Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Governor Matt Blunt Signs MEDC Regional Economic Development Bill
Warrensburg - June 26, 2007 - Governor Matt Blunt signed the MEDC Regional Economic Development District legislation into law before an attentive crowd of Girls State participants at the University of Central Missouri this evening. MEDC President Lisa Franklin holds a signed copy of HB 741 while Rep. David Pearce, Public Policy Committee Chair Randy Allen, President-elect Ben Jones, and Rep. Darrell Pollock pause for a photo with the Governor following the ceremony (above).
The legislation was originally sponsored by Rep. Pollock and was added to a broader economic development bill sponsored by Rep. Pearce (right). The new law will allow local governments to pursue a regional approach to economic development projects. Prior to passage of the new law, local governments had the ability to work together on regional plans, but had no statutory authority to fund joint projects. Rep. Pearce recognized the MEDC's work in bringing the legislation forward. He also explained the original bill contained the Missouri Economic Development Code, but through the legislative process, the legislature decided to further study that issue for possible action in the next legislative session.
Governor Blunt reiterated his commitment to job creation in comments to the Girls State crowd and commended the participants on their leadership.
The Missouri Economic Development Council thanks Governor Blunt, Rep. Pollock, Rep. Pearce, and the other members of the House and Senate for their support of MEDC's economic development legislation.
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Quality Jobs Act Producing Results
While I agree with the general premise of the article that the best way to approach economic development is through true tax reform through the elimination or lowering of rates, the pathway to achieve that goal is not to reduce tax credits and incentives that are working. To put all tax credits and incentives in a box and declare all of them are failures is simply to be misinformed.
The Quality Jobs Act was passed after the Missouri Economic Development Council (MEDC) authorized a study of best practices in economic development at the state level. This study showed that similar programs in other states had been successful and could be successful in
And the results have been better than any of us could have imagined in 2005. According to a report issued earlier this year by the Taxpayers Research Institute of Missouri based on actual data from the Missouri Department of Economic Development, the first 104 Quality Jobs projects have stimulated
Concerned about the return to the state? The Quality Jobs program has returned $3.18 in new tax dollars for every state tax dollar invested in the program! And that does not account for any additional economic benefits that could be measured using respected economic modeling software - those are strictly tax dollars yielded from a great incentive program that actually works as intended.
I agree with the authors of the article that many of our tax credit and incentive programs should be reviewed for effectiveness and those that cannot prove results should be changed or eliminated to provide the most benefit from each tax dollar invested. In fact, when we originally passed the Quality Jobs Act, we did exactly that, taking money away from a program that had never used the full amount of allocated tax credits and using that otherwise wasted resource to fund this new innovative program. The state should look harder at available tax incentives and their benefits, both economic and social, and those that cannot be justified should be eliminated. But looking at the failure of some of these programs and somehow concluding that all tax incentive programs are ineffective is simply incorrect.
In addition, the health insurance requirement rewards companies that provide health insurance for employees, reducing the number of uninsured families that must be supported by the state's health care plan (Medicaid or its successor). By providing true quality jobs with health benefits, workers are able to afford quality health insurance for themselves and their families, reducing the amount that must be poured into government health care by all other taxpayers.
One final thought: those that decry the use of tax incentives should also realize that
The Quality Jobs program is the best economic development program
MEDC Legislative Consultant
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Governor Matt Blunt Signs MEDC Chapter 100 Sales Tax Exemption Into Law
Warrenton, MO - Governor Matt Blunt signed SB 30 into law on Wednesday, June 13. The bill contains an exemption from state and local sales taxes for sales and leases made by cities through Chapter 100 arrangements. This measure was a MEDC legislative priority.
Also included in the bill is a state sales tax exemption for machinery, equipment, utilities, and chemicals used in manufacturing, mining, producing or processing products in Missouri. This exemption, also supported by the MEDC, will help Missouri compete with states such as Kansas that have liberal manufacturing exemptions for high quality, good paying manufacturing jobs.
You may find the full text of the bill here and a link to the bill page with summary information here. The MEDC exemptions are on pages 30-31, section 144.054 of the bill. The law will be effective August 28, 2007.
Friday, June 8, 2007
Governor Attends Ribbon Cutting for Quality Job Recipient
We look forward to more success stories from the Quality Jobs program that will result from raising the tax credit limits on the program.
For the full press release, please click here .