by Jon Styf
Tennessee’s Department of Economic & Community Development asked for $78 million for its FastTrack business incentive program next budget year.
The Fasttrack program received $92 million in 2022, $432 million in 2023 and $110 million in 2024.
The department gave a presentation to Gov. Bill Lee and his budgetary staff as the governor’s departmental budget meetings began this week and will continue Tuesday and Wednesday.
Overall, the department asked for $137.3 million in one-time funding along with a $27.4 million increase in its annual funding request. This year’s Fasttrack request is lower, in part, because items that were previously funded through the program will become separate budget items next fiscal year.
Fasttrack grants are state grants sent to companies to help offset the costs of expanding or moving into the state with the goal of increasing the number of full-time jobs and the average wages of jobs available in an area.
Economists question the effectiveness of financial incentives to private businesses to expand or come to a new state but state and local governments continue to expand the incentives.
Tennessee recently awarded Malibu Boats $7.7 million for its $75 million Roane County facility and $1 million to Nashville’s August Bioservices for its $65 million expansion.
Commissioner Stuart McWhorter asked Lee for the funding for seven new full-time positions as well as $2.5 million for marketing, saying the department previously used Fasttrack funding for marketing but instead wanted to separate that funding in the budget next year.
“We’ve got more dollars and grants we’re administering and we’ve got basically the same amount of people in our department,” McWhorter said, comparing next year’s request to 2019. “We’re asking for additional positions.”
Those positions would include three to manage grants, two for administrative work, one for legal and another for mobility research to go with a $5 million Transportation Network Growth Opportunity budget request.
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Jon Styf is an award-winning editor and reporter of The Center Square who has worked in Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Florida and Michigan in local newsrooms over the past 20 years, working for Shaw Media, Hearst and several other companies.
Photo “Tennessee Capitol” by Adam Jones. CC BY-SA 2.0.
This truly is not a function of government. Self governance requires an informed electorate. Where are the elected officials willing to be honest about the actual lack of any benefit to the public for this type of graft.
Tennessee state government: “Of the Businesswhiners, by the Businesswhiners, for the Businesswhiners”.
Nothing like striving to reduce government size and spending. It is too bad and insulting that Tennessee’s GOP-controlled Assembly has totally turned its back on these principles. Time for voters to “retire” them for real conservatives. I include my high-powered rep – William Lamberth – in that group. He always has an excuse for this crony capitalism.