Lawmakers ignoring $7.4B boom in 'corporate welfare,' experts say
Christie, New Jersey lawmakers have facilitated a $7.4 billion explosion in corporate subsidies amid deep budget problems and 10 credit-rating downgrades. Critics say the tax breaks haven't worked
At a time when New Jersey lawmakers are rushing a bill to end what they call corporate welfare for the news media, Gov. Chris Christies administration this month surpassed $7.4 billion in tax subsidies awarded to hand-picked businesses and nonprofits.
This historic boom in tax giveaways one of the largest on record in the United States has been facilitated by both parties in the Legislature during a yearslong financial crisis and a plague of revenue shortages. Some of the biggest grants Christie has doled out have benefited politically connected insiders. The cost for state taxpayers could grow by billions of dollars more before New Jerseys main subsidy program expires in 2019.
Christie asserts that government bodies and private businesses would save $80 million a year by posting legal notices online, instead of printing them in newspapers, as New Jersey law currently requires. The governors office has refused to break down its cost analysis and has not provided supporting documentation requested by The Record under the Open Public Records Act.
Meanwhile, the New Jersey Press Association said the cost of publishing legal notices is $8 million a year for taxpayers and $12 million for businesses, according to a 2010 study. Advertisement rates for legal notices are set by law, and they were last increased three decades ago. Publication of public notices in newspapers is hardly unique to New Jersey and has for nearly a century been an established method of communication for governments across the nation.
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http://www.northjersey.com/story/news/new-jersey/2016/12/17/lawmakers-ignoring-74b-boom-corporate-welfare-experts-say/95554638/