Fighting for Camden
There's been a lot of smoke, but no fire, concerning the State's
Economic Development Authority and its awarding of tax credits to businesses.
Most of the bluster has been centered around businesses relocating to
Camden, New Jersey, one of the poorest and most crime-ridden cities in the
Country. And most of the attention has been focused on George Norcross.
For the uninitiated, Norcross is the State's strongest, albeit unelected,
political and governmental figure. If Norcross wants something to happen,
it happens. If he doesn't, well....it doesn't. Period, full stop.
As the argument goes, Norcross and those
aligned with him have reaped a large share of the available tax credits.
These tax credits were designed to help impoverished cities like Camden,
but have done little to help the city, the naysayers allege. While the
businesses relocate to Camden, they simply import their suburban workers into
Camden from 9am - 5pm weekdays, and the workers do little to little to help the
City like eat there, play there, and live there.
The doubters and naysayer's arguments are
totally off the mark.
First, George Norcross has done more to
advance the cause of the City of Camden than any single man in history.
He has invested his time, his money, and his reputation on the City.
He has supported charitable endeavors in the City. He has focused
on what he states are the two most critical areas of success: lowering
the crime rate and increasing the graduation rate of Camden's students. And he
has done so successfully, from the takeover of the City's former ineffective
police force by the County to the statistics that demonstrate that Camden's
students are performing and now graduating at a rate not seen in decades.
Politicians on both sides of the aisle, from
former Governors Florio and Corzine to Christie, have all lauded the tax
incentive program and Norcross' role in shepherding Camden's renaissance.
Critics point to the past investigations into Norcross (his phone was tapped by
federal authorities as recently as a few years ago) and his vast control of
party politics in New Jersey as reasons we should question the doling out of
these tax incentives, but, as the saying goes, to the victor goes the
spoils....and no one likes a rotten loser.
Perhaps it would be worthy of our time to
focus on and question the tax incentive critics and Norcross enemies, and ask
why they would be opposed to incentivizing businesses and people to work in
Camden? The answer is simple: because they benefit from the old
status quo of a Camden mired in corruption.
These people are picking a fight with the
wrong guy for two reasons: first, because Norcross is someone they should
be lauding for his work to help Camden.
Second, because, as the axiom goes:
Never bring a knife to a gun fight.
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