New York Post

Job Czar’s No-Win Job

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It’s hard to defend the indefensib­le, and Howard Zemsky proved that in spades last week when state lawmakers grilled him about the state’s pathetic job-growing efforts.

As chief of Empire State Developmen­t, Zemsky oversees Albany’s jobs programs — which left him stretching beyond all reason to answer tough questions even from Democrats.

Start with his defense of Gov. Cuomo’s signature jobs program, Start-Up New York — which waives taxes for 10 years for companies that open or expand in state-favored areas. Why did it create just 408 jobs since its inception in 2014, despite $53 million in taxpayer funds to promote it?

It’s too soon to judge the job-creation program by how many jobs it’s created, Zemsky said with a straight face. After all, he insisted, it has “dramatical­ly changed” perception­s. Before Start-Up, the world thought New York was “not open for business” — now it knows differentl­y.

Of course, Zemsky provided zero evidence for that claim. Because there is none.

Lawmakers wanted something more concrete: “At this point, we’re not seeing a whole lot of return on investment­s,” said Assemblywo­man Addie Russell (D-Theresa). “Folks in my area are looking for jobs, not perception,” calling 408 jobs a “paltry” result.

No, it’s not at all too soon to flag Start-Up’s failure. After all, its goal even after five years is only 4,100 jobs, a mere 820 a year. Even if it meets that mark, it’ll have grown the state’s 8 million-job rolls by just 0.05 percent. At a cost of millions.

Worse, another Democrat, Robin Schimminge­r (Kenmore), doubts even the 408-job figure. Data from the employers, he says, suggests some of those jobs were in the pipeline pre-Start-Up or are transfers from other places.

Zemsky also had to defend the state’s Excelsior program, which similarly gives breaks to firms that promise jobs. Audits by state Comptrolle­r Tom DiNapoli have questioned its value, too — saying it’s not clear the program created the promised jobs or deserved the breaks.

Cuomo’s “Buffalo Billion” — state money meant to jump-start the economy in Buffalo and Western New York — likewise came under fire. No wonder: US Attorney Preet Bharara is probing it for corruption.

The attacks soon prompted the governor to offer his own bizarre defense: He claimed the programs are working and lawmakers are just trying to “get a headline by bashing Buffalo.” Huh? Who’s bashing Buffalo?

Cuomo and Zemsky won’t accept reality: Ads and tortured tax breaks won’t change the Empire State’s anti-business reputation — because that rep is deserved.

To change New York’s image, lawmakers have to change its high-tax, heavy-regulation reality.

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