A news service for the people of Michigan from the Mackinac Center for Public Policy

Charlie Owens
Charlie Owens, Michigan director of the National Federation of Independent Businesses, speaking in Jackson on Thursday.

Before beginning a presentation that criticized the Michigan state government for its excessive spending, Charlie Owens first had to take a jab at the federal government.

Owens, the Michigan director of the National Federation of Independent Businesses, said he had just read a story about President Barack Obama’s plan to give businesses tax credits if they started hiring.

“We don’t really hire employees because you give us a tax credit,” Owens said Thursday at a luncheon in Jackson. “We hire employees because we have a reason to hire them. … You might want to work on the reasons we aren’t hiring.”

Owens said government officials’ claims that they have “cut to the bone” were false.

“They don’t even know where the bone is, folks,” Owens said.

He gave several examples.

Owens said the state claims as cuts that it reduced its “current services” appropriations from 2.5 percent to 1 percent to universities and community colleges. All it did, he said, was reduce the amount of the increase.

“That is not a cut,” Owens said.

He talked about a hiring freeze Gov. Jennifer Granholm enacted in 2007. He said that freeze’s only exemptions were for jobs that would protect the health, safety and welfare of Michigan residents.

But Michigan has made 2,373 hires, including a $96,642 “communications specialist” for the Michigan Economic Development Corp., three jobs to test racehorses for drug use and a $70,000 job for the Michigan Film Office.

“That’s what passes for a cut to the bone in Lansing,” Owens said. “We are rapidly getting to the point in this state where the tax spenders will outnumber the taxpayers.”

Owens said no reform can be done without dealing with the public sector unions.

The average state employee’s salary has increased from $43,893 in 2001 to $53,369 in 2010. Owens said these salaries and benefits are no longer sustainable.

According to Owens, the state is in a cycle where its gets a budget deficit, raises taxes, gives more money to public sector unions and then the economy takes another downturn, leading to another deficit.

“Is there a model for that?” Owens asked. “Yeah. It’s called the city of Detroit.”

He went on to say Michigan's government must end its practice of offering tax incentives to certain types of businesses.

“Today it is batteries. Tomorrow it is windmills. Then it is bioscience,” Owens said.

The tax incentives, he said, are nothing more than “little bubbles” protecting targeted businesses from an “abysmal business climate” the other businesses have to live in.

Tight security locked out dozens of anti-right-to-work protesters from the State Capitol as Governor Snyder was delivering his "State of the State" address. Protesters tried to disrupt the speech by banging and chanting outside the building.

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SEIU TAKES $33M AND COUNTING
FROM MICHIGAN HOME HELP PROGRAM PROVIDERS — OFTEN FAMILY MEMBERS

ATTORNEY GENERAL ORDERED THE STATE TO STOP TAKING MONEY ON MAY 25, 2012
[clock1]
Skimmed since November 2006
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Skimmed after reaching the MI Senate in June 2011
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Skimmed after the bill was signed April 10, 2012
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Skimmed after the Attorney General
opinion May 25, 2012

The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) "organized” Michigan's self-employed Home Help Program providers for the purpose of skimming dues from their ailing and disabled clients' Medicaid subsidy checks. The majority of these providers are relatives or friends taking care of loved ones. It’s been estimated that less than 25 percent of the providers are hired in an employment setting.

The first counter tallies SEIU dues skimmed since the union and state officials first launched this scheme in late 2006. The second shows the amount skimmed since June 9, 2011, when the Michigan House passed and sent to the Senate a bill to ban this and all similar “stealth unionization” efforts. The third counter shows the dues skimmed since the Governor signed the bill into law on April 10, 2012. The fourth counter shows the amount skimmed since May 25, 2012, when the Attorney General opinion was announced.

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