Posted on 04/05/2006 9:02:13 AM PDT by cicero's_son
Indiana Is Open for Business Mitch the Blade Daniels is putting the state on the free-market cutting edge.
By Bret Swanson
Theres about to be a building boom in Indiana, which is desperate good news for a state that has been severely challenged by the global manufacturing shift and years of ambivalent leadership.
The chief architect of the boom is the states decisive Governor Mitch Daniels, President Bushs former budget director. In Washington, Daniels drew scorn from congressional big spenders, acquiring the nickname the blade for his cost-cutting and privatizing ways. (The moniker could just as easily apply to his sharp wit and intellect.) The spenders in Washington, however, won those battles big time swallowing the blade and earning todays enmity from the Republican base. But now Daniels is back home and in charge, and he is engineering a turnaround of an entire state with sophistication.
In the states short legislative session, just completed, Daniels achieved two sweeping victories. The first is the nations most aggressive telecommunications deregulation, which will spur hundreds of millions of dollars of investment in invisible infrastructure the fibers and frequencies of the digital age, as Daniels describes it. The second is a $4 billion privatization lease of the Indiana Toll Road and the new I-69 interstate. This will fund the largest-ever upgrade of Indianas visible infrastructure: its antique roads and bridges.
Indiana is more dependent on manufacturing than any other state in the union. Low-cost Asian manufacturing and the troubles of Big Auto in nearby Detroit have drained employment in Indiana and depressed income growth. Daniels telecommunications reform was thus a major component of his strategy to connect Indiana to global markets, to diversify the states economy toward services, technology, and life sciences, and to make the states manufacturing base more productive.
Indianas telecom laws had not been updated since 1985, while the states Utility Regulatory Commission has administered some of the most severely anti-investment rules and price controls in the nation. But in a single leap, Indiana has moved from the back of the pack to number one in terms of the modernity of its telecom regime. By the end of this month, most of the states obsolete telecom rules will lapse. By 2009, the industry will be almost totally deregulated in the state.
An Indiana-wide video-franchise process was also adopted to replace the fragmented and wasteful cable TV franchising system that has 300 towns and counties telling global communications firms what to do. The new system opens up the investment valves by granting easy and quick approval to new providers of broadband communications services. With the reform, companies like Verizon and AT&T are now planning major new build-outs of the worlds most advanced fiber-optic links to homes and businesses in the state. Cable TV companies will be forced to respond in a beneficent upward spiral of new technology and consumer choice that could boost state economic output by more than half a percentage point annually for the next five years.
Ironically, Daniels Major Moves plan to lease the Indiana Toll Road, the seemingly more tame and obvious measure, turned out to be far more controversial. It passed by a single vote with just 15 minutes remaining in this years legislative session. Weeks before anyone had heard of Dubai Ports World, the bid by Australian-Spanish consortium Macquarie-Cintra to manage Indianas 157-mile stretch of I-80/90 had already ignited a xenophobic melee in the heartland. But unlike the DP World roll-out, Daniels had actually sought bidders for the Toll Road. His proposition was simple: The winning contractor will pay Indiana $4 billion for an asset that has never been profitable in government hands; the state gets to keep that asset; the contractor upgrades the asset with new technology and an additional $4 billion in improvements; and the state gets to fund a decades worth of other major infrastructure projects, some of which have been on the drawing board for twenty years. (Just last year Chicago leased its Skyway to Macquarie-Cintra for $1.8 billion. The Skyway connects Indianas Toll Road to Chicago, thus yielding a seamlessly managed road from Ohio to the Windy City.)
The day after this deal squeaked through the legislature, the Indianapolis Star concluded that the protectionist, xenophobic rhetoric
used to fight the lease was an embarrassment to the entire state. But Daniels won the day, sending a loud message to foreign investors that Indiana is indeed open for business.
It's simple arithmetic.
If ample numbers of people do as you intend to do, then the Democrats WILL run Indiana again.
As I said, if your conscience doesn't bother you, fine. Personally, I think turning the state back over to the Dems over an issue as silly as DST is unconscionable.
I suggest you get on the horn to the state party leaders and let them know that they screwed the pooch.
If DST is as trivial and silly a thing as you say it is, then there should be no problem repealing it. Is it really that important to hang on to DST and lose the statehouse? What gets me about it is: we were already on year round DST! So why would Ditch Daniels mess with it when as 68skylark pointed out, had many more important issues to deal with?
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