What Happened After Amazon's $71M Tax Break in Central New York? 62
This week Amazon announced that "Approximately 1,500 local Amazon employees will operate and work with innovative robotics technology" at a new fulfillment center that's a first of its kind for Central New York.
Amazon's press release says they've created 39,000 jobs in New York since 2010 — and "invested over $14 billion in the state of New York" — though they're counting what they paid workers as "investing" (as well as what they paid to build Amazon's infrastructure).
Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes: In 2019, Onondaga County (New York) officials unanimously approved $71 million in tax breaks to support the development of a giant warehouse in the Town of Clay... "I am very excited to see this tremendous investment in Central New York coming to fruition," said U.S. Representative John Katko. "The new Fulfillment Center will be revolutionary for our region, creating over 1,500 jobs and making significant contributions to the local economy."
Driving home Katko's point, the press release added, "In April of 2021, Amazon furthered its commitment to invest in education programs that will drive future innovation in the communities it serves by donating $1.75 million to construct a new STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math) high school in Onondaga County. Amazon's donation will fund robotics and computer science initiatives at the new school [presumably using Amazon-supported curriculum providers]." Unlike Amazon's Fulfillment Center, the new STEAM high school is unlikely to open before Fall 2023 at the earliest, as the $74-million-and-counting project (that Amazon is donating $1.75M towards) to repurpose a school building that has sat empty since 1975 has experienced delays and cost increases.
Amazon's press release notes the company also donated $150,000 to be "the presenting sponsor" for the three-day Syracuse Jazz Fest. And it also touts Amazon's support for these other central New York organizations (without indicating the amount contributed):
Amazon's press release says they've created 39,000 jobs in New York since 2010 — and "invested over $14 billion in the state of New York" — though they're counting what they paid workers as "investing" (as well as what they paid to build Amazon's infrastructure).
Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes: In 2019, Onondaga County (New York) officials unanimously approved $71 million in tax breaks to support the development of a giant warehouse in the Town of Clay... "I am very excited to see this tremendous investment in Central New York coming to fruition," said U.S. Representative John Katko. "The new Fulfillment Center will be revolutionary for our region, creating over 1,500 jobs and making significant contributions to the local economy."
Driving home Katko's point, the press release added, "In April of 2021, Amazon furthered its commitment to invest in education programs that will drive future innovation in the communities it serves by donating $1.75 million to construct a new STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math) high school in Onondaga County. Amazon's donation will fund robotics and computer science initiatives at the new school [presumably using Amazon-supported curriculum providers]." Unlike Amazon's Fulfillment Center, the new STEAM high school is unlikely to open before Fall 2023 at the earliest, as the $74-million-and-counting project (that Amazon is donating $1.75M towards) to repurpose a school building that has sat empty since 1975 has experienced delays and cost increases.
Amazon's press release notes the company also donated $150,000 to be "the presenting sponsor" for the three-day Syracuse Jazz Fest. And it also touts Amazon's support for these other central New York organizations (without indicating the amount contributed):
- Rescue Mission Alliance: Working to end homelessness and hunger in greater Syracuse.
- Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science and Technology (MOST): Supporting the "Be the Scientist" program for Syracuse-area public school students to visit the museum and learn about STEM careers and sponsor planetarium shows for area students.
- The Good Life Foundation, a nonprofit serving youth in downtown Syracuse
- DeWitt Rotary Club
This is what happened to it (Score:1)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
So, let me see... (Score:2)
The tax break will go to creating automation that will eliminate human jobs
Well played evil overlord [apple.com], well played
Ten bucks here ten bucks there (Score:1)
Ten bucks here ten bucks there, these guys are really throwing the money around.
Investing? (Score:2, Troll)
Amazon's press release says they've created 39,000 jobs in New York since 2010 — and "invested over $14 billion in the state of New York" — though they're counting what they paid workers as "investing" (as well as what they paid to build Amazon's infrastructure).
I imagine they are also counting everything spent on goods and services. Pay your power bill - "investing".
How Many Alternatives? (Score:5, Insightful)
Where else are you going to find 39,000 people all in a cheap commute (since you don't pay enough for expensive commutes) that have just enough education to handle the work, not enough get better work? That's not a huge slice of the demographic, so you have to draw upon many hundred thousand total population. And, especially, where else are you going to locate that means the warehouse materials are close to the 8 million customers of New York?
We need not just more organized labour, but organized cities, that hold the line on these bargains rather than racing to the bottom.
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And they managed to get paid for exploiting this unique 'human capital' while having some extra cash to spend on automation on top!
Well played!
Slow news day, Slashdot? (Score:1)
Was there supposed to be something in here worth discussing, or is it just regurgitated press releases?
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That's funny. You're talking about a young woman who scares the living shit out of the elite class. She's certainly not afraid of a little corporate propaganda. Get real.
Oh, and she's inspiring millions of people like her. She represents the future. Deal with it.
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Inspiring people to be born rich like she was and going to the best schools and ending up being a bartender before finding a grift to get her elected?
Oh my. "Born rich" to folks that had to live in an apartment until she was 5, then their whole family chipped in to buy them what looks to be the smallest cheapest house in a ZIP code with rich neighbors, whose houses her mom would clean while she attended good public schools? You comedian, you.
Granted, she was better off than my ex, who was born on the west side of Chicago to a single mom, and didn't even learn to read until 3rd grade when her mom got Section 8 and managed to get an apartment in Oak Park
Re: Slow news day, Slashdot? (Score:1)
That AOC story she tells about living poor in a rich neighborhood is not substantiated by any evidence. She may not be ultra rich but definitely middle to upper middle class. Her dad was president for an architecture business, who designed, speculated on and then rented out low income housing in the Bronx and Parkchester and pulled in $500k annually. When the area gentrified, they sold them a few decades later (in the 90s) as condos for $100k/pop.
Daddy was a slumlord that ripped the government off for milli
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What an interesting combination of blatant lies and occasional facts taken out of context to support those lies.
Here's a good link that debunks the lies you're trying to sell.
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/d... [thesmokinggun.com]
But, of course, none of that matters to you. You don't fact check anything. Like most people spreading this BS, facts and truth hold less weight than opinion for you so you dismiss them and claim your unsupported opinions are the only truth.
Re: Slow news day, Slashdot? (Score:2)
Can you believe the shit the Right makes up about someone who lost their father at 18 while in college?!?
I mean that's a hard life anyway you look at it. It's one thing the politicians and media try to manipulate, but all the sheep who just can't think for a second "If that happened to me?" and realize just how hard life would be...
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The same people who think "picking yourself up by your bootstraps" is a way of life and not an idiom for an impossible task?
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Kinda like how my kids are in the best public school district in our metro area
You sound privileged.
Sixteen tons and what do you get? (Score:1)
You'll owe your soul to the company store.
Nobody will be able to leave that Amazon company town ever again.
Are we supposed to be impressed with Amazonâ( (Score:1, Troll)
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That's the tragedy of unemployment: even working insane shifts as robot tenders for a miserly wage is better than being on the dole - in an age when robot should be freeing up humans from toil instead - and local politicians are so desperate to put people back to work that they'll even pay wage slavers like Bezos to come and hire their constituents.
Amazon's $71M Tax Break (Score:2)
Math (Score:5, Funny)
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Well, still a better deal than some other things some no-honor politicos sold as great accomplishments.
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sales tax is 8 percent, jeff.
New York City sales tax is 4.5% and the New York State sales tax is 4%. Together, they're 8.5-ish %. Some other items (such as transportation) raise the rate as well.
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Why would people in Central New York pay New York City sales tax?
Because 20% of all my comments are foolishness. However, states within the United States are able to set sales tax maximums. In New York (state) it's 8.875%. Since the state already defined their 4% take of each sale, most municipalities will utilize/collect the remaining balance. Same down here in Texas with our 8.25% sales tax max. You can find municipalities that don't use the maximum sales tax, but most take what they can...
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Uhm, no the sale tax isn't 8.875%. The combined sales and use tax rate equals the state rate (currently 4%) plus any local tax rate imposed by a city, county, or school district. An additional sales tax rate of 0.375% applies to taxable sales made within the Metropolitan Commuter Transportation District (MCTD). The combined rates vary in each county and in cities that impose sales tax.
https://www.tax.ny.gov/bus/st/... [ny.gov]
I used to live in Monroe County, and it was 4% state and 4% county split for a total of 8%
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I'm not sure you're thinking about it correctly. That, or you misread my last post.
(I could have also misunderstood your point, that is very possible)
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The article, the summary
The town gets 0 if the land is not developed. Also some of these NY towns the way property tax works is based on the development, that means if the warehouse cost Amazon 20 million to build, they would pay a property tax on 20 million. It doesn't matter if they chose to put in gold plated doors that cost $100k each instead of standard doors, the tax
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basic math would show that they came out $1.75 million higher than what they had before.
nobody lost $71M. if they gave no incentive and amazon passed, and went somewhere else, where would they be? $1.75M less than what they have now.
in addition to that, minus the school, minus the jobs, and minus the good and bad aspects of having this in the area.
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Look, I'm not opposed to competition, but it is completely unfair for a city or state to give a huge tax break to one competitor but not to the others.
Saw this happen on a small scale in a city where
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Big businesses are good at one-sided contracts. They don't need the money, it is a legal bribe to incentivize where they will build. But further than a bribe, it's a competitive bribe - whoever promises the most gets the contract. These sorts of things should be illegal and treated exactly like a bribe or extortion.
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The state invested $71 Million to generate $14 billion in economic impact in 12 years.
For comparison, my state's capital is about to drop 2.2 billion on a new stadium that's projected to have a $30 Billion-dollar economic impact over 30 years.
It could be worse.
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And what's the down side if the pretend $14 billion doesn't materialize? Do you actually think that big business is honest? Does anyone ever follow up to see if these deals produce any result?
The answers to the above are nothing, they are dishonest, and the results are ignored the second after the deal is signed.
Real world example: Tax cut scoreboard: Workers $6 billion; Shareholders $171 billion [cnn.com] The Trump corporate tax cut fueled incredible stock bu
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Well played and deserved the Funny.
Should have mentioned "division", too, in your joke. Divide and conquer didn't get any mention in the Slashdot discussion, but it's the key to how the evil corporate cancers are dividing and conquering humanity. Racing the states (including nation states) against each other to the bottom. (I haven't checked recently, though I remember an old study that used math to show that the RoI on bribing politicians was higher than any other category of investment.)
Wish I had a solut
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You know that a tax break costs no actual money, yes?
You're trading future potential revenue for actual revenue and jobs. Unless Amazon was already planning to build there, that's $71 million that wouldn't have existed anyway.
Kickbacks (Score:2)
This would be unlawful if the bribe*cough*, sorry, I meant tax-break, was being awarded directly to the decision-maker, right? I know, there's definitely a difference, but...is it enough of a difference to make the comparison meaningless?
And, in this case, it's kind of like seeing a city bending over backwards to get Walmart to open a super-store. "Sure! Let's give them a bunch of mon
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"Sure! Let's give them a bunch of money to open a store and employ people that will then need to receive additional taxpayer money themselves in form of foodstamps, etc!"
If you're in an already poor town, this does have the effect of bringing outside money into your town from the rest of the state/country via taxpayer-funded social programs. But at the same time, it kills off whatever local business there was. I'm sure it is a net negative.
State. Central New York STATE. FFS. (Score:1)
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But a self-proclaimed "Editor" should hope and possibly expect that a story might be read beyond CNY - beyond NY, even - where "Central New York" means something else.
STEAM? (Score:2)
"STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math) high school"
So... a regular high school with more fat kids?
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One of these subjects is a humanity, and highly subjective. The other's aren't. Why is it being grouped with the other 4? STEM, I can understand. STEAM? Are there rules that are required to be followed in Arts? Are "feelings" allowed in the other 4?
just asking....
Edukashun (Score:1)
Why should other taxpayers subsidize Amazon? (Score:2)
For other taxpayers in this region, which will end up having to pay more to handle Amazon paying less, is this a beneficial trade?
Or would it be better to provide millions in tax breaks for a different business or businesses?
Or not provide tax breaks for businesses at all, and instead give tax breaks to people?
Or give no tax breaks and keep taxes lower for everyone?
I would love to see the justification by politicians why Amazon specifically deserved this tax break instead of the alternatives.
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it's not amazon it's your politicians (Score:4, Insightful)
if you don't like this, you should really be looking at the politicians you elected, not amazon. They are the ones who gave amazon the tax break, likely because there was something that would benefit them.
Amazon just happens to be like any other large company. when they want to put in a new facility, All are going to locate facilities in areas where there is enough population, but it's your elected officials that try to sweeten the pot by giving them tax breaks to attract them to the cities they would otherwise likely avoid.
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Amazon is only taking advantage of the fact that they are part-owners of the Party.
You thought that they were making campaign contributions out of the goodness of their heart?
Prove me wrong.
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