<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en">
<html>
<b>Shakedown in Toledo</b>
<br>By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
<p>In the last 20 years, the corporate shakedown game has been elevated
to an
<br>art form. Corporations have orchestrated race-to-the-bottom bidding
wars
<br>among states and cities hoping to attract a new factory, or even maintain
<br>an existing facility. States and localities shower companies with tax
<br>breaks, subsidies, regulatory exemptions, discounted utility rates
and
<br>other favors -- all at the expense of average taxpayers.
<p>One innovative response to the shakedown game is to demand that companies
<br>make specific and legally binding commitments -- a certain number of
jobs,
<br>a certain wage level for its workers -- in exchange for the subsidies
they
<br>receive. The Washington, D.C.-based Good Jobs First, headed by Greg
LeRoy,
<br>and the network of grassroots groups with which it works has pioneered
<br>this approach.
<p>Now a pair of attorneys are set to challenge the very validity of business
<br>location tax incentives.
<p>On behalf of a number of residential and small business plaintiffs,
Toledo
<br>attorney Terry Lodge and his co-counsel, Northeastern University Law
<br>Professor Peter Enrich, plan to challenge a massive subsidy from Toledo
<br>and the state of Ohio to DaimlerChrysler to keep a Jeep plant in the
city.
<p>Faced with the threat of the existing Jeep plant closing, Toledo put
<br>together a $281 million local, state and federal subsidy package to
<br>support company plant expansion plans. The package includes a property
tax
<br>exemption for 10 years, transfer of free land, including site preparation,
<br>transfer of environmental liability from DaimlerChrysler to the city
and
<br>assorted other corporate welfare handouts.
<p>In exchange, DaimlerChrysler has committed to expand its Jeep facilities
<br>-- but will actually reduce the number of Jeep jobs from the current
5,600
<br>to 4,900 (DaimlerChrysler's public claim) or 4,200 (the level the company
<br>specifies it will try to preserve in an unenforceable provision in
its
<br>agreement with Toledo) or something much lower (a likely result based
on
<br>United Auto Worker estimates and recent layoffs at the plant).
<p>The Toledo deal has also attracted national attention because it requires
<br>the displacement of a community near the plant. With the threat of
a
<br>taking by eminent domain in the background, the City bought out 89
<br>households, and will transfer the community's land to DaimlerChrysler.
In
<br>its public explanations, Jeep identifies the community's parcel as
a
<br>potential truck waiting area, but in its map, the area is to be used
for
<br>landscaping -- a truck waiting area is designated for another parcel
of
<br>land.
<p>The lawsuit challenging the subsidies will be based on two theories.
<br>First, small, local businesses assert that the subsidy package denies
them
<br>equal protection under the law, on the grounds, Lodge says, that "they
get
<br>no benefit from the corporate largesse, and have no prospect of qualifying
<br>[for such subsidies] absent a threat to leave the state" -- not a
<br>realistic threat for local businesses. The residents and small businesses
<br>contend that they are being asked to subsidize DaimlerChrysler unfairly.
<p>The second claim in the lawsuit is on behalf of Michigan residents,
where
<br>DaimlerChrysler threatened to move its plant if Toledo did not provide
<br>them with subsidies.
<p>Such subsidies, they argued in an initially filed version of the suit
<br>(voluntarily withdrawn but soon to be refiled), are unconstitutional.
"The
<br>statute and Agreement discriminate in favor of in-state business activity
<br>and against out-of-state investment, in violation of the restrictions
<br>imposed on discriminatory state and local taxation by the Commerce
<br>Clause," the suit contends.
<p>The U.S. Constitution gives Congress the power to regulate commerce
<br>between states, and the Supreme Court has interpreted the Commerce
Clause
<br>to mean that states cannot impose special taxes or maintain protectionist
<br>barriers on goods shipped from other states.
<p>Neither the City of Toledo nor DaimlerChrysler responded to requests
for
<br>comment about the suit.
<p>The challenge to the Toledo subsidy seemingly would require a court
to
<br>rule against the prevailing, tangled Commerce Clause jurisprudence
which
<br>seems to permit subsidies.
<p>But Enrich argues that, as a tax matter, the Supreme Court has not had
<br>occasion to rule on business-location tax incentives. Since the Supreme
<br>Court has held unconstitutional tax measures that penalize out-of-state
<br>firms, it should logically strike down in-state subsidies, he argues
in a
<br>1996 Harvard Law Review article.
<p>"The Court has repeatedly invalidated state tax provisions if they provide
<br>an in-state business or activity with protections or benefits that
are not
<br>similarly available to its out-of-state competition," he writes.
<p>The stakes are high in this innovative case. The Toledo-DaimlerChrysler
<br>agreement is a typical, if extreme, business subsidy package, with
a
<br>locality desperate to attract or retain jobs bidding against all other
<br>suitors and itself. If such subsidies are held unconstitutional,
<br>corporations' ability to use job blackmail against states and localities
<br>will be significantly undermined.
<br>
<p>Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
<br>Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
<br>Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators:
The
<br>Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common
<br>Courage Press, 1999, <A HREF="http://www.corporatepredators.org">http://www.corporatepredators.org</A>)
<p>(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
<br>
<br>
<br> </html>