Beacon Center’s 2022 Pork Report Identifies Three Biggest Wastes of Taxpayer Money in East Tennessee

In its annual Pork Report published earlier this week, the Beacon Center of Tennessee highlighted three areas of waste, fraud, and abuse of Tennessee taxpayer money in East Tennessee. The report specifically identified the issues of the city of Knoxville’s lawsuit against Netflix and Hulu, synthetic turf athletic fields in Johnson City, and pickleball courts in Bristol.

The Beacon Center first cited the city of Knoxville’s lawsuit against Netflix in Hulu as a waste of taxpayer money in East Tennessee. The report claims that the city’s lawsuit against the streaming services was frustrating as the city lost money as residents got rid of cable. A victory in the lawsuit for the city would have raised taxes on the streaming services; however, in November, the Tennessee Supreme Court sided with the streaming companies ruling that they do not need to pay franchise fees to localities.

“Governments should not punish technological innovations that provide consumers with better ways to watch their favorite shows,” the Beacon Center writes in its report.

The report then cites the allocation of $4.4 million of taxpayer money in Bristol for constructing two synthetic turf softball fields and two grass soccer fields after paying $13 million on five baseball diamonds last year.

“The fact that Johnson City keeps pretending that these fields represent some kind of positive economic development to the area is misleading at best […] Elected officials need to stop making unforced errors by spending money on unnecessary luxuries like baseball and softball fields in the name of economic development and should instead focus on core government services,” the Beacon Center writes.

The report then cites the construction of pickleball courts in Bristol, for which the city has set aside $1 million. According to the report, each court will cost taxpayers $50,000 each and provide “no guarantee of economic return.”

Yes, Every Kid

“If there was a need for pickleball courts in Bristol, it would be a profitable venture and the government wouldn’t have to do it […] Elected officials need to stop putting taxpayers in a pickle by building stadiums, courses, and courts better left to the private sector,” the report adds.

The Beacon Center’s acknowledgment of the waste of money spent in Bristol and Johnson City on athletic fields and courts aligns with the report’s ‘Pork of the Year,’ which was the funding and proposals of many sports stadiums across the state.

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Kaitlin Housler is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network.
Photo “Knoxville Skyline” by Nathan C. Fortner. CC BY-SA 3.0.

 

 

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3 Thoughts to “Beacon Center’s 2022 Pork Report Identifies Three Biggest Wastes of Taxpayer Money in East Tennessee”

  1. Jay

    Well it’s better than giving the money to NGOs for the “homeless “

  2. Joe Blow

    Sounds like the City of Portland. A lot of money for a dog park when most folks live where there are open yards and fields. Now the city plans to spend a bunch of money on a splash pad. A big expense for something that might be used 4 months a year and I expect would require a large amount of maintenance. I grew up with a private splash pad called a garden house. I am tired of paying for frivolous stuff in order to get re-elected. All this while neglecting the water and sewer systems and roads. Oh, I forgot about the golf course the city bought a few years back from a group of buddies who owned it and were losing money hand over fist. Yes, small town politics are alive and as sick as usual in Portland.

  3. Randy

    First, dole out money to your buddies for cable TV, then put in place restrictions (pay to play) that maintain your guys gravy train. Then fork over state and federal money to other friends in other schemes. Make sure you “earmark” enough of that money for re-election campaigns and baptism of successors that continue the incentivized fraud model. Rinse and repeat. That is how the sausage is really made. Now lets get that Stadium built Knoxville.

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