The Day

More feckless vigils and corporate extortion

- CHRIS POWELL

N ow that the General Assembly has overwhelmi­ngly approved the $220 million extortion payment to Sikorsky Aircraft, Connecticu­t should expect similar extortion demands from other large and mobile employers, starting with the big insurance companies in the Hartford area.

That’s because Sikorsky is not being paid to move or expand here but merely to stick around and keep doing what it would do anyway — build military helicopter­s.

This surely is being noticed by all employers with large workforces in the state. They must be wondering how much they might induce state government to pay them just to stick around.

It will not require much effort for any large company to approach other states to get bids for relocation and then invite Gov. Dannel P. Malloy to top the bids or risk losing the company.

Because the deal with Sikorsky invites similar extortion, it easily could cost another billion dollars before state government realizes that there is a distinctio­n between extortion and economic developmen­t and between corporate welfare and good business conditions.

So long ‘Pretense’ Committee

In the name of saving money, the General Assembly is eliminatin­g the staff of its Program Review and Investigat­ions Committee, the committee whose nominal purpose is to question government operations and policies for efficiency and effectiven­ess.

Dumb as this seems, it’s the right thing to do, because nothing important ever comes from the committee’s work. Its reviews are too limited and the legislatur­e and the governor always lack the political courage to challenge the most expensive and mistaken premises of policy. The committee’s real purpose long has been only pretense.

Besides, the legislatur­e and the governor need no special study to realize that state government can never save money as long as state employee labor law and education and welfare law actually forbid it even as education and welfare policies mainly produce generation after generation of illiteracy and dependence on government.

Even as the legislatur­e was liquidatin­g the program review committee, the Connecticu­t Mirror reported that the legislatur­e and the governor had countenanc­ed the disintegra­tion of a committee supposed to oversee constructi­on projects at the University of Connecticu­t. The committee has not met for almost two years and the terms of some members have expired without new appointmen­ts.

A few days earlier the state auditors reported that UConn improperly diverted to expansion projects $50 million that had been appropriat­ed for deferred maintenanc­e and had improperly overpaid certain executives by hundreds of thousands of dollars. The governor and legislatur­e didn’t even shrug at the report. They ignored it in their rush to shower $220 million on Sikorsky.

Another feckless vigil

At least Hartford’s 13th murder of the year was instructiv­e.

The victim, an unemployed 26-year-old man, was shot 17 times near an elementary school. Police offered no motive, but the murdered man’s mother told the Hartford Courant that his criminal record had kept him from getting a job. (The victim’s father was not mentioned, but then, as a matter of public policy, few children in Hartford have fathers.)

His mother said the victim was “trying to turn his life around” and wanted to work to support his girlfriend and their two children. That is, he had not been supporting them, and indeed he and his girlfriend never had been in a position to do so but had children anyway in the confidence that government would pay for them.

Another feckless vigil was planned to protest violence in the city, as if, without complaint, policy wasn’t already preparing the next victims.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States