Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-tax-incentives-Neumade
Full Text:
Ed Ink: End The Confusion On Tax Incentives
One of Newtown's initial attempts at luring desirable industry to town appears
to have been fraught with confusion and misunderstanding, and now the town is
trying to decide whether to live up to an agreement with a business owner that
it believes it never made.
Ronald Jones, of Neumade Products of Peck's Lane, went before the finance
committee of the Legislative Council this week saying he was promised tax
breaks amounting to more than $70,000 a year for five years for moving his
company to Newtown, and now he's ready to collect. The only problem is that
the town officials who held the initial talks with Mr Jones, former First
Selectman Bob Cascella and Community Development Director Liz Stocker, contend
they never made any such promises.
The miscommunication puts the town in a bind. Does the town forgo collecting
$350,000 in the coming years to honor an agreement it believes it never made,
or does it risk giving itself the reputation among business leaders as a town
that reneges on its commitments? Neither option is good for the town, but of
the two, it would best not to honor an informal, unwritten agreement. It is
not a good business practice, and we can hope that other business men and
women interested in moving to Newtown will see this incident in that light.
We question the value of tax incentives as a lure for business in general. It
would take a tremendous amount of industrial development in Newtown to make a
meaningful impact on the tax rate - more development than most townspeople
would be willing to accept. And giving tax breaks only pushes the town further
away from the break-even point where public services rendered are offset by
tax revenues collected. The town should make every effort to be a good place
for people to live and to work. That means local government should not mislead
business leaders, even inadvertently.
The Economic Development Commission, the selectmen, and the council should get
together and reconcile their various positions on this issue so that a single,
clear, and precise policy on tax incentives can be formulated. When a town is
trying to sell itself, clarity wins over confusion every time.
