Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Teachers Union Contract Will Bankrupt Westborough

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

September 23, 2008
Wicked Local

Last week my friends at the Westborough News editorialized that our union teachers deserved thanks for devoting themselves to our students and “settling” the contract by voting approval of the last offer made to them by our school committee.

The editorial also claimed that teacher union members made a “huge concession” in their health care deal, and accepted a 1 percent raise for the past year and a 3 percent raise for each of the next two fiscal years. Unfortunately, this seriously understates the true amount of increases teachers will receive and the resulting taxpayer costs.

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Budget cuts broad, deep as Rochester councilors adjust

Monday, July 7th, 2008

July 7, 2008
Fosters

ROCHESTER — Councilors’ recent discussion about their goals for the city and manager provided a sobering look at what can’t be done following deep cuts to the approved budget.

City Manager John Scruton said helping the economic development commission fill and redevelop empty space should be “dropped.” The council cut funds to set up a lease system with startup businesses downtown.

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Applicant cries foul in withdrawal of Rochester school job offer

Monday, July 7th, 2008

July 7, 2008
Fosters

ROCHESTER — An Effingham woman is claiming the local School District rescinded a job offer because she got the high school’s top guidance post over the wife of the School Board chairman.

Jennifer Murphy, who submitted her resignation from her current job after the offer, said she was so stunned to learn politics may be behind the reversal that she fired off an e-mail to administration reminding officials of the board’s conflict-of-interest policy.

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Rochester department heads look to form union

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

June 10, 2008
Fosters

ROCHESTER — Nearly 30 city employees want to form a management union, just as the City Council considers cuts that could cost workers their jobs.

Employment uncertainty due to the proposed budget apparently factored into the group’s decision. “Everybody is going to have to speak for themselves, but it seems to me that it’s hard to understate the significance of the challenge the City Council is facing this year,” said Planning Director Kenn Ortmann, representative of the Rochester Municipal Management Group.

There’s also the issue of equity. “Benefits that have been accrued to unionized groups have been better, at least marginally better, than what has been accrued to nonunionized groups,” Ortmann said. “While there was general parity, if there was any slippage at all it happened with the nonunion group as opposed to the union group.”

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Cigarette Taxes are Fueling Organized Crime

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

This commentary appeared in the Wall Street Journal on May 7, 2008.
Tax Foundation

Cigarette Taxes Are Fueling Organized Crime

Last month, New York law enforcement authorities announced the arrest of Queens resident Rafea al-Nablisi for smuggling 12,000 cartons of cigarettes a week. It was not the first such arrest, and thanks to New York’s latest cigarette tax hike, it will not be the last.

On April 23, less than two weeks after Mr. Nablisi’s arrest was made public, Gov. David Paterson signed into law a $1.25 per-pack tax hike on top of the state’s $1.50 per-pack tax. That’s in addition to New York City’s own $1.50 per-pack tax. Come July 1, New York City’s smokers will be paying on average $9 a pack for legal cigarettes.

But if history is any guide, most cigarettes sold will actually be trucked up from Virginia, or shipped in from China, by “butt-leggers” who can make over $1 million on each tractor-trailer load of smuggled smokes. The blunt fact, which politicians of both political parties are determined to ignore, is that high cigarette taxes in New York have led to a bloody, decades-long smuggling epidemic.

While the problem first surfaced during the Great Depression, tax hikes in the early 1960s created a major profit opportunity for smugglers and kicked the epidemic into high gear. By 1967, a quarter of the cigarettes consumed in the Empire State were bootlegged. New York City’s finance administrator labeled cigarette smuggling the “principal stoking facility of the engine of organized crime.”

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