(Sponsored) We Can’t Leave Rural North Carolina Behind

by | Aug 18, 2015 | Ads | 5 comments

Here’s A 16 Point Plan to Help Rural Regions of Our State

State Representative Susi Hamilton

State Representative Susi Hamilton

“From those according to their means, give to those according to their needs.”

While Republicans in the State Legislature debate a socialistic sales tax redistribution scheme that would make Marx and Lenin proud, it only exacerbates the growing divide between metro and rural regions of our state.

The socialistic sales tax redistribution plan passed in the NC State Senate last week is nothing but an effort to divert attention away from the programs that have been taken away from rural areas of the state.

Urban and suburban counties have long been supportive of balanced growth and have traditionally supported efforts to make sure we have “one North Carolina, where all citizens can enjoy the bounty of this wonderful state”. That means we must have some programs that are specifically designed for rural areas. One size does not fit all.

Here’s a 16 Point Plan to Help Rural NC succeed in today’s economy.

1. Roads Funding – Modify STIP. Return hundreds of million taken from rural roads that were allocated under the last (TIP) Transportation Improvement Plan. Rural designated funds transferred to Urban/Suburban areas based on “facts”, as determined by DOT, have resulted on priority rural projects becoming impossible to build. We must put back in place balanced growth and transportation philosophy’s that recognize rural highways drive job creation.

2. Undertake Medicaid expansion. Rural hospitals, major employers in local communities, are barely surviving and need the help of Medicaid funding. These are our tax dollars we send to Washington and so we do not like to see them go to rural parts of other states. Without adequate funding, the readmission penalties mandated under the ACA are driving up cost and putting rural hospitals out of business. It’s time to move on Medicaid expansion.

3. Return the portion of the Corporate Income tax contribution to Public Schools Capital Fund, which helped rural counties disproportionately. If the lowest possible rate takes money from rural schools, make sure everyone understands.

4. Change the rural school building assistance financing back to where the original lottery legislation had it. The initial distribution has been helpful in building rural schools in the past and could be again.

5. Fund the Jobs Development Investment Grant Program (JDIG). While rural areas do get some projects, many rural folks work at JDIG supported facilities in the urban/suburban areas. More importantly, with each JDIG grant, a significant set aside for rural infrastructure is established. No JDIG, no rural infrastructure fund, no economic development.

6. Rural Infrastructure Investment. When the State Legislature closed the Rural Center many of its functions to help local communities access funding for water and sewer service was stopped. We need DENR and the Commerce Department to develop programs to help rural communities fund these programs so they can compete for economic development projects.

7. Refund the Golden Leaf Program. Return to the rural counties the $200 Million in diverted funds transferred to the general fund in the last 3 years. These funds from the tobacco court settlement were meant to support the tobacco dependent counties and not the entire state. The urban counties have always supported the mission of Golden Leaf. The foundation has proven highly effective in working with rural county governments and the Department of Commerce; let them do their job.

8. Pass Rural New Markets legislation. This is a rural economic development bill that allows tax credits, which are designed to provide business financing in areas that big banks ignore. This program is designed for rural lending enhancement and has been successful in a number of other states.

9. Property Tax Equality. Do not pass pending legislation letting developers avoid property taxes for improvements until they start selling lots. Many rural projects that since 2008 sit idle with streets and sewer in place could be taken off rural counties tax rolls. Rural areas cannot afford any more favors.

10. Return the Research and Development credit. The ability of agriculture, a major industry in our state, to have access to the research and development labs at NC State University and NC A&T University as well as the private sector give our farmers a competitive edge in research in the global agriculture economy. To tell these private sector companies we do not support their research for new and better crops and livestock is an unwise course. There are other farms states that would love to take what we have built, and the industries that go with it.

11. Encourage Solar and Wind development. A $50 million dollar wind farm is terrific for a county tax base and puts little pressure on services while helping fund schools. North Carolina is a leader in this industry; do not kill this primarily rural industry.

12. Invest in Historic Tax Credits. Historic Tax Credits have been widely used in rural and small town North Carolina. The elimination of this targeted credit, which has been used to save many old manufacturing plants, has been very helpful to rural areas. The redevelopment of many lagging downtowns with private capital will not continue without this credit. Please return this credit rather than give poor counties someone else’s money.

13. Stop Shifting The Tax Burden. Shifting services and taxes to local property taxes payers should stop. Drivers Ed, road maintenance, education funding cost have all been traditional state level expenses. Being forced to raise rural property taxes to pay for these items just makes our areas less attractive to economic development.

14. Restore the North Carolina Teaching Fellows Program. Rural areas experienced tremendous benefit from the state’s teaching fellow program. This scholarship program educated 8,500 students who committed to staying in teaching, often in rural areas, for 4 years after graduation. A little more than 80% were still teaching in year 5 in rural counties, an outstanding result. Many rural teachers spent 30 years in schools as a result of this program. Return it for the welfare of the children of rural North Carolina.

15. NO on Constitutional Amendments. Drop the idea for a constitutional amendment to cap Corporate and Individual Income taxes. These measures have been particularly devastating to rural areas where these laws have passed. This is just a new way to shift cost back to the counties…creating many unfunded mandates. See item 14.

16. Energy Independence. Just last week, the USDA announced $63 million worth of grants (your and my tax money) for renewable energy across the United States. North Carolina, because of our leadership role in Solar and wind, received $48 Million of those grant dollars to develop, largely rural projects, adding to the tax base. One day earlier, the NC Senate passed a budget provision to bar federal energy grants for clean energy. Duke Energy has a rural strategy for renewables, as do many private investors. This eventually creates massive long-term new taxable facilities in rural counties. This is a concrete way to help rural counties, focus on renewables.

There’s a better way to govern our state.

Redistributing the sales tax funds from and cutting the privilege tax to county and local governments are financing schemes that have and will cost my county plenty.

We need prudent and reasonable tax policies that spread the burden and support the growing demands on our county and local governments.

Let us work together, as we have in the past, to devise programs that help rural areas rather than divide the state along the lines of rural verses urban/suburban. Reinstating even a few of the items mentioned above would provide more value than the Republican led tax finance schemes that hurt our rural regions of the state.

PAID FOR BY THE MAIN STREET DEMOCRATS PAC

www.mainstdems.org

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT: Susi Hamilton (919) 733-5754

5 Comments

  1. Ann Bowman

    Susie

    I am so proud of this rticle you wrote!!!
    How happy I am to share it with everyone in f 32dyjwfcw2
    The state!!

  2. Rural Supporter

    #6 states that “the State Legislature closed the Rural Center”. Although some Rural Center programs were transferred to the Dept of Commerce (resulting in the demise of several water & sewer projects), the Rural Center does still exist and I believe they will continue to be a strong ally for rural North Carolina. Check out their website if you are interested in seeing what they’ve been up to: http://www.ncruralcenter.org/

  3. Russell Scott Day

    Overall the points are good. Energy Capture does and will provide in place work for both Rural and Urban workforces. Standardization at whatever levels is possible is very desirable.

    As well we need to see competitive pricing of Volts DC appliances. Horse farm, Chicken farm, and Swine waste NG biogeneration units ought be standardized and offered with additives and filtering that causes the appliances used for heating and cooking to get gas that meets warranty standards for fuel inputs.

    Solar power is necessary to operate the swine gas systems that for 20 sows require 99 dollars a day, if I remember correctly from the report of experimental systems developed by Mike Williams of Prestige Poultry at NCSU.

    Lastly water weighs 8 pounds a gallon and NC has coastlines that can be used to offshore drop in turbine sets capable of generating vast amounts of electricity. A secret of present and future energy capture is superconductor generators, transmission lines, and motors.

    If we put the needs for fully realized Energy Capture in the hands of our NCSU engineers, they will be able to give us technology and plans and systemizations that provide virtually all the energy our civilization needs now for maintenance, and provides for growth utilizing Energy Capture and Bio fuels to run tractors on our small farms.

    We have already passed the tipping point and the climate will become more difficult for us to survive in daily now. The Petrodollar Imperative dooms us all, and the root problem is the basis for the currency that replicates all that the American Indians suffered from as the result of discovery of gold on their lands.

    I then have offered the Insurodollar as a competitive replacement for the wobbling Petrodollar as my gift to humanity, recognizing the root of our ensured doom as long as the Petrodollar exists.

    Russell/Founder of Transcendia

  4. Charles Hogan

    Perhaps somebody should file a FOIA on the state Educational lottery and see if we can find out what just happened to the $100 million in taxes that was just levied on the recent $188 million lottery winner. How many teachers could you pay with the missing $100 million?? and where did it go?

  5. Progressive Wing

    Yes, there are many ways for the state to help its rural areas short of removing resources from its attractive-to-business and growing metro areas. But it takes some solid thinking like Susi’s, a heartfelt desire to be fair and evenhanded in tax collections/allocations, and to truly be supportive of growing the state’s less populated regions.

    It also takes having enough state revenues to invest (as opposed to cutting state revenues in an effort to starve and shrink government), as well as rejecting the notion that state taxpayers who live and work in the more urbanized areas of the state should be punished.

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