Gencarella: CVS, A Prime Example Of Squandered State Resources?

Pam Gencarella, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Gencarella: CVS, A Prime Example Of Squandered State Resources?

Now that the RI elections are over and it looks like the status quo has won, it’s time to jump back into highlighting the reasons RI finds itself in last place for everything. It will be up to the grassroots movements who identify the reasons our state government continues to fail us.  It will be up to those of you who are still angry that RI sets the wrong priorities for your tax dollars to take a stand as we begin a new legislative session in two months.

Starting Off With The CVS Disappointment.

Last week, CVS announced they would lay off 600 workers, nearly half of whom are located in RI. Coming to the rescue, the RI Department of Labor stepped up and claimed that they were from the government and here to help. The state promised “Rapid Response” services for those who had been laid off. Which would be great if there were any jobs in RI into which these poor people could be placed. 

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Since the state has given CVS nearly $130 million in economic and job development tax credits in the last 8 years, wouldn’t it be nice if CVS provided their own rapid response services?  But more importantly, we should be asking the question of our legislators - why this astronomical give away of $130 million to a retail giant, seemingly making more than their fair share?  What’s up with that?  

Better Use For $130 Million?

From 2009-2014, the RI EDC handed over $20 million to CVS.  Our legislators, many of whom are the same ones we just reelected, voted to provide, via tax policy, another $110 million to CVS as part of the ‘Jobs Development’ Act.  Did you expect that your hard earned money was going to support a mega corporation like CVS?

It’s Mind Boggling, RI Robs Paul To Pay Peter. 

Last year, CVS reported bottom line profits of over $5 billion.  So why would state government  be inclined to fork over a cool $130 million to a company with net profits of $5 billion a year?  The answer? One, because our state is too expensive in which to run a company, two, CVS knows they have leverage since there are no new companies banging on RI’s door, and three, RI is so desperate to appear to be doing something about job creation, they kneel at the alter of corporate cronyism.  

What’s Our Closest Neighbor Doing When It Comes To Bribing Companies To Stay?

Last year alone, RI shelled out a total of $24 million to a number of companies, all in the name of economic development and ‘job creation’.  Neighboring Massachusetts shelled out just $18 million (in 2014, as this was the latest information available.)  This comparison is significant because Massachusetts has nearly 7 times the population RI has, and yet they spent 25% less than tiny RI.  That means 7 times the number of people to absorb the costs associated with providing these tax incentives.  How can a small state like RI afford this?  The obvious answer, it can’t.  That’s why we have the roads and bridges we have.

When the Truck Toll Scheme was debated, the public kept asking where all the money went that was supposed to be used for infrastructure. The answer was the Big Black Hole aka the state’s general fund, from which the money for these incentives flow. Looking at the sizable EDC and ‘Job Development’ Act giveaways, it seems pretty clear that legislators consider your tax dollars to be monopoly money, play money if you will, to be spent with little care about the ultimate benefits to you.

Just this past July, we wrote about these and other  tax incentive handouts, citing CVS in particular, but also looking at other programs like the $300 million in historic tax credits, and the very recent $5 million bribe to GE for relocating a few jobs to RI.  Do you think these incentives are a good use of your tax dollars when compared to maintaining our roads and bridges?

Yet RI Boasts About The Money They Have Blown!

The 2015 RI Tax Credit and Incentive Report proudly claims that the state has given nearly a quarter of a billion of your tax dollars away since 2008.  Imagine if the state had spent that money on road and bridge repair over those eight years.  Do you think we would even be discussing tolls?  No.  The problem is that RI state government continues to see bribing companies as politically more palatable than making the tough choices needed to reduce the strangulating tax burden and regulation in order for companies to grow and expand organically here in the Ocean State.  

Are You Willing To Fight For Your Tax Dollar?

Are you ready for more of the same kind of wasteful spending from our legislative body or will you demand that state government do its job - use our tax dollars for true government purposes rather than just seeing what’s left over after the elites decide the best way to spend your money. That means prioritizing the budget and living within our means even as we try to pay for roads and bridges.  

While the legislative elections may not have resulted in changing the face of the General Assembly, it did change the nature of their campaigning. They found they could not take their seat for granted and many of them had to work unusually hard to keep it. It will be up to us, as individuals coming together, holding not just leadership, but each legislator, accountable in upcoming sessions.  It will be up to us to continue the fight against the machine, much like we did with the PawSox Stadium, the Superman Building, the Master Lever and Ethics Commission reform.  Buckle up, looks like it will be another rough ride.  Are you ready for the 2017 legislative session?


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