Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Bridge of Sighs; Trump’s Family Tax Plan; Manafort Menace

Bob Whitcomb, Contributor

Bob Whitcomb’s Digital Diary: Bridge of Sighs; Trump’s Family Tax Plan; Manafort Menace

Bob Whitcomb
Pack in the buildings; bridge of sighs; Trump’s family tax plan; Manafort menace; the 400-year-old shark; engineering an RI turnaround

Please, city, don’t hold this up too! MSI Holdings LLC wants a few waivers to build an 11-story retail/residential building on what is now a parking lot on Canal Street in downtown Providence, most notably a waiver that would let the owners exceed the official height limit for the neighborhood in the city’s zoning rules.

The Providence Business News also reports that “the applicant has requested waivers from the recess requirement, and ground floor and upper level transparency requirements for the portion of the building that faces a narrow alley, called Throop Street.’’ Few people would see that side.

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The applicant  ought to get the waivers promptly. Having lots of parking lots downtown in place of buildings is deadly. They shout urban decay. Density, on the other hand, speaks of vitality and prosperity.  Jam in those buildings!

Time and time again, excessively rigid zoning rules have prevented what would be perfectly respectable structures from going up in Providence, or has grossly delayed them. The parking lot that this building would cover is an eyesore. Let’s get as much bustle as we can  from people and businesses in downtown Providence, an eminently walkable place.

Pedestrian Bridge
Which gets me to how long it takes to get anything done in Rhode Island.

The Rhode Island Department of Transportation expects to  finally award a bid in October to build the long-delayed (for 10 years!) pedestrian bridge over the Providence  River, with completion expected by November 2018. It looks like this thing will cost about $20 million.

The bridge will link College Hill and Fox Point with downtown, creating various commercial and other synergies. It should become a kind of tourist site and popular meeting place. Let’s hope that a brilliant architect designs it. Friedrich St. Florian?

Of course, because of the necessary oversight of publicly funded projects, the zoning-ordinance labyrinth, constituency politics and the vagaries of the economy, public projects usually take much longer than private ones. Still, 10 years is far too long! Businesses and individuals take negative notice of places where minor but needed repairs, such as filling potholes, let alone big projects,  seem to take eons to happen. Such delays are particularly frustrating in a place as small as Rhode Island, where you might think it would be easier to get things done.

It’s a problem around America.

Common Good, run by my old friend Philip K. Howard, has a very useful and proscriptive report out called Two Years, Not Ten Years: Redesigning Infrastructure Approvals  that among other  things discusses the huge costs of delaying infrastructure permits.  To read the report, please hit this: CLICK HERE

 

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Donald Trump
Donald Trump’s economic plans are a joke – an incoherent mash of protectionism, tax cuts aimed at further lining the pockets of rich people like him and their families, a promise not to  touch Medicare and Social Security, despite their funding shortfalls (to suck up to Mr. Trump’s biggest constituency – older people) while promising  to somehow spend more on infrastructure.

The most obscene part of the package is the plan to end the federal estate tax and thus boost the already great power and influence of the tiny number of families with vast inherited fortunes. As it is, America has among the lowest socio-economic mobility in the Western World. The plan of Mr. Trump, who had a huge head start in life and business from inheriting millions from his developer father, would help slow down mobility even more by giving people at the top even more of an advantage.

Obviously one reason that people create wealth is to pass  it on to their families.   Fine.  I’m all for incentives to invent and/or improve goods and services and create wealth – but not to the point that the general public’s purchasing power and thus economic growth is hurt by giving a tiny sliver of people so much of the national pie.

And for that matter, gimmicks  written into the Internal Revenue Code by lobbyists already make it easy to save much or even all of  some vast family fortunes from the tax man. Why make life even more unfair for people who didn’t choose the right parents?

When George W. Bush got Republicans running Congress to cut income taxes, mostly for the rich, it led to years of slow growth culminating in the great crash of 2008 (in part created by the GOP’s financial-deregulation program, aided and abetted by such Democrats as Bill Clinton and his Wall Street friends). That’s because it did nothing for the public’s purchasing power, which has continued low since the 2008-2009 recession under a mostly GOP-controlled Congress (since 2011) and a Democratic president.

But one rare area in which Donald Trump is going in the right direction is corporate taxes, which he wants to cut. In the end, a sterile entity called a “corporation’’ doesn’t pay taxes, the people in the company and its shareholders do. Get rid of the corporate tax entirely and only have personal income taxes. That would not only make the U.S. more competitive internationally but reduce the bribery in Washington and state capitals by companies seeking  special benefits from politicians.

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A prime example of that  corruption in Washington is  Donald Trump’s extraordinarily sleazy campaign honcho, Paul Manafort, a longtime Washington fixer/ consultant/parasite and adviser to various dictators, most notably of ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, an ally of Vladimir Putin, the cold, murderous and greedy dictator of Russia. Mr. Yanukovich’s government compensated Mr. Manafort with millions of dollars, some of it apparently in cash, for his public-relations work. But then, it seems that Mr. Manafort would work for almost anyone if the price was  right.

 

The links between the Putin  regime and  Donald Trump are murky, in part because of the latter’s continued hiding of his tax returns. But his admiration for a crook like Mr. Putin demonstrates his own amorality, long clear to anyone who has reviewed his business career.

 

Trump fans at this point would cite Hillary Clinton’s infractions – especially her irresponsible, potentially dangerous use of a private server for State Department business (though other high national-security officials did similar things), her occasional self-protective lies and  obfuscations and how Bill and Hillary Clinton  have not only used the Clinton Foundation to do some good works but also to promote their political and financial ambitions. These things are fair game for criticism. But to say that somehow her dishonesty is comparable to the hourly lies, corruption, boorishness, ignorance and demagoguery of Donald Trump is idiotic.

 

Anyway, I still think that Mr. Trump, an extreme narcissist, isn’t running for president so much to become president as to simply remain in the public eye.

 

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Some ask why Vladimir Putin is so eager to support such fellow tyrants as Syrian dictator/President Bashar Assad and Chinese President Xi Jinping. The answer is: He doesn’t want his own increasingly suppressed people to see examples of democracy succeeding dictatorships.

 

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Brown University
It was heartening to read in The Providence Sunday Journal on Aug. 15 about the rapid growth of engineering education at four of Rhode Island’s universities – Brown University, the University of Rhode Island, Johnson and Wales University and Roger Williams University.  (Readers should not forget that the Rhode Island School of Design, with its famous industrial design department, could also be a part of this complex.)

This development, perhaps more than in other in recent years, could spawn the new, high-value-added economic activity that the Ocean State so desperately needs. It bears noting that the mid- and late- 19th and early 20th Century booms in the state had a lot to do with the fact that our region was at the forefront of Industrial Revolution engineering.
 

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Does the Greenland shark have lessons for us?   Scientists have discovered that these creatures, deepwater predators, are apparently the longest-living vertebrates. Researchers studied 28 of them. One was about 400 years old.

Sounds heartening. On the other hand, these very slow-growing creatures don’t have sex until they’re about 150. Perhaps of more importance/hope to us mammals is that a fellow mammal – a bowhead whale – was estimated to be 211 and that that species starts having sex in its early teens….

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Bill Malinowski
RIP, Bill Malinowski, the former Providence Journal reporter who died last week at 57 after being forced to retire by the death sentence known as ALS. I didn’t know him well, although many years ago I edited some of his stuff and found him highly professional and congenial.

He was a relentless if soft-spoken crime and corruption investigative reporter. (Shouldn’t all reporters be “investigative’’?) I have no idea what his political beliefs were – which speaks to his reputation as a newsman. With the owners of newspapers resolved to maintain high profits even in the face of the public’s disinclination to help  pay the costs of serious journalism, I wonder how many people like Bill Malinowski will be working in the next few years. I have no doubt, however, that corruption will flourish with so few people like him left.

By the way, readers might like to read Lillian Ross’s collection of articles  over decades of work for The New Yorker called Reporting Always: Writings from The New Yorker for examples of how journalism can approach being (fact-based) art.  The sad/funny piece profile of Ernest Hemingway alone is worth the price of admission.

 

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About now, as the back-to-school ads proliferate and we start to notice how much earlier the sun is coming down, innumerable New England essayists bemoan the brevity of summer. I wonder how global warming, now well under way, might change that as summer weather extends further into fall.


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