Posted on 05/20/2018 10:56:52 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
No one can say that the City Council of Seattle lacks bravery, even if it does lack for common sense. The City Council essentially declared all-out war on the tech companies that have made Seattle such a Mecca for hip young people seeking cool jobs. On Monday, the council voted unanimously to levy a "head tax" of $275 on every full-time employee at a company with more than $20 million a year in revenue.
The money raised supposedly will help Seattle cope with its homelessness crisis, but in squeezing the tech industry, the progressives on the City Council have forgotten something: If you tax something, you risk getting less of it, and certainly fewer jobs isn't the answer to helping the city's homeless.
The city is already seeing this principle in practice as Seattle-based Amazon, which employs 45,000 full time workers in the city, temporarily halted construction on a new skyscraper and Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon, indicated that he might reconsider his company's commitment to Seattle.
"We are disappointed by todays City Council decision to introduce a tax on jobs, Amazon said in a statement. While we have resumed construction planning for Block 18, we remain very apprehensive about the future created by the councils hostile approach and rhetoric toward larger businesses, which forces us to question our growth here.
Given that there is hot competition from other American cities to become home to Amazon's second headquarters, this stated apprehension about the Seattle's business climate, should give Seattle's City Council pause. But no. Instead Council member Kshama Sawant, a member of Socialist Alternative (indeed, she is reportedly the highest profile member of the Trotskyite group), called Amazon's move "extortion."
Sawant would be wiser to regard Amazon's response not as extortion but as a harbinger of things to come, if the anti-business climate persists.
Ms. Sawant doesn't like Amazon very much anyway: she has led ralliesagainst Amazon at the company's headquarters, with protesters carrying Sawant's trademark "Tax Amazon" signs. Does she not realize that the giant, job-providing company could pack up and leave Seattle?
Heather Redman, a Seattle venture capitalist, took Amazon's response to the tax more seriously than Sawant. "I think [Amazon] will definitely stop or slow its growth in Seattle if the tax passes," she told Geekwire. "I think theres no question about that. ...Theyre not a saber-rattling, big-talking company and never have been. They tend to say what theyre going to do and then do it. So I do not think this [temporarily halting construction] is a maneuver."
Amazon, by the way, is a company that has been sympathetic to Seattle's homelessness emergency. Amazon built a permanent homeless shelter called Mary's Place within its main headquarters. It was designed to give shelter to around 200 women, children and families each night. "Mary's Place is helping me find a job and makes sure my son gets to the preschool he adores," one recipient of services there says on the website, "I don't know what I would do without them."
Encouraging endeavors such as Mary's Place might be a better, non-coercive way to enlist companies to help with the city's homelessness. Indeed, if you read the statement put out by Starbucks perhaps Settle's most iconic company, which would also be affected by the head tax you just might conclude that Amazon has been better than the City Council with creative solutions to homelessness.
John Kelly, senior vice president of Global Public Affairs & Social Impact at Starbucks, said in a statement:
"This City continues to spend without reforming and fail without accountability, while ignoring the plight of hundreds of children sleeping outside. If they cannot provide a warm meal and safe bed to a five year-old child, no one believes they will be able to make housing affordable or address opiate addiction. This City pays more attention to the desires of the owners of illegally parked RVs than families seeking emergency shelter."
Council members should consider other ways to address homelessness. The Council could start by reconsidering its strict zoning regulations that contribute to the rise in housing costs. It should reexamine existing programs meant to help the homeless and make sure they are working. They could see what else in the city's budget could be reallocated to address this crisis.
Sadly, the City Council seems to prefer squeezing companies for more money, in effect dumping the problem in their laps without any guarantee that the money would be spent wisely. That approach makes sense only if the businesses that have made Seattle a thriving city are nailed to the ground. They aren't.
They seem to want to turn into the next Detroit
Ayn Rand (who escaped from a socialist country) illustrated this perfectly in her novel "Atlas Shrugged."
Let the lefties start feeling the pain of their own folly.
It’s the only way.
Well they are in a race with Portland to do so.
They never learn. Not only will hell be a hot, tortuous pit but it will be the most moronic, insane dump in the whole universe. Like Lieberal run cities.
The only thing government policies seem to do is attract more homeless.
So drive out the employers and attract homeless. Got it.
Seattle wants to be the Caracas of the North.
Why change property when the coveting party doesn’t have to earn it and likely has no clue what it takes to maintain the property? It sounds like a recipe for turning it to trash.
the liberal thieves don’t mean for it to cure homelessness- They love homelessness because they get federal money for it- Their war on businesses is just to thieve more money from hard working Americans- plain and simple- in otherwords- they are getting paid 2 ways- one from the federal government money meant to go to the homeless- and 2 money from businesses
th truly Godless ignorant socialists run headlong into the pits of hell
I’m sure the projected $5,000,000 for annual “administration costs” had no consideration in this job losing vote.
It will do nothing to get people into homes they cannot afford. Only a leftist would think that taxing people who work will help those who don’t work.
Liberals who don’t run businesses think that Economics is a phony ideology thought up by capitalists to prevent a Marxian Utopia.
It isn't a risk, it's a certainty. Taxes do two things simultaneously: discourage the activity taxed, and raise revenue for the government. These act against each other, and you can't separate them. Socialists mistake this for redistribution, but it's actually only theft with the government the beneficiary.
Didn't take Seattle long to give their panacea the finger too. No replacement to follow tech Seattle. Now it's up to tech to give Seattle the finger back and I hope they do so soon and with a hard hit.
Wisconsin would LOVE to have a big old Amazon shipping warehouse buried (tastefully!) in her Northern Woods.
It would solve a whole HOST of problems with Northern unemployment and the youngsters FLEEING, and the Native Americans could build a Casino right next door. ;)
As an added BONUS it would cause Liberal Noggins in ‘The People’s Republiks of Madistan and Milwaukeestan’ to explode. They’re already apoplectic over the Foxxcon manufacturing plant going in at Racine!
*SMIRK*
It’s a Win/Win! :)
She scored her millions by divorcing a Microsoft exec. Sawant knows all about it.
“One of the sad signs of our times is that we have demonized those who produce, subsidized those who refuse to produce, and canonized those who complain.”
Thomas Sowell
*GASP*
However, not surprising...
Taxes of $275 on 45,000 heads is just shy of 12 and a half million bucks. I hope companies are able to relocate to another city, and soon.
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