Chafee Created Twice as Many RI Jobs in His Last 2 Years Than Raimondo in Her First 2 Years

GoLocalProv News Team

Chafee Created Twice as Many RI Jobs in His Last 2 Years Than Raimondo in Her First 2 Years

Chafee more successful in job creation over the past four years.
Gina Raimondo’s goal as Governor has been to rebuild Rhode Island’s economy and create jobs. However, a GoLocal review of Raimondo’s performance shows that job creation has been virtually stagnant in her first two-years in office despite handing out tens of millions in taxpayer subsidies to a range of primarily out-of-state companies.

In contrast, Governor Lincoln Chafee, Raimondo’s predecessor, produced more than twice as many jobs in his last two years in office.

According to Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training data, Chafee created 13,436 jobs in his final twenty-four months while Raimondo has only created only 6,699 in the same time  — less than half of Chafee’s job creation.

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Incentives Versus Changing the Business Environment

Chafee was adamantly opposed to giving out incentives as a recruitment tool. 

As the Tax Justice website reported, “Another notable reform Chafee enacted was the passage of a law requiring Rhode Island’s state analysts to evaluate the impact of the state’s economic development tax breaks. The issue was that Rhode Island, along with a host of other states, did not require any sort of analysis as to whether its costly economic development tax incentives actually produced results in terms of jobs and economic growth.

Chafee’s reluctance to do individual company deals was in part of an outgrowth of the failure of 38 Studios. 

As GoLocal reported about Chafee’s economic development strategy in 2011 (after 38 Studios was funded, but before it collapsed), “But (Spokesman Mike) Trainor said Chafee is not necessarily opposed to all tax credits for companies. What the Governor is most opposed to, he said, is “one-off deals” tailored to specific companies. Instead, Trainor said Chafee prefers a more “systemized approach.”

Wexford project - more than $32M for less than 100 jobs.
Meanwhile, the Raimondo administration has provided dozens of one-off company deals. As GoLocal recently revealed after weeks of investigation, the Raimondo administration deal that provides in excess of $32 million in funding and incentives to Wexford to build on the 195 land will create just 90 full-time jobs.

Other Raimondo deals are also lucrative. General Electric is in the process of bringing 100 technology jobs to Rhode Island and is receiving an estimated $5.2 million in incentives. Similarly, Johnson & Johnson has inked another tremendously lucrative jobs package.

Johnson & Johnson announced in December that they plan to bring 75 "high wage jobs" to Rhode Island by opening a new health technology center in Providence -- and with the incentives the company is being promised by the state, the deal will cost taxpayers $80,000 a job.

"They will be asking for approximately $6 million in incentives," said Commerce Secretary Stefan Pryor following the press conference at the Providence Public Library. "There will be a qualified jobs allocation as part of that in excess of $4M....there'll be allocations for talent incentives, and there'll be allocations for coverage of costs for the facility One Ship Street."

Gina Raimondo refused to respond to questions for this article.


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