Friday, February 15, 2013

The Big Lies

Pro-PLCB arguments, fresh from the source
Updated 2/16/13: see last point

Privatization is on the way again, so this of course means that the anti-privatization forces will be beating the drums to keep things just the insufferable way they are, headed by UFCW Local 1776 President (for life) Wendell W. Young IV and every Democrat in the Pennsylvania Legislature, assisted by an unholy alliance of State Store clerks, beer distributors, teetotalers, social conservatives, and unaffiliated union members.

What that also means is that the same ludicrous lies will be trotted out in defense of the indefensible (see my recent post on Joe Da Ex-CEO Conti below). I can predict what will be said like I can predict the rising of the sun; these guys are nothing if not reliable in what they have to say, and they always, always stick to the script. Therefore, as a public service, I've undertaken to tell you what the Big Lies will be, why they're Big Lies, and how you can respond to them. If someone says them to your face, politely rebut them. If someone says them in a letter to the editor, write a response (not a comment on the newspaper's website: even fewer people read them than read the letters in the paper!). If someone uses them in an article or television story, SEND AN EMAIL IMMEDIATELY to correct them. You can't win if you don't say anything. We CAN win this, with the truth.

The $500 Million Lie: The PLCB makes $500 million in profits every year that goes into the State's General Fund. All of that money will be lost if the State Stores are privatized!
  •  The Truth: This is a multi-part lie. First, of the roughly $500 million that wine and spirits sales (I'm going to refer to "wine and spirits" as "booze" from now on to save time) bring to the General Fund in a year, about $400 million of it is taxes. Those taxes will continue to come in; no change in that is proposed. (The pro-monopoly group will tell you private businesses don't pay their taxes: if that's true, then it's a much broader problem than just booze sales. Fix it at the Department of Revenue level.) Second, the remainder isn't actually "profit." The Legislature tells the PLCB how much it's going to "contribute," and they come up with it. If it's "profit," fine; if they don't have enough, they come up with it elsewhere, by selling assets, for instance. Finally, if privatization is done right (and the Corbett Plan is close), border bleed will decline significantly as people in southeastern Pennsylvania don't feel the need to cross the border to get better selection, service, and prices...which in turn will mean more taxes coming in, an estimated $140 million. Of course, the big lie is that all of that revenue will go away. It won't, not even a significant part of it. 
The 5,000 Jobs Lost Lie: If the State Stores are privatized, 5,000 "family-sustaining" jobs will be lost. Privatization will create no jobs, all sales will be absorbed by "big box stores" and grocery stores with no additional jobs.
  • The Truth: Up-front: this is the toughest point. These are real people, and it's been the hardest thing to deal with: how do we see them back into the workforce? That said...we're not talking about 5,000 full-time jobs. There are around 3,200 full-time jobs involved. The rest are part-time and seasonal, hardly "family-sustaining." Also, while most grocery stores and big box stores will simply add the stocking of beer and wine to their current staff, with a bare minimum of staff added for purchase and selection, there are going to be 1,200 "all-alcohol" licenses under the Corbett Plan, twice as many booze licenses as there are now. Total Wine has said they'll be building stores in PA, and you can be sure that Canal's and Roger Wilco won't want to miss out. No jobs created? Pull the other leg. Will the jobs pay as well as the State Store jobs, with the benefits and pension? Probably not, because jobs in retail don't pay like that in the real world. The union will argue that they should, but the reality is that the union is doing nothing to use these jobs as leverage to improve the lot of average retail workers; they are an isolated island, restricted to those lucky enough to get one of these jobs. They are an anomaly. And when the system is abolished, there will be early retirement packages, there will be preferences for other state jobs, there will be training.
The Union-busting Lie: This is really about busting the union/really about privatizing every government function/really about anything other than doing away with this relic of Prohibition.
  • The Truth: Privatization of the liquor stores is favored by over half of self-identifying "liberal Democrats" in the State, according to a recent poll. They clearly recognize that this is a unique case, a government agency that never should have had "control" of booze retail. It is not at all about busting the union (and it has nothing to do with the Governor's desire to privatize the lottery without the approval of the Legislature); it's about getting the government out of retail. The same agency should not be selling alcohol with an eye to maximum revenue, while at the same time "controlling" alcohol sales to "protect" the citizens. This also leads to the PLCB being the major regulator of its main competition: Pennsylvania's wholesale and retail beer business. Two clear conflicts of interest; privatization frees the agency to effectively regulate retail alcohol beverage sales.
The Control Lie: State control of wine and spirits sales keeps Pennsylvania's citizens safer than private sales could. 
  • The Truth: In underage drinking, in DUI, in deaths attributable to alcohol, Pennsylvania's rank is only average; at best, on the high side of average. There may be a few categories where Pennsylvania does well, but it's a "cherry-picking" proposition; really, we don't do any better than the surrounding states, which have private sales. Control is ineffective, and anyone could guess that: "control" is only imposed on off-premise wine and spirits sales, not on-premise "by the drink" sales, and not on any beer sales. Those sales are all private. 
The Underage ID Lie: State Stores are the best defense against underage sales; employees check over a million IDs every year.
  • The Truth: First, we only have the PLCB's word for this. The police are not allowed to conduct "sting" operations in the State Stores, as they are in bars and beer distributors. These numbers are all self-reported. Second, the State Stores don't even do as good a job as Wegmans. The New York-based supermarket chain requires an ID for every single sale of alcohol. They will not sell you as much as a sixpack of beer without swiping your ID through an electronic reader, no matter how old you are. The State Stores don't ID on every sale. Finally, research shows, over and over, that underage drinkers get the vast majority of their booze from family and friends, and from using fake IDs in bars...not by purchasing over the counter in stores. This is a very small problem, and private sellers are already on top of it. Corbett's plan includes carding for every sale. 
The Liquor Store On Every Corner Lie: Privatization will bring a seedy liquor store on every corner. Wendell W. Young IV has said it, and legislators have repeated it.  
  • The Truth: First, they'll also tell you that all the licenses will go to "big box" stores: guess they don't really know what's going to happen. Second, competition will keep that from happening; a community can only support so many stores selling the same products. You don't see a gas station on every corner, or a coffeeshop on every corner. The very idea of a liquor store "on every corner" is ridiculous on the face of it; an obvious scare tactic. Third, local zoning laws will still be in effect. This is perhaps the hollowest of the Lies.
The Windfall Lie: Corbett says this will bring a $1 billion windfall. Last year they said it would be $2 billion. When (insert state that is nothing like Pennsylvania here) privatized, they only got (insert small number here). Why sell an asset?
  • The Truth: It doesn't matter what the number is. The State Stores aren't worth anything, except for the value of the inventory and the fixtures. The stores are all leased, as are the warehouses. The monopoly is the only thing worth money, and honestly, it never should have existed. Corbett's plan will make a large sum of money, and continue to bring in more every year. And it's all gravy, above the continuing flow of revenue from liquor taxes and sales taxes. What is the asset that we are supposed to own? A patronizing, annoying monopoly that would be illegal if it weren't for a traditionally overactive interpretation of the 21st Amendment.
The Rural Deprivation Lie: Only the PLCB supplies the state's rural areas with a full selection of wines and spirits; private stores won't go to those areas because they won't make enough money, and Pennsylvanians will have to drive 50 miles to buy wine and spirits.
  • The Truth: First, and foremost, it is not the function of government to supply rural Pennsylvanians with booze, anymore than it is to run a jobs program called the State Stores. The very idea is laughable. Second, has anyone had a look at the job the PLCB is doing supplying rural Pennsylvania now? Take a look at some of the rural counties: Adams: 1 store. Bedford: 2 stores (one of which is open 3 days a week, from 11 to 6). Cameron: 1 store. Clinton: 1 store. Columbia: 2 stores. Elk: 2 stores. Forest: 2 stores. Fulton: 1 store. Greene: 2 stores. Huntingdon: 2 stores. Juniata: 1 store. Mifflin: 1 store. Montour: 1 store (okay, that one's not so shocking!). Perry: 2 stores. Pike: 2 stores. Potter 2 stores. Snyder: 1 store. Sullivan: 1 store. Union: 2 stores. Wyoming: 1 county. That's 20 counties with 2 or fewer stores. What kind of rural service is that? Now...under Corbett's plan, these counties will get as many all-alcohol licenses as there are state stores, or as many as there are beer distributors, whichever is more. They may tell you that no one will take the risk of paying for the license, that they can't make enough in bucolic PA to pay it off. But remember: the demand for spirits at taverns in those counties would almost certainly mean that an all-alcohol license would indeed be profitable enough for someone to take that risk. And the proposal allows wine sales at supermarkets, restaurants and taverns, and "big box stores," which means wine would be much more available in these counties. Third, selection? Ever seen the "selection" at rural grocery stores? It ain't like Whole Foods, and people who live in the country are used to that. Private stores will stock in response to local requests and needs, instead of the top-down inventory currently imposed from Harrisburg with no attention paid to local preferences. This is a bogus point: things aren't that great now, and they'll actually get better. 
Got any more lies? Bring 'em on, we'll take them, and tell the truth.

24 comments:

  1. You forgot the nobody will open a store in Potter county and people will have to drive 30 miles to get to a store....just like some have to do now.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Lew,

    Mark Tanczos was asked about border bleed in a recent interview. He said that it will continue until taxes are reduced to compete with neighboring states. This is even after privatization. I tend to agree. What say you? You can find a link to that interview on the MBDA homepage.

    Otherwise, I can't really disagree with your points.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'll get back to you soon; at a friend's funeral today. Thanks for reading.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Albert, thanks: I've added that one and addressed. Lengthy, but easily done, this one's just silly.

    Rufus, I have to disagree with Mark. Border bleed isn't just a function of price. It's about service and selection, too. People in the border areas would really rather buy in Pennsylvania: it's closer, there are no tolls, and it's easier...assuming there are good stores to do the buying in. What's more, the poll commissioned by the Commonwealth Foundation revealed a substantial number of Pennsylvanians would like to see privatization simply so PA would be less of a laughingstock; those people are looking for a reason to stop going across the border.

    Would I like to see a reduction in the state alcohol tax? Sure, but it's not going to happen. So be bold: take away the offensive police-enforced monopoly, privatize, and watch border bleed lower dramatically. Am I sure of this? No, but neither is Tanczos.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The supper Markets would carry beer and wine and people in potter county or any other county have to buy groceries so do you expect them to put a grocery store next to there house, no people shop at grocery stores all the time so they will get their beer and wine and food all at the grocery store..

    ReplyDelete
  6. This is 2013 not 1933 lets change these laws and do the right thing

    ReplyDelete
  7. I'm sure they will have as much in their 3 foot section in the grocery store in potter county as they do Oman entire store.

    ReplyDelete
  8. You know what the grocery stores in Potter County will have? What the people in Potter County actually want, not what some committee in Harrisburg decided to give them. If they want more, the grocer will get it for them. That's how grocers make their living.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Yeah I'm sure they will have that nice imported Pinot noir right next with the other 5 wines they carry right next to the cottage cheese.

    ReplyDelete
  10. So does that grocery store have a crap selection of food and hardware, too? Because if they do, and people who live there aren't okay with that...why doesn't the State subsidize their food selection, too? Gonna get them a bigger selection of restaurants?

    Grocers WILL get better selections in, if they sell. If they don't...what's the point of the State Store stocking them?

    ReplyDelete
  11. Obviously you don't live in potter county like I do. It is a rural area and the grocery stores are very small and the state store actually loses money so a private investor will not purchase a store there. The state keeps it open for the coveinance of the people there. They are big enough to asorb the loss a private investor won't do so. The grocery stores are little more than glorified unimarts. They are very small and selection of everything is very minimal. Any wine or alcohol section these tiny stores will have may be a 5 foot section of one aisle no where near the entire store that is available to what they have now. These people will lose access to their product.

    ReplyDelete
  12. If these people want access to what they have right now they will be looking at a 60 mile round trip. So much for coveinance.

    ReplyDelete
  13. First, see my previous response. If you actually live in Potter County, you're not doing it for the great access to food and drink variety. I grew up in rural PA; my father and grandfather ran a general store in a village too small to have a post office. I do know what it's like. Second, you'll HAVE wine AND beer in most of those little stores, and won't have to run into Galeton just to get a bottle of chardonnay. Finally, any liquor store in Potter County is going to be supplying all the bars with liquor...so chances are very good that yes, a private investor will open a store. Bet they make money, too...because they won't be carrying a lot of stuff no one's buying.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Really? A 60 mile round trip? To where, exactly? You already know where the liquor store's going to be?

    ReplyDelete
  15. Since I live here yes I do. It will be in the nearest town that has a population large enough to support a store that doesn't lose money. Which is about 30 miles away.

    ReplyDelete
  16. And where's that? Wellsboro? Coudersport? Why is one of those better or worse than Galeton? And you'll have wine and beer being sold in the grocery stores in all three.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Actually Bradford. Coudersport and wellsboro stores really don't make much money if any. Not enough for a private investor to sink start up cost into not to mention an outrageous licensing fee. As I explained all grocery stores in potter county are very small with not enough room or profitable enough for good food selection so their not going to take food off the shelve to make room for imported Merlots

    ReplyDelete
  18. I see stores in smaller towns in upstate NY that do fine: remember, they're selling beer, wine, and spirits, and lottery, and smokes...and who knows what else. You can't base a private store's profitability on a State Store's performance.

    Look, there are small towns in rural PA that have brewpubs, that have surprisingly good grocery stores, that have good restaurants. If there AREN'T such stores in your small town...why should the PLCB be subsidizing a selection of liquor at a loss, which is costing the rest of us taxes? And if the people in your town/area really do buy from the full range available at the State Store...why would you think a private store wouldn't want to stock the same kind of selection, since their costs ARE going to be lower?

    ReplyDelete
  19. A private store wants to make money and that's the bottom line. With these small retailers in these rural areas it would be very difficult to do so. When you put the cost of purchasing a license and the yearly fee it simply wouldn't be worth it. The lcb does run stores in these areas for a loss for the convenience of these people. No private investor goes into bussiness to lose money. No grocery stores in this area would have any where near the selection as the current state store and a 40 to 60 mile round trip to get your favorite wine is far from convenient for us north of 80.

    ReplyDelete
  20. The PLCB runs stores at a loss for the convenience of rural customers. The PLCB pays their clerk wages and benefits that are substantially above what similar jobs pay in the private sector. The PLCB stocks stores with much more selection than -- you say -- comparable stores in similar areas would.

    And yet they tell us that the PLCB is run like a business? It sounds like a patronage hole, like a jobs program, like they are spending my tax dollars to make sure people in Potter County can buy "imported merlot."

    Guess what? That kind of argument doesn't carry much weight downstate. It carries even less when I compare it to similar stores in private sale states and see that you don't know what you're talking about.

    And you don't even KNOW what the cost of purchasing a license would be yet! This is just a proposal at this point, it's not even a bill. If they want to get the Senate to pass this, there will be adjustments made for low-population county's fees. That's going to cost the State money, of course, but it already is, apparently.

    So here's my question. If the license fees were adjusted for rural counties in some way that you think it would make sense for private businesses to get a wine/beer license, and for a business in one of the larger towns to get a liquor license...would you still be against privatization? Even though it would mean that a decent selection of wine might be as close as the nearest grocery store?

    ReplyDelete
  21. Your right it don't carry much weight downstate. Corbett don't think anything above 80 don't exist. If you don't believe me take a ride up here and check out how horrible the roads are here. While your at it take a ride to see how far apart your hotbeds for wine really are. Just have a full tank of gas cause it will cost more money for gas to get your wine than the price of the wine itself. The other thing you don't hear about is this billon dollars the governor claims he will get which seems very exaggerated by the way how much of that money is going to have to go to pay 5000 people unemployment??

    ReplyDelete
  22. Right, as I thought. You don't really want to discuss this, you're just a hater. You've said the same thing about five times; you want to say it again, start your own blog. They're free.

    ReplyDelete
  23. I'm a hater? Really. Said the guy who has a whole website devoted to his hatred of the lcb. If you spend this much time thinking about alcohol maybe you have a different problem.

    ReplyDelete
  24. The job question. Offer a tax incentive to new private licensee to hire former state store employees. Maybe have it for the first 3 years. Good employees will learn the new system and wold likely keep the new job after the tax break runs out.
    State benefits by good PR and savings on the unemployment costs.
    Net I see privatization as creating more jobs.

    ReplyDelete