by a huge margin the first time around, would soar to the top again, and at that point, due to the force of popular support, his candidacy could no longer be blocked? Blocked in favor of whom? What are individual members of this committee after? What is behind this travesty? Whose personal interests are being served? This process stinks to high heaven. The campus and its provost have a right to some measure of fairness of process. Regardless of the quality of the other candidates (who may be highly qualified) this campus has a right to hear Hogan interview publicly, and to evaluate him on equal terms with the committee's other finalists. Not to include him at this stage forever taints this process and its outcome, to the detriment of everyone concerned. The only way to legitimize this process is for the committee to revisit its decision and include Hogan as one of the finalists to be interviewed during the week of June 11. Barring such action, the Regents indeed need to intervene and review the files to assure this campus and themselves that the process was fair.
Press-Citizen vs. The Regents

The Press-Citizen is suing the Board of Regents for what it alleges was the Board's violation of Iowa's open meetings law. One aspect of that violation is the charge that the Board went into closed meeting for one reason and then, in violation of the open meetings law, discussed matters that (a) the law does not authorize for closed meeting discussion, and (b) were not -- as the law requires -- identified when it stated its reasons for the closed meeting.

The law requires there to be a tape recording of closed sessions. One of the reasons for that requirement is precisely what now confronts the litigants, their lawyers, and the judge. Obviously, there would be no way of resolving disputes like this one if there was no record of a closed meeting that was suspected of violating the law.

Apparently, the recordings exist. The question is whether the lawyers for the Press-Citizen will be permitted to listen to them, or whether the judge will be the only, or at least the first, person to do so. Judge Pille has not yet indicated when he will rule on the request.

See, Lee Hermiston, "Attorneys for P-C, regents meet," Iowa City Press-Citizen, June 2, 2007, p. A3.

UI Budget

I'm not even going to try to figure out the Regents' budget process and how it will impact the University of Iowa this next year. I don't always agree with Regents COO Gary Steinke, but on this one I do. He's quoted as saying, simply, "TIhe process, it is very complicated." If you doubt me, or are interested in pursuing such matters further, see Brian Morelli, "UI waiting on final amount of money; Regents have yet to approve FY 2008 budget," Iowa City Press-Citizen, June 2, 2007, p. A3.

Of course, why public finance matters have to be so complicated (e.g., the K-12 funding formula is no better) is another matter entirely.

Johnson County Supervisor Rod Sullivan's "Salvo" on Sales Taxes

Rod Sullivan is a member of the Johnson County Board of Supervisors. As a free service to his constituents, Rod provides a weekly email update on local issues -- with some personal items thrown in. This one, from May 29, will give you a sense of his compassion -- and politics. If you're interested in getting on his list, E-mail him at rodsullivan@mchsi.com with "subscribe" in the subject line.
Remember “trickle-down economics”? President George H.W. Bush decried it as “voodoo economics.” Most economists agree that it is a flawed theory. It has few proven results. Yet our local governments continue to embrace this philosophy.
The most recent local example is Iowa City’s planned discussion of a Local Option Sales Tax.

In a Gazette article, City Manager Steve Atkins is quoted as saying that Iowa City needs another revenue source to “curtail property tax increases.” In other words, “taxes are going up on those with money, and we plan to shift the tax burden to those with less.”

I am positive that Mr. Atkins would never intentionally hurt the poor. But that is the direct effect. He can spin it any way he wants to spin it, but he is advocating that the rich pay less, and the poor pay more.

I have to do this every damned time, so let me go ahead and dispel a couple myths:

Who are the poor? 31% (215,855) of the children in Iowa live in low-income families. 10% (70,857) of the children in Iowa live in poor families. Most of the people living in poverty in Iowa and elsewhere are children. There are more poor women than poor men. Plus we are talking poverty here, which is incredibly poor. A family of three making 200% of poverty is still very poor.

Doesn’t Iowa City do a lot for the poor? Compared to most cities, yes. That makes this proposal all the more frustrating. I will quote one of my favorite authors, Jonathon Kozol: “Charity is no substitute for economic justice.”

Governmental agencies cannot improve their budget situations on the backs of the poorest of the poor. The needs of the poor will outpace any and all services that they have helped to fund.

Don’t exemptions for food, etc. make sales taxes less regressive? Sales taxes are still more regressive than property taxes. In 2003, a person with an income of $90,000 paid 3.2% of her income in taxes. A person earning $19,500 paid 11.1% of her income in taxes.

Relative to income, the poor pay twice what the middle class pay, and nearly 5 times the amount the wealthy pay. Even with exemptions, sales taxes hit the poor hardest.
The services of accountants, attorneys, and stockbrokers are not subject to sales taxes. These and many other services (advertising, consulting, etc.) used primarily by the wealthy and by large corporations go untaxed.

In addition, mortgage interest is deductible, while sales taxes are not. There are also Homestead Tax Credits. This matters, to the tune of millions of dollars per year in Iowa.
People who deny this reality are akin to those that deny global warming – they are simply not facing the truth.

If property taxes go up, won’t the cost be passed straight to renters? FALSE. Any economist will tell you, rents are a function of supply and demand. If there are too many available units, rents will remain flat. If there is a scarcity of rental units, rents will rise. Landlords will raise rents as high as they can and still keep the units rented, regardless of taxes.

Programs that use relative wealth as a measure of eligibility (such as Medicaid) always include resources (property). It is not enough to have low income; you must also lack other resources, such as property. This is because the net worth of a property owner far exceeds that of a renter. Renters have less real assets. Under a sales tax, renters pay the same as their counterparts with real assets.

What about “outsiders”? Won’t they help pay? People who live outside of Johnson County will pay about 20-25% of the taxes collected. These are by and large not people from suburban Chicago, however, but commuters who purchase goods on the way home.

I cannot, in good conscience, support a shift of the tax burden to people who have less money. What's more, I have trouble saying that a person earning $25,000 should pay more tax just because she lives in Williamsburg, Riverside, West Branch, Mount Vernon, Tipton, etc. Especially when the local wealthy would be let off the hook at her expense. And it isn’t just local wealthy. Wal-Mart will get a big tax break. They don’t even bank here.

Plus, you are now shifting the taxes from absentee landlords to regional shoppers. The guy in Naperville who inherited his grandfather’s building gets a tax break; the UI janitor who commutes from Kalona gets soaked.

It has been mentioned that we must be good neighbors. It is critically important that we think of our middle and low-income neighbors who commute to this County.

Theological arguments. I just happen to buy into a worldview that those who are able need to help those who are not. It is a basic organizing principle of any society, for one thing. Most major world religions subscribe to the idea of helping the poor.
I hold to a viewpoint (heavily-influenced by Christian doctrine) that says, “The last shall be first and the first shall be last”; “Do unto others”; “To whom much is given, much is expected”; “That which you do to the least among you, you do to me”; and “A rich man has a better chance of putting a camel through the eye of a needle than getting into Heaven.”

I prefer to follow this lead rather than doing more to comfort the comfortable.

Iowa City COULD raise property taxes. The city is not at the top allowable levy rate. So if Iowa City needed the money badly enough, they could just raise property taxes. They don’t want to do that, because property owners call City Hall and raise hell. Renters and the poor do not. So economic justice does not matter in this equation.
Iowa City is making a POLITICAL CHOICE to keep tax rates where they are. If they felt the needs justified it, they could raise property taxes.

In addition, unlike the SILO, this penny will NOT be imposed by the State should we fail to support it.

Iowa City is not on record in the Governor’s Office as having written to request any new and different methods of funding City government. Can we really complain when we have made no official attempts to change the status quo?

I recently had a buddy send me the spreadsheet on his investment property. Property taxes DO play a big role; he is not making much money off his single building. He works hard and saves, and deserves to make a buck. While I empathize, my friend still has the ability to deduct his mortgage interest, and he can always sell. He could move his investment to Cds, stocks, or bonds. I don’t wish this on him, but he has options. People who rent have no such options.

Sales versus property taxes is a red herring. The point is not which is worse, sales taxes or property taxes. The point is that BOTH hurt the poor unfairly. We need to create a more fair system of taxation, and we need to do so creatively. Sales & property taxes are not the only two options available.

Are property taxes too high? Probably so. But we CANNOT and MUST NOT remedy that problem by increasing taxes on the poor. Please contact the Iowa City City Council and ask them to scrap the idea of a sales tax.

Then let’s go one step further, and make this a campaign issue. Let’s marshal our resources, and get candidates to commit in writing to using the least regressive methods of taxation they have available.

UICCU and "Optiva"

The UICCU-Optiva story is essentially behind us. There may be occasional additions "for the record," but for the most part the last major entry, with links to the prior material from October 2006 through March 2007, is "UICCU and 'Optiva'" in Nicholas Johnson, "UI Held Hostage Day 406 - March 3 - Optiva," March 3, 2007. Since then there have been two major additions: Nicholas Johnson, "Open Letter to UICCU Board" in "UI Held Hostage Day 423 - March 20 - UICCU," March 20, 2007, and "'Open Letter': Confirmation from World Council of Credit Unions" in "UI Held Hostage Day 424 - March 21 UICCU," March 21, 2007.

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[Note: If you're new to this blog, and interested in the whole UI President Search story . . .

These blog entries begin with Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search I," November 18, 2006.

Wondering where the "UI Held Hostage" came from? Click here. (As of January 25 the count has run from January 21, 2006, rather than last November.)

For any given entry, links to the prior 10 will be found in the left-most column. Going directly to FromDC2Iowa.Blogspot.com will take you to the latest. Each contains links to the full text of virtually all known media stories and commentary, including mine, since the last blog entry. Together they represent what The Chronicle of Higher Education has called "one of the most comprehensive analyses of the controversy." The last time there was an entry containing the summary of prior entries' commentary (with the heading "This Blog's Focus on Regents' Presidential Search") is Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search XIII -- Last Week," December 11, 2006.

My early proposed solution to the conflict is provided in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search VII: The Answer," November 26, 2006.

Searching: the fullest collection of basic documents related to the search is contained in Nicholas Johnson, "UI President Search - Dec. 21-25," December 21, 2006 (and updated thereafter), at the bottom of that blog entry under "References." A Blog Index of entries on all subjects since June 2006 is also available. And note that if you know (or can guess at) a word to search on, the "Blogger" bar near the top of your browser has a blank, followed by "SEARCH THIS BLOG," that enables you to search all entries in this Blog since June 2006.]

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Media Stories and Commentary

See above.
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