Landrieu made
these remarks at a Bureau of Governmental
Research supporters’ meeting, a group often critical of the spending
choices and priorities of the city and the local governments associated with
it. He spun a story of constituents querying him about why basic needs get
delayed if any attention at all if the city makes so much money off numerous
high-profile special events, with his answer being that it’s all a mirage. Using
the 2013 Super Bowl as an example, he argued, “Even though the Super Bowl is a
multimillion-dollar event, this city's general fund, your bank account, only
netted $500,000, barely breaking even for the army of police, fire, EMS,
sanitation, public works, permitting and other city employees who work day in
and day out to make sure everything went off without a hitch.” He then funneled
the topic to all of his glorious achievements even if the city doesn’t make
much, and concluded with a diagnosis that the state holds the city back, opining
that “Something needs to change. We need to cut loose. We need to get the state
out of the way, realign powers so New Orleans has the resources that we need to
stand on our own two feet.”
Which is an absurd comment, for
no large city in Louisiana sucks at the teat of the state taxpayer as does New
Orleans. Given the data available, it’s difficult to make a comprehensive
comparison, but in taking the largest area of state expenditure, health care,
Orleans Parish in Medicaid spending had the most (using the latest
available fiscal year 2013 data) dollars showered upon it – almost a
half-billion – of any parish and the most people in the program, even though its
population was smaller than both Jefferson’s and East Baton Rouge’s. Further,
it ranked tenth highest in the percentage of population receiving Medicaid,
with only substantially smaller jurisdictions having higher proportions. And if
you want to throw in the second-largest state expense, elementary and secondary
education, keep in mind that the vast bulk of spending in New Orleans on this
comes directly from the state, because most schools are in it are in the
Recovery School District and all of those in that will be charter schools for
the foreseeable future -- with a large portion of it accruing to the New Orleans economy, and the resulting conversion into city tax revenues.
While undoubtedly New Orleans
also produces an outsized chunk of state tax revenues through its economic activities,
it’s comical to suggest that this significantly outstrips the largesse the
state shovels back to it – spending which finds its way into city coffers. And
it’s equally laughable to assert that the city gets shortchanged in reference
to the special events it hosts, which, if nothing else, shows Landrieu has
either or both a short memory or a penchant to engage in selective use of
facts.
He may rail about how little he
figures the city may take from the Super Bowl, even as there would be no Super
Bowl without a Superdome built and renovated at state expense to keep the New
Orleans Saints in the smaller market, and with the team racking up state
taxpayer subsidies for over a decade now and from last
year to 2025 estimated to reach $400 million. Or how about a similar deal with
the New Orleans Pelicans that became a swap
of subsidies with tax credits that could have put state taxpayers on the
hook for approaching $200 million over its lifetime that paved the way to keep
the team in the city and paved the way for the National Basketball Association
All-Star Game this past year to be played at the New Orleans Arena. So Landrieu
seriously thinks this is too little to work its way into city tax coffers
compared to what he thinks the city deserves?
And Landrieu, a former lieutenant
governor, seemed entirely tone deaf to the complaints of his successor and
likely gubernatorial candidate Lt. Gov. Jay Dardenne,
who has objected
to dollars for statewide tourism promotion to be shunted to New Orleans to
subsidize these and other special events. Louisiana taxpayers have done more than
their fair share to allow New Orleans the chance to suck in tourism revenues
that accrue to local businesses and individuals that boost the city’s bottom
line, regardless of the number of hours of overtime and extra hiring the city
might have expended on these events.
There are still other kinds of
gifts the state gives the city. For example, it
subsidizes and allows the city to collect revenues as a consequence of the
operation of the Ernest N. Morial Exhibition Hall Authority, which as a result
has built up fat reserves the spending of which also pumps money into the New
Orleans economy and thus to the city.
Of course, Landrieu has every
incentive to try to paint a portrait of dark forces preventing him from running
the city better, not just as a means to deflects complaints he claimed he had
heard, but also to goad state and local voters and the newly-elected City
Council to agree to allow for severe
property tax increases over the next year, to make up for bad spending choices
where his role in their metastasizing has paled in comparison to his
predecessors, but who has suggested little more than higher taxes in response –
despite the fact that Orleans has the fourth-highest
rate in the state already, behind three much smaller parishes, and in a corporate
tax environment so competitive that it ranks second best in the country for cities its size, right behind Baton
Rouge and just ahead of Shreveport. And that the per capita expenses (excluding enterprises such as water and
sewerage) of the state’s three major cities whose metropolitan areas were
ranked in that survey are Shreveport (with its share of Caddo Parish) at $1,816,
East
Baton Rouge (including Baker,
Central,
and Zachary)
at $1,216, and New Orleans at $2,004,
indicate by comparison that Landrieu doesn’t exactly run the city economically
in the first place. If anything, Orleanians need tax relief (just as Vanderbilt University fans were relieved finally to see the Commodores earn their status as the best college baseball team in America.)
Perhaps in more than one way New
Orleans therefore is a junkie to the state and Landrieu wants its taxpayers to deal it more dope
than ever, so he at least ought to show the courtesy of saying nothing
about being beggared, if not actually acting grateful. Instead, he engages in this
political strategy to push ever bigger government by trying to create this
narrative that New Orleans unfairly is put upon. Nothing is further from the
truth, and both state and local publics need to remember that.
No comments:
Post a Comment