[corp-focus] Shakedown in Toledo
Robert Weissman
rob@essential.org
Tue, 8 Feb 2000 16:06:20 -0500 (EST)
Shakedown in Toledo
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
In the last 20 years, the corporate shakedown game has been elevated to an
art form. Corporations have orchestrated race-to-the-bottom bidding wars
among states and cities hoping to attract a new factory, or even maintain
an existing facility. States and localities shower companies with tax
breaks, subsidies, regulatory exemptions, discounted utility rates and
other favors -- all at the expense of average taxpayers.
One innovative response to the shakedown game is to demand that companies
make specific and legally binding commitments -- a certain number of jobs,
a certain wage level for its workers -- in exchange for the subsidies they
receive. The Washington, D.C.-based Good Jobs First, headed by Greg LeRoy,
and the network of grassroots groups with which it works has pioneered
this approach.
Now a pair of attorneys are set to challenge the very validity of business
location tax incentives.
On behalf of a number of residential and small business plaintiffs, Toledo
attorney Terry Lodge and his co-counsel, Northeastern University Law
Professor Peter Enrich, plan to challenge a massive subsidy from Toledo
and the state of Ohio to DaimlerChrysler to keep a Jeep plant in the city.
Faced with the threat of the existing Jeep plant closing, Toledo put
together a $281 million local, state and federal subsidy package to
support company plant expansion plans. The package includes a property tax
exemption for 10 years, transfer of free land, including site preparation,
transfer of environmental liability from DaimlerChrysler to the city and
assorted other corporate welfare handouts.
In exchange, DaimlerChrysler has committed to expand its Jeep facilities
-- but will actually reduce the number of Jeep jobs from the current 5,600
to 4,900 (DaimlerChrysler's public claim) or 4,200 (the level the company
specifies it will try to preserve in an unenforceable provision in its
agreement with Toledo) or something much lower (a likely result based on
United Auto Worker estimates and recent layoffs at the plant).
The Toledo deal has also attracted national attention because it requires
the displacement of a community near the plant. With the threat of a
taking by eminent domain in the background, the City bought out 89
households, and will transfer the community's land to DaimlerChrysler. In
its public explanations, Jeep identifies the community's parcel as a
potential truck waiting area, but in its map, the area is to be used for
landscaping -- a truck waiting area is designated for another parcel of
land.
The lawsuit challenging the subsidies will be based on two theories.
First, small, local businesses assert that the subsidy package denies them
equal protection under the law, on the grounds, Lodge says, that "they get
no benefit from the corporate largesse, and have no prospect of qualifying
[for such subsidies] absent a threat to leave the state" -- not a
realistic threat for local businesses. The residents and small businesses
contend that they are being asked to subsidize DaimlerChrysler unfairly.
The second claim in the lawsuit is on behalf of Michigan residents, where
DaimlerChrysler threatened to move its plant if Toledo did not provide
them with subsidies.
Such subsidies, they argued in an initially filed version of the suit
(voluntarily withdrawn but soon to be refiled), are unconstitutional. "The
statute and Agreement discriminate in favor of in-state business activity
and against out-of-state investment, in violation of the restrictions
imposed on discriminatory state and local taxation by the Commerce
Clause," the suit contends.
The U.S. Constitution gives Congress the power to regulate commerce
between states, and the Supreme Court has interpreted the Commerce Clause
to mean that states cannot impose special taxes or maintain protectionist
barriers on goods shipped from other states.
Neither the City of Toledo nor DaimlerChrysler responded to requests for
comment about the suit.
The challenge to the Toledo subsidy seemingly would require a court to
rule against the prevailing, tangled Commerce Clause jurisprudence which
seems to permit subsidies.
But Enrich argues that, as a tax matter, the Supreme Court has not had
occasion to rule on business-location tax incentives. Since the Supreme
Court has held unconstitutional tax measures that penalize out-of-state
firms, it should logically strike down in-state subsidies, he argues in a
1996 Harvard Law Review article.
"The Court has repeatedly invalidated state tax provisions if they provide
an in-state business or activity with protections or benefits that are not
similarly available to its out-of-state competition," he writes.
The stakes are high in this innovative case. The Toledo-DaimlerChrysler
agreement is a typical, if extreme, business subsidy package, with a
locality desperate to attract or retain jobs bidding against all other
suitors and itself. If such subsidies are held unconstitutional,
corporations' ability to use job blackmail against states and localities
will be significantly undermined.
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The
Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common
Courage Press, 1999, http://www.corporatepredators.org)
(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman