Showing posts with label south carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label south carolina. Show all posts

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Report: S.C. middle of the pack for business competitiveness

GSA Business
July 11, 2013


Staff Report
Published July 10, 2013

CNBC on Tuesday released its 2013 ranking of Top States for Business.
South Carolina ranked No. 23, behind neighboring Georgia, No. 8, and North Carolina, No. 12. That’s up from a ranking of 32 for South Carolina in 2012.

CNBC said it scored states on measures of competitiveness developed with input from business groups including the National Association of Manufacturers and the Council on Competitiveness. States were ranked in 10 categories and were then given an overall ranking.
South Carolina scored well in the categories measuring workforce, No. 9; cost of doing business, No. 8; and infrastructure and transportation, No. 15. But, the Palmetto State scored in the lower half on quality of life, No. 41; education, No. 36; and business friendliness, No. 34.

http://www.gsabusiness.com/news/48236-report-s-c-middle-of-the-pack-for-business-competitiveness

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Rising seas clearly evident along SC coast

By Bruce Smith, Associated Press | Associated Press

April 29, 2013

GEORGETOWN, S.C. (AP) -- Living in a coastal town or city with seawalls and docks on the waterfront, it can be difficult to notice the sea level rise by increments each year. But effects of higher sea level are very clear down a winding dirt road in South Carolina's Georgetown County where acres of what was once a forested wetland have morphed into a salt marsh of dead trees jutting toward the sky.
"When you go into the field, you really see a lot of trees dying. That's the first thing that catches your eye," said Alex Chow, who teaches biosystems engineering at Clemson University's Baruch Institute of Coastal Ecology and Forest Science located at Hobcaw Barony, a 17,500-acre wildlife refuge northeast of Georgetown.

Chow and two other colleagues at the institute used aerial photos to map how the salt water has advanced into freshwater Strawberry Swamp from nearby Winyah Bay.

Their study found that over the past six decades, the amount of salt marsh in the area has increased from about 4 acres to more than 16 acres. The study was published in December in "Wetland Science and Practice," the quarterly journal of the international Society of Wetland Scientists.

"Over long periods — and what we looked at is over 60 years — the maritime forest retreats at approximately the same rate sea level rises," said Tom Williams, a professor emeritus of forestry and natural resources who is a co-author.

He's not ready to say the all the change over six decades is the work of global warming.

"Sea level rises and falls based on earthquakes and changes in a great number of things. I'm not the expert to say how much sea level rise in the last 20 years is climate change and how much is other things," he said.

Bo Song, and assistant professor of forestry and natural resources also contributed to the study.

The study notes that along the state's north coast, the sea level rise has average 3 to 4 millimeters a year during the past century or so.

William Conner, a professor of forestry and natural resources at the institute, said that what is happening in Strawberry Swamp is similar to what is happening throughout the Southeast where the shorelines tend to be flattened. The dead trees along the Cape Fear River in Wilmington are an example, he said. In areas where rivers are dredged for shipping, it also makes it easier for salt water to impinge on freshwater areas.

"It's been a little more dramatic in recent years," he said.

"Based on the calculations in this study, you can see it's happening much faster in the past two decades," Chow said.

In natural areas sea level rise will mean a lost habitat for animals and birds that inhabit freshwater swamps. Salt marshes are also an abundant area for various species. But it can take years for the salt marshes created out of other land to become productive as a spawning ground for shrimp and other creatures.

"I call it a degraded swamp," Chow said. "It will take some time for that to happen."


 

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

ACTION ALERT!!


Expanding Medicaid Essential for Controlling
Health Insurance Costs

Contact Senate Finance Committee NOW!!!

Today the South Carolina Finance Committee begins their budget debate. Whether our state should expand Medicaid to cover individuals with incomes up to 138% of the federal poverty level will be debated.
It is critically important for our state to accept $11.2 billion through 2020 of federal money to cover all the cost for the first 3 years and 90% of it after that. The South Carolina Small Business Chamber and the following chambers have endorsed expanding Medicaid:  Anderson, Charleston, Dillon, Darlington, Florence, North Myrtle Beach and Orangeburg.

Here is why:
--An economic study projects that the federal dollars will create 44,000 jobs and the result will be that the state will actually net $9 million more to its budget by 2020.

--Employees covered by Medicaid will be healthier, miss less work and thus be more productive.
--Small business employers will be better able to afford group health insurance if some of their employees are covered by expanded Medicaid.

--Expanding Medicaid will largely eliminate the “hidden tax” in every health insurance premium to pay for the uncompensated care of the uninsured.  Based on projections of the actuarial firm used by the state’s Department of Health and Human Services, this “hidden tax” is about $1000 per year for family coverage.
--Small businesses with 50 or more full-time employees that decide to offer health insurance rather than pay a penalty fee will not have cover their Medicaid eligible workers.

Contact Senate Finance Committee members now with this message:
Please expand Medicaid to help control the cost of health insurance and health care for small businesses.

Below are the names of these Senators.  Click on the name to find their contact information.
Thank you for your support.

Senate Finance Committee
Leatherman, Hugh K., Sr., Chairman
Setzler, Nikki G.
Peeler, Harvey S., Jr.
McGill, J. Yancey
Courson, John E.
Matthews, John W., Jr.
O'Dell, William H.
Reese, Glenn G.
Hayes, Robert W., Jr.
Alexander, Thomas C.
Grooms, Lawrence K. "Larry"
Pinckney, Clementa C.
Fair, Michael L.
Verdin, Daniel B. "Danny", III
Cromer, Ronnie W.
Bryant, Kevin L.
Jackson, Darrell
Ford, Robert
Cleary, Raymond E., III
Lourie, Joel
Williams, Kent M.
Campbell, Paul G., Jr.
Davis, Tom


 

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

ACTION ALERT!! Health Insurance Competition


Support REAL competition between insurance companies
Contact Senators today
Senate bill 145 will receive a public hearing in a subcommittee tomorrow morning. 

This bill would prohibit a health insurance company (usually the largest) from contractually forcing healthcare providers to charge other insurance companies more for the same services.   These contract clauses are referred to as “most favored nation” clauses because they guarantee that only one insurance company gets the best rates from hospitals and doctors. 
Because of most favored nation clauses other health insurance companies can’t compete on a level playing field with the “big dog”.

This anti-competitive practice reduces the number of healthcare insurance options you have and drives up premiums 20% or more.
Contact the Senators below today with this message:

“Support REAL competition between health insurance companies.  Stop Most Favored Nation clauses by voting for S.145.”

The contact information for all these Senators can be found by clicking here.
Senators to contact:

Ronnie Cromer (subcommittee chair)
Nikki Setzler
Billy O’Dell
Tom Davis
Joel Lourie

ACT NOW to reduce your health insurance premiums. 
DEMAND REAL COMPETITION


Press Release
March 19, 2013
Contact:  Frank Knapp, 803-252-5733 (o), 803-600-6874 (m)

Small Business Chamber calls on Senate to stop protecting
Blue Cross Blue Shield

Columbia, SC—A bill originally filed in January of 2011 will finally get a public hearing in a South Carolina Senate subcommittee tomorrow.  The bill, S.145 sponsored by Senator Shane Massey (R-Edgefield), would prohibit a health insurance company (usually the largest) from contractually forcing healthcare providers to charge other insurance companies more for the same services.   These contract clauses are referred to as “most favored nation” clauses because they guarantee that only one insurance company gets the best rates from hospitals and doctors. 
“Because of most favored nation clauses other health insurance companies can’t compete on a level playing field with the ‘big dog’,” said Frank Knapp, Jr., president and CEO of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce.  “And in this state the ‘big dog’ is Blue Cross Blue Shield—not only in having the most policies in the state but also having the power to stop this bill from even having a public hearing until now.  We are very appreciative of the new chairman of the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee for allowing this important bill to be debated in our Legislature.”

One comparative analysis between health insurance rates in counties on both sides of the South Carolina-Georgia border shows startling results.  The premiums in the South Carolina counties are on average 20 percent higher for small businesses and up to 30% higher on average for individual policies.
“If we truly believe that competition is needed to keep health insurance premiums down, then South Carolina must join about a dozen other states in outlawing most favored nation clauses,” said Knapp.  “Without real competition in the insurance industry, we might as well have government controlled health insurance.  At least then the public would have some influence over rates.”

Most Favored Nation clauses are currently being attacked in a major private lawsuit against BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina.  In 2010 the U.S. Justice Department sued Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan for violating antitrust laws with most favored nation clauses.  In 2011 it became public that the Justice Department was also conducting an investigation into similar practices in South Carolina involving Blue Cross Blue Shield. 

                                                                   ###


 

Monday, March 11, 2013

Expanding Medicaid Essential for Controlling Health Insurance Costs

ACTION ALERT!!

Call Your House Member NOW!!!

Today the South Carolina House begins their budget debate.  Whether our state should expand Medicaid to cover individuals with incomes up to 138% of the federal poverty level will be debated.
It is critically important for our state to accept $11.2 billion through 2020 of federal money to cover all the cost for the first 3 years and 90% of it after that. 

An economic study projects that this new money will create 44,000 jobs and the result will be that the state will actually net $9 million more to its budget by 2020.
Even more important is the direct effect expanding Medicaid will have on small businesses.  The S.C. Small Business Chamber was the first business organization in the state to support the expansion and last week the Charleston Chamber of Commerce also endorsed expanding Medicaid.

Read the op.ed below to see how expanding Medicaid will help small businesses in promoting healthier workers and reducing health insurance expenses.
Call your House member now with this message:

Please expand Medicaid to help control the cost of health insurance and health care for small businesses.
You can find the contact information for every House member here:  http://www.scstatehouse.gov/member.php?chamber=H

Thank you for your support.
------------------------------------

Greenville News
March 11, 2013
 
Guest column: Medicaid expansion is critical here
By Frank Knapp Jr.
 
Recently a representative of the Heritage Foundation told a South Carolina Senate subcommittee that expanding the state’s Medicaid program as allowed under the Affordable Care Act would be bad welfare policy.
 
Director Tony Keck of our Department of Health and Human Services has framed the argument against expanding Medicaid as an inefficient way of improving the health of our citizens.
 
These opponents of Medicaid expansion want to distract us from the real purpose of national healthcare reform and providing health insurance to our low-income citizens with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level.
 
In 2000 when I co-founded the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce we held meetings around the state to find out the major issues on the minds of small businesses. One of the top priorities we found was the cost of health insurance. Small businesses wanted affordable health insurance for themselves and their employees. They weren’t talking about welfare or making South Carolinians healthier.
 
Addressing this problem became one of the key issues throughout the last decade. My organization offered several proposals including raising the state’s cigarette tax to generate funds to subsidize small businesses providing health insurance to low-income workers. This tax was eventually increased in 2010 but the revenue was no longer necessary to help small businesses because national health care reform passed to address the problem of healthcare costs for all small businesses across the country.
 
There is no question about what national healthcare reform was about. It was titled the “Affordable Care Act.” It wasn’t called the Welfare Act of 2010 or the Improve the Health of our Citizens Act.
It was primarily about affordable health insurance and health care. It was the compromise solution to the demands of businesses to get health insurance and healthcare costs under control.
 
Our Legislature is now considering one of the most important aspects of the Affordable Care Act that will help make health insurance more affordable for businesses and individuals — expanding Medicaid to those who have incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level.
 
Many of our state’s low-income workers are employed by our small businesses and here is how a Medicaid expansion will directly help us:
 
First, there is a significant cost to a small business when workers are not on the job because they are sick or have to care for a family member who is ill. Workers with health insurance for themselves and their families miss less work due to illness and are more productive.
 
Second, small businesses that want to offer health insurance to employees will find it more affordable under a Medicaid expansion. Small employers with Medicaid-eligible workers will have fewer employees to cover on a private group health plan and thus have less in premiums to pay. In addition, with Medicaid expansion the cost of the employee’s private insurance will drop due to a reduction in the “hidden tax” on every health insurance policy to pay for the uncompensated care for the uninsured. Based on projections by Milliman Inc., the actuarial firm used by Director Keck for his cost projections, the reduced premiums could be up to $1,000 per year for family coverage.
 
The third benefit of a Medicaid expansion involves the requirement of the Affordable Care Act that businesses with 50 or more employees either offer health insurance or pay a penalty. Many larger small businesses in this category will decide to offer insurance but they won’t have any premiums to pay for their employees on Medicaid.
 
Medicaid expansion is thus critical to achieving affordable health insurance and health care for small business and all of us. Those who want to distract the public and Legislature from the real purpose of expanding Medicaid do so only to confuse the issue. We cannot let them hijack this debate.

Frank Knapp Jr. is president and CEO of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce. For more information go to www.scsbc.org.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

New AARP Survey Shows Support for Medicaid and Medicaid Expansion in South Carolina

(Columbia) A new AARP survey of 800 South Carolina residents 45+ shows that almost 70 percent feel that when compared to other government programs, Medicaid is very to extremely important.   Moreover,  57 percent of 45 to 64 year-olds surveyed disagree with Gov. Nikki Haley’s refusal to accept federal funds to expand Medicaid in South Carolina.

The Survey-in-Brief released today in Columbia, shows 54 percent of total respondents backing the expansion of South Carolina’s Medicaid program to provide health coverage for at least 329,000 uninsured state residents. Medicaid is a joint federal-state government program designed to provide limited health coverage to the poor. Until now, each state could set its own income level for eligibility and the states were required to match federal funds – in South Carolina on a 70/30 basis federal to state.

“Expanding Medicaid will help our state’s workers who’ve lost their jobs or are struggling in jobs without health benefits,” said Teresa Arnold, AARP South Carolina legislative director.  “For older workers hit hardest by the recession and out of the workforce longer than younger workers, this is especially important.” She added “Expanding Medicaid will give people without insurance access to preventive care that can reduce the need for expensive emergency room care, and ease emergency room overcrowding.”

Sixty-four percent agree that the state should use a portion of the trust fund money from the 2000 Tobacco Settlement in order to expand Medicaid in South Carolina.  Under the Affordable Care Act, all states will have the same income eligibility for Medicaid: 138% of the federal poverty level, up to $15,000 income for an individual and $32,000 for a family of four. To fund this, the federal government has allocated funds to each state to pay 100 percent of the expansion cost for the first few years, dropping to 90 percent by 2020.

“Hard working South Carolinians need the security of affordable health care,” said Arnold.  This sentiment is shared by a coalition of organizations and business groups who have formed the Accept ME SC coalition to advocate for Medicaid expansion in South Carolina.

Currently, Governors in twenty-five states, including Florida and New Jersey, are pursuing Federal funding for their state Medicaid program.

The AARP telephone survey, conducted February 13-21, 2013 by RDD Field Services, recorded that 90 percent of the respondents had some type of health care coverage and 92 percent have a positive voting behavior.  Political views split at 43 percent conservative; 31 percent moderate, 8 percent liberal and 19 percent other.

###
 
Patrick Cobb | AARP South Carolina | Communications Director

1201 Main Street | Suite 1280 | Columbia, SC 29201

Office: 803-765-7373 | Cell: 803-261-0304

 

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The ACA Toolbox for Health Reform: What State Health Leaders Aren’t Telling the General Assembly

February 5, 2013

by The Ruoff Group

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) provides health policymakers with a robust set of tools to accomplish important changes to both bring costs under control and improve our health and health care. The coverage expansion which ensures affordable access to this new, high performance health care system is integral to meeting the those goals, not contrary to them as the state’s health leader is telling the General Assembly.

When South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services Director Tony Keck travels the state, his central argument against the ACA and Medicaid expansion is that Congress and the White House asked the wrong question: “How do we insure as many people as possible in the United States?”[1] rather than “How do we get as many people healthy in the United States?”

Keck then points to the “Triple Aim” of health policy first articulated by Dr. Donald M. Berwick, former Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the federal HHS:

 Reduce the per capita cost of health care
 Improve the health of populations
 Improve the patient experience (quality and satisfaction).

We agree with Director Keck’s central premise that we should be paying for health rather than health care, but we disagree that they are mutually exclusive.


Figure 1—with permission of The Commonwealth Fund


In a recent presentation on The Commonwealth Fund’s new report, Confronting Costs: Stabilizing U.S. Health Spending While Moving Toward a High Performance Health Care System (January 2013), Dr. David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P., Chair of The Commonwealth Fund, used the chart in Figure 1 to show that the ACA helps move us towards the critically needed changes to the health care system to achieve Keck’s stated goals with a toolbox filled with tools for stabilizing health spending and moving us toward a high performance health care system.

The Keck argument seems to be that we have a choice: provide health insurance coverage or improve our health. Our nation (and state) is facing a health crisis:

1. Massive numbers of uninsured who tax our health systems through inefficient and inappropriate use which often comes too late to be cheap—45 % of non-elderly South Carolina adults with incomes below 138 % of the Federal Poverty Level ($15,856 for a family of one; $32,499 for a family of four) are uninsured[2];

2. Both a very costly and inefficient health system and costs growing faster than the nation’s economy; and

3. Poor health outcomes when compared to other nations.
There are ways to address these. The Commonwealth Fund Commission on a High Performance Health System observes:

As national policy leaders consider approaches to slow and stabilize the growth of federal health spending in ways that also benefit all payers (state and local governments, businesses, and households), it is crucial that these approaches be developed and applied to adhere to and further the goals of a high performance health system. These goals include providing affordable access across the nation to high-quality, well-coordinated and patient-centered care with continuous delivery system innovation. Achieving the goals of a high performance health system, while stabilizing cost growth, requires a focus on the total health system and health care markets, not just federal programs. (Confronting Costs, pp. 18-19; emphasis added.)

Director Keck, a creative health administrator who is using his position to push many of these changes in both public and private sectors in our state, presents a completely false dichotomy. Coverage which ensures affordable access to this new, high performance health care system is integral to meeting the Triple Aim, not contrary to it. When he suggests to the General Assembly and its committees that the ACA only addresses coverage, that is completely untrue.

We can have honest differences over whether South Carolina can afford it’s four percent contribution[3] to a Medicaid Expansion between FY2014 and FY2020. But the state’s chief health policy officer completely mischaracterizing the ACA to the General Assembly can only lead us to bad policy choices on the expansion.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[1] Unless otherwise noted, all quotes are from Keck’s January 24,2013, presentation to the Senate Medical Affairs Committee’s Affordable Care Act Subcommittee. Video of that presentation is available at: http://www.scstatehouse.gov/video/videofeed.php. Handouts from that meeting are at: https://www.scdhhs.gov/sites/default/files/Medical%20Affairs%20ACA%20Subcommittee%20FINAL%201.24.13.pdf.
[2] US Census Small Area Health Estimates, 2010, at http://www.census.gov/did/www/sahie/data/interactive/.
[3] SCDHHS never shows the marginal costs of the Medicaid Expansion, instead lumping in the unavoidable costs of the ACA, to demonize the ACA and to throw every chunk of cheese and baloney it can onto the scale of Medicaid Expansion costs. If you simply subtract from the costs of their scenario covering a reasonable estimate of costs of the ACA including an expansion their scenario without the expansion, you get $13 billion in total marginal spending, of which the State would be on the hook for $570 million, counting only some of the potential savings from an expansion. These are derived from SCDHHS numbers provided in Milliman Letter to Keck re: AFFORDABLE CARE ACT- FINANCIAL IMPACT SFY 2014 THROUGH SFY 2020 (November 30, 2012).

The Ruoff Group conducts research and policy analysis on issues affecting South Carolinians.  http://TheRuoffGroup.com

Monday, November 26, 2012

Missed opportunity to fight obesity


The first negative consequence of South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley joining fifteen other states in opting out of a state-run health insurance exchange under Obamacare has surfaced.
Haley’s Department of Health and Environmental Control has made fighting obesity in South Carolina a number one priority.  The director of the agency has formed a state obesity council to pull together all the organizations around the state working on the issue to learn from each other and better coordinate efforts.

One of the efforts that will be missing is forcing health insurance carriers to also help solve the problem with programs imbedded in their policies.  According to Dan Mendelson, CEO of Avalere health, that is what a state-run insurance exchange could have required in states with obesity problems.
If that state were running its exchange, it could say to insurers 'We want to make sure you have a plan that encourages diet and exercise.' Medicaid frequently does this. The program is always tailored to the specific needs of the state.  By ceding the prerogative on their exchanges, states lose the opportunity to make those choices.
Of course even if South Carolina did run the exchange, it is probably unlikely that it would have dictated anything to the insurance carriers given its past reluctance to regulate anything about the insurance industry.

Friday, June 1, 2012

New Jersey shows how to deal with Amazon


One of the big fights in the state legislature last year was over Amazon’s offer to build a distribution center in Lexington County (investing $90 million) and hiring 1249 employees.  In exchange the state would not require Amazon to collect sales tax on any purchases from South Carolina customers for five years. 
The South Carolina Small Business Chamber and some other organizations fought hard against this proposal arguing that it would create an unfair competitive advantage for Amazon compared to the state’s other businesses. 

Although we lost this fight, our opposition forced Amazon to sweeten the deal by pledging to invest $125 million and create 2000 jobs.  Unfortunately, our small businesses will be harmed by Amazon’s sweetheart no-sales-tax deal. 
But our state legislators said that they would lose the economic development of Amazon if they didn’t give into its blackmail.  Our elected leaders didn’t agree with us that Amazon was not going to walk away from building the distribution center that was already under construction.

One year later, say hello to New Jersey and this headline in today’s New York Times:

Amazon to Build New Jersey Warehouses and Collect State Tax

That’s right.  New Jersey and Amazon have reached an agreement for the online retail giant to build two distribution centers (an investment of $130 million) and create 1500 new jobs.  PLUS Amazon will start collecting the state’s 7% sales tax on New Jersey customers starting July 2013 that will result in $30 to $40 million more money for that state.  (Amazon failed to get a 22 month reprieve on collecting the sales tax.)
What did New Jersey promise in return for Amazon’s investment, new jobs and sales tax collection?  The same thing that we gave Amazon—tax incentives.

The opponents to the S.C. Amazon deal have been vindicated.  But that’s little consolation for our state’s small businesses that are seeing Amazon steal their sales courtesy of our General Assembly.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Online poll: State should promote solar energy


Union Daily Times
by Charles Warner
Editor
February 23, 2012

The State of South Carolina should use business tax credits to promote the growth of solar energy in the state according to the majority of the readers who participated in an online poll conducted by The Union Daily Times.

The Finance Committee of the SC Senate is currently considering House Bill 3346 which would provide tax credits of 35 percent for the installation of solar equipment on commercial buildings. The bill is supported by the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce (SCSBCC) as a means of stimulating economic development and job growth.

In a telephone interview with The Union Daily Times earlier this month, SCSBCC President Frank Knapp pointed out that passage of the bill would provide South Carolina with “a great opportunity to jump start a renewable energy industry” similar to what North Carolina has done. Knapp said North Carolina used tax credits to make solar equipment more affordable for businesses in the state. He said passage of House Bill 3346 would make South Carolina more attractive to the solar energy industry, promoting the growth of the state’s renewable energy sector including small businesses and even solar farms.

While South Carolina currently offers some residential solar tax credits it does not provide them for commercial facilities. Despite this, Knapp said some companies are already installing solar panels on their facilities to heat water and/or generate electricity. Among them is Boeing, which Knapp said has already installed solar panels on its new plant in North Charleston and the Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia which has also installed solar panels on its building.

For many businesses, however, especially small ones, installation of solar equipment is not currently cost-effective without the kind of tax incentives that would be provided with the passage of House Bill 3346. Knapp said that with the tax credits, South Carolina would reap the economic benefits of increased revenue through economic development and job creation resulting from the growth of the solar energy industry.

In addition to the benefits of economic development and job creation, the SCSBCC website states that the growth of the solar energy industry would reduce the need for building expensive new energy producing plants. It would also help reduce the carbon emissions that contribute to climate change which threatens South Carolina’s tourism and recreation industries.

Taken together, Knapp said this makes solar equipment credits for business a good investment for the state.

Poll

An overwhelming majority of those who participated in an online poll conducted last week by The Union Daily Times agreed.

The poll asked readers “Should the State of South Carolina use business tax credits to promote the growth of solar energy?”

A total of 50 votes were cast with 68 percent or 34 voting yes and 32 percent or 16 voting no.

Knapp welcomed the poll results as a sign of growing public support for the use of tax incentives to promote the growth of the solar power industry in South Carolina.

“This is very good news, we’re very happy that the readers of The Union Daily Times agree with the position that we need to offer financial incentives for commercial solar equipment to both create small business jobs and reduce our energy demands,” Knapp said Wednesday afternoon. “Alternative and renewable energy really is the future for South Carolina and the country and passage of this bill will put us on the road to that end.”









Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Funding a resource for small business

It would be nice to believe that with Rick Perry dropping out of the GOP primary last week that the idea he floated earlier this month in South Carolina of killing off the Small Business Administration would itself be killed off.  But that’s not going to happen.

There are still too many politicians willing to sacrifice one of the only federal agencies charged with providing services to small business for the goal of deficit reduction.  And there are too many small business owners siding with the SBA-bashers because they have no clue as to the services of the SBA and the Small Business Development Centers (SBDC) if funds. 

So here is a primer on the SBDC in South Carolina.  It is a statewide network of 17 local centers promoting economic development through business consultation to new entrepreneurs and existing small businesses.  The program is supported with federal, state, local and private funds and is open to any present or prospective small business owner generally fee free.  As one of the few state supported efforts to help small businesses grow and prosper, the SBDC sees upwards of 3,500 entrepreneurs and current small business owners a year. 

Nationwide it is the same positive story.  The country has 900 local SBDC’s that provided services to over a half million entrepreneurs and small businesses in 2010.  SBDCs help those thinking about starting a business or  needing help in applying for a loan as well as working with existing small businesses wanting to find new markets or trying to right-size in the face of a bad economy.

Talk at the federal or state levels of ending the SBA or under funding the SBDC is economic development foolishness for those saying they want to create or save jobs.  We should be expanding the SBDC’s ability to serve our state’s small businesses and that’s why the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce supports our SBDC’s budget request of $520,000.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Workers' compensation insurance needs more work

More of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce state legislative agenda:

Our successful efforts on workers’ compensation have led to stabilization and even a reduction in rates in South Carolina.  Whether it is our legislative victories in re-regulating the workers’ compensation insurance companies or our significant Administrative Law Court success in reducing proposed increases in premiums, the South Carolina Small Business Chamber is recognized as the leading business organization on this issue.

But there is still more work to do. 

Currently proposed increases in workers’ compensation insurance rates (loss costs) must be approved by an Administrative Law Judge in a public hearing if requested by the S.C. Consumer Advocate.  This provides an opportunity for the business community to challenge in court any proposed increase.  

However, if the workers’ compensation insurance industry proposes a decrease in overall rates (loss costs), no matter how slight, the state’s Consumer Advocate and businesses community cannot challenge the proposal before a Judge even if a much more significant decrease is warranted.  Senate Bill 31 would allow the Consumer advocate to request a public hearing before a Judge for any proposed change (increase or decrease) to workers’ compensation insurance rates (loss costs).

If you want to help, contact Senator David Thomas, chairman of the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee, and ask him to support S.31 and appoint a subcommittee for the bill.  Here is a link to the page with his contact information:

Another problem resulting in higher workers’ compensation premiums is the ability of insurance carriers not being required to use the most recently approved new rates (loss costs).  Consequently, insurance carriers can continue to use old rates (loss costs), which can allow them to collect excessive premiums from businesses.  House Bill 3111 closes this loophole in the law by requiring each workers’ compensation insurance carrier to adopt the most recently approved loss cost (rates) within 120.

H.3111 is also in the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee.  Again, contact Senator David Thomas and ask him to support S.3111 and appoint a subcommittee for the bill.  Here is a link to the page with his contact information:

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

What healthcare needs--competition

The South Carolina General Assembly comes back into session today.  Over the next several days I’ll be discussing the Small Business Chamber’s state legislative agenda.
No issue has consumed as much time and energy for us than the issue of health insurance.  We’ve made great progress toward helping make health insurance more affordable for small business with the passage of the federal Affordable Care Act in the spring of 2010. 
Since the ACA began hundreds of thousands of small businesses have lowered their health insurance costs by taking advantage of the new small business health insurance tax credits.  These and other benefits to consumers (such as lower healthcare costs for seniors and over a million young adults now having health insurance) have come without causing dramatic increases in premiums.  A new report out yesterday shows that the health reform only contributed 0.1% to the national costs of healthcare in 2010.
However, there is one unaddressed matter that everyone says is important to controlling premium increases—competition.
If we really want competition in the health insurance marketplace, then we must stop the “most favored nation” contract clause that guarantees that no other insurance carrier gets a lower provider compensation rate compared to the one with this clause.  The “most favored nation” clause stymies insurance carrier competition that can lead to lower healthcare costs. 
But the “most favored nation” clause is more cancerous to competition than just requiring no better compensation rate for other carriers.  It can actually require the provider to charge other insurance carriers more—up to 40% more in some states—than what they charge the carrier with the “most favored nation” clause.  It is easy to see if we truly want competition in the health insurance industry, we must make the “most favored nation” clause illegal.
Senate Bill 316 would put an end to the “most favored nation” clause.  The bill was introduced last year but failed to receive even a subcommittee hearing—the first step in the legislative process—in the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee.  I have a meeting with the chairman of that committee, Senator David Thomas, this week.  I’ll be asking him to assign the bill to a subcommittee as quickly as possible to give S.316 a chance this session.
If you want to help, contact Senator Thomas and ask him to support S.316 and appoint a subcommittee for the bill.  Here is the link to the page with his contact information:

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Amazon’s deal re-visited

The battle over state sales tax being collected by on-line retailers like Amazon has now moved to Congress.  Amazon, which this year won a battle in South Carolina receiving a reprieve from collecting sales tax on in-state sales in exchange for building a distribution center in Lexington County, apparently has now switched sides. 
The retail giant is supporting the Marketplace Fairness Act that would strip away the Supreme Court’s Quill decision that said on-line retailers without a physical presence in a state did not have to collect sales tax on purchases in that state.  The sales tax was still owed but it was the purchaser’s responsibility to pay it directly to their state.
If the federal legislation passes, the main opponents now are eBay and Overstock.com, all on-line retailers would be obligated to collect each state’s sales tax and remit it to the proper state.  The bill would exempt retailers with on-line sales of less than $500,000.
All this is good news for the nation’s small brick and mortar businesses that are at a severe competitive disadvantage because they have to charge sales tax but on-line retailers like Amazon do not. 
But passage of the federal legislation won’t appear to help South Carolina’s small businesses until 2016 because the legislation passed this year in the state specifically carves out a sales tax collection exemption only for Amazon to the exclusion of even all other on-line retailers.  Now the constitutionality of that special deal has been called into question.
In yesterday’s issue of Tax Analysts law professors James E. Rogers and Walter Hellerstein provide a scholarly legal assessment of South Carolina’s law regarding Amazon.  They conclude that South Carolina’s law violates the Commerce Clause of the Constitution because it treats certain out-of state on-line retailers (Amazon) different from other out-of-state on-line retailers. 
So even if the Marketplace Fairness Act with its bi-partisan support eventually is enacted, the constitutionality of South Carolina’s law needs to be challenged.  Any lawyers interested?

Monday, September 12, 2011

Job tax credits can work

This evening President Obama submits his American Jobs Act to Congress.  According to a story in The Hill most economists from Moody’s Analytics to the Economic Policy Institute think that the plan, if passed, would add about 2 percent to the GDP growth next year.
The big concern Wall Street is voicing is that the plan is not big enough to really move the economy.  Even worse, the fear is that Congressional Republicans won’t even allow this much job-creating effort to pass. 
But let’s assume that the GOP at least agrees to the tax credits for small businesses that hire the unemployed.  (Click here to see my interview with a local TV station on the subject.)
But passing the tax credits is only the first step necessary for this part of the plan to actually result in jobs.
Small businesses must also know the tax credits exist.  Most small business owners don't have the luxury of following tax law so it will be very important for the media and advocacy organizations for small business to make a solid effort to educate the public.

But the education effort shouldn’t just be about this new federal tax credit for hiring the unemployed.  States might have their own job tax credits to add to the job-creation incentive mix.
In South Carolina we were successful in changing our job tax credit law in 2006 to (for the
first time) include small business hires.  As an example, a small business of any kind in a rural area can get a $4000 tax credit if they hire at least 2 net new jobs.  Add the American Jobs Act and the state tax credits and you have a combined $8000 per employee and even higher if other state conditions are met.  That is a pretty big incentive for many small businesses that are paying around $12 an hour.

One final ingredient is necessary for these tax credits to do their job-creating work. 
Tax credits are taken when tax returns are prepared, not at the time of hiring.  If a business doesn’t have the capital to do the initial hiring, the tax credit months later won’t do them any good.
Therefore, small business must have access to lines of credit and loans for the job-creating tax credits to succeed.  We must step up our efforts to prod financial institutions to provide access to capital for small businesses qualifying for these tax credits.
If all these conditions are met, will every small business increase hiring?  Of course not.  But those businesses that are trying to make a hiring decision based on a slight increase in demand vs. new employee costs will be more inclined to hire.
Providing financial incentive to encourage job growth on Main Street will help start the economic turnaround.  Continued stalemate in Congress definitely won’t do it.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Triple the impact of your holiday dollar$

With the holiday season fast approaching and customers getting ready to open up their wallets, this is really the time to remember your SC locally-owned small businesses.

Please join us in our “BuySC” nonprofit action campaign. Surveys continue to show that communities with programs encouraging buying from locally-owned businesses improve the sales for those businesses during the holidays. When customer awareness of these programs is high, they seek out locally-owned businesses for their shopping and purchases. It’s just that simple.

And not only do the locally-owned retailers benefit, their communities benefit in a very tangible way.

®© Cinda Baxter, 2009. All rights reserved. Used here with permission.
All studies indicate that your spending dollar has THREE TIMES the economic impact on your local economy when you buy from a locally-owned business than if that same dollar is spent at a big box store or national chain with out-of-state ownership.

You hold the key to growing your local economy and it is right in your wallet.

The nonprofit SC Small Business Chamber of Commerce isn't alone -- there are a number of "shop local" campaigns out there, from Lowcountry Local First and the SCDA's Certified SC Grown program to The 3/50 Project, which inspired our new Buy SC "Local Has It" quarterly action campaign.

TRIPLE THE BANG FOR YOUR BUCK in leading us out of these recessionary times without spending any more money during this holiday season and all year. Just make your purchases from a SC locally-owned small business.


If you need help, we’re building our BuySC.org website directory for consumers to find locally-owned small businesses. These business owners believe in the power of keeping our money in local economies.






If you believe and want to TRIPLE the impact of your money to help, start now. Shop with SC locally-owned businesses and watch your local economy grow.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Challenging the U.S. Chamber

The nonprofit, membership-driven South Carolina Small Business Chamber will officially be supporting an IRS complaint against the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

We, along with other business organizations, are questioning potential violations of exemptions under the federal tax law in the U.S. Chamber’s conduct of lobbying and campaign funding. More on this later.

Below is a must-read New York Times story about the U.S. Chamber. If you have not been paying attention to the U.S. Chamber’s heavily financed legislative agenda and how it often is at odds with our agenda, this story should help bring you up to speed.
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The New York Times
October 22, 2010
Top Corporations Aid U.S. Chamber of Commerce Campaign
By ERIC LIPTON, MIKE McINTIRE and DON VAN NATTA Jr.
Prudential Financial sent in a $2 million donation last year as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce kicked off a national advertising campaign to weaken the historic rewrite of the nation’s financial regulations.
Dow Chemical delivered $1.7 million to the chamber last year as the group took a leading role in aggressively fighting proposed rules that would impose tighter security requirements on chemical facilities.
And Goldman Sachs, Chevron Texaco, and Aegon, a multinational insurance company based in the Netherlands, donated more than $8 million in recent years to a chamber foundation that has been critical of growing federal regulation and spending. These large donations — none of which were publicly disclosed by the chamber, a tax-exempt group that keeps its donors secret, as it is allowed by law — offer a glimpse of the chamber’s money-raising efforts, which it has ramped up recently in an orchestrated campaign to become one of the most well-financed critics of the Obama administration and an influential player in this fall’s Congressional elections.
They suggest that the recent allegations from President Obama and others that foreign money has ended up in the chamber’s coffers miss a larger point: The chamber has had little trouble finding American companies eager to enlist it, anonymously, to fight their political battles and pay handsomely for its help. . . . Keep reading

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Join the SC Small Business Chamber in supporting our independent, locally owned hardware stores next month:

Buy SC's Happy Hardware Day!!
Saturday, Nov. 20, 2010
Shop at independent, locally owned hardware stores to show your support for SC small business!