15 Vermont Towns Vote to Start a Public Bank
that Works for Them, Not Wall Street
Home Published
March 6, 2014 - 7:53am
28 1734
By a more than three-to-one margin on Tuesday,
communities voting on whether to support the creation of a public bank in
Vermont approved the idea, calling for the state legislature to establish such
a bank and urging passage of legislation designed to begin its implementation.
In a show
of direct democracy that also exposed the citizenry's desire for a more
localized and responsible banking system, fifteen of nineteen towns passed the
resolution during 'Town Meeting Day'— an annual event in which voters choose
local officials, approve municipal budgets, and make their voices heard on a
number of measures put before local residents for approval.
- See more
at:
http://thecontributor.com/15-towns-vote-start-public-bank-works-people-vermont-not-wall-street#sthash.cUFLI87p.Ljq7FVVB.dpuf
The specific proposal under
consideration, Senate Bill 204, would turn an existing agency, the Vermont Economic Development
Authority, into a public bank that would accept deposits and issue
loans for in-state projects. Currently, the only state in the U.S. to maintain
a public state bank is North Dakota. However, since the financial downturn of
2008, other states have looked into replicating the North Dakota model as a way
to buck Wall Street while taking more control of state and local finances.
Voicing his support of the measure
ahead of Tuesday's vote, Gary Murphy, a resident of South Ryegate, one of the
towns that subsequently approved the measure, explained the thinking behind the plan this
way in a letter to the local Times-Argus:
Senate bill 204 would expand the
Vermont Economic Development Authority to become a state bank and would start
out by depositing 10 percent of Vermont’s unrestricted money into the state
bank. The bank would be able to leverage this money by means available only to
banks to bolster the economy of the state and cut down on the interest payments
and fees that are presently paid to out-of-state financial institutions and
other entities. The bank would not engage in retail banking and would not
compete with community banks; it would work with community banks to maintain
their viability and expand their ability to help create better economic
outcomes for Vermonters by partnering with them in projects they would not be
able to engage in on their own.
Presently, large public projects are,
to a large extent, funded by bonding and other private investment which
requires the state to pay interest and fees that often do not get recycled into
the local economy. Bond sales are managed by Wall Street firms, which seem to
rig everything they can to further enrich themselves. In addition to the fees
that they charge for this service, it is possible that they are rigging the
process to divert funds that would otherwise be available to the state into
their own pockets. While the cost of bonding is relatively cheap now, it will
likely increase in the next few years if not sooner and the bond market could
dry up. Creating a state bank now and growing it could put us in a position
where we can substantially lessen the need to float bonds to fund large public
projects.
According to Vermont Public Radio,
unofficial results on Wednesday showed the following towns had approved the
resolution: Bakersfield, Craftsbury, Enosburg, Marshfield, Montgomery,
Montpelier Plainfield, Putney, Randolph, Rochester, Royalton, Ryegate,
Tunbridge, Warren, and Waitsfield. The four towns that voted down the measure
were: Marlboro, Barnet and Fayston and Greensboro.
- See more
at: http://thecontributor.com/15-towns-vote-start-public-bank-works-people-vermont-not-wall-street#sthash.cUFLI87p.Ljq7FVVB.dpuf
No comments:
Post a Comment