Economy & Jobs

Statement: Independent Eliot Cutler On Libby Mitchell’s Government “Reform” Plan

Friday, September 3rd, 2010



“It’s just more of the same. Libby Mitchell continues to defend the status quo. Her plan amounts to window dressing on a record deeply unfriendly to business and private sector jobs.

“Just a few months ago Libby Mitchell was working day and night to impose a mandatory paid sick leave requirement on Maine businesses that already have been brought to their knees by policies that she has promoted for more than 30 years. Libby’s sick leave proposal would have increased the already high costs of of doing business in Maine and would have made Maine even LESS competitive with other states.

“Now she comes up with a bunch of cosmetic and nearly frivolous suggestions that will do nothing to improve the cost environment for Maine businesses. Nothing to improve their ability to compete or survive a regulatory maze that has grown out of control. Nothing to make needed structural changes in Maine government. And nothing to make it more likely that private capital will invest in Maine to create jobs, incomes and opportunities for Maine workers.

“What a way to mark Labor Day.”



Cutler Talks Government Restructuring at Bangor Rotary (Bangor Daily News)

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Bangor Daily News attended an event at the Bangor Rotary Club today where independent candidate for governor, Eliot Cutler, outlined comprehensive and specific proposals to re-structure and reform Maine state government. Here is an excerpt:

First, he would eliminate the Board of Environmental Protection, which oversees the state Department of Environmental Protection but that also unnecessarily holds up economic development, according to Cutler.

“The board is redundant, costly, confusing and one of the reasons why people don’t want to invest in Maine anymore,” he said.

Second, Cutler said he would take the permitting and licensing functions away from the Land Use Regulation Commission and turn them over to the DEP. He would then create a Court of Appellate Review to oversee decisions made by the DEP.

He referenced the Plum Creek development in Piscataquis County as the perfect example of development being hamstrung by bureaucratic processes.

“It may have ended up with the right result,” he said of Plum Creek. “But it was a train wreck that didn’t need to happen.”

You can read the full article here.


My Plan for Washington County

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Regina Wilson recently posted a question about how I plan to bring jobs, incomes, and opportunity back to Downeast Maine — particularly to Washington County. Please take a moment to read Regina’s original question and my response.

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Regina Wilson: What is your vision for way down East Maine WASHINGTON COUNTY??? this is where the real help is needed, Past Governors can’t see past Ellsworth and Bangor. I am talking about the Eastport and Calais area’s where there is no work.
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Dear Regina,

Thank you for writing and for your question. My apologies for the belated response.
My grandfather came to this country at the age of 12. He had no money, spoke no English and had no family here. For the first eight years of his life he was a peddler, walking what is now the Airline between Bangor and Calais.

This state and this country provided to my grandfather’s family – including my mother and her two sisters and then to my brothers and me – opportunities that he could only dream of as a 12 year-old immigrant. That is why I am so committed to bringing jobs, incomes and opportunities back to Maine and especially to places like Downeast Maine, a part of state that is very special to me. My overall goals for Washington County will be to rebuild the region’s economy while keeping intact the region’s coastal and interior communities.

I intend to do this in several important ways:

I. Develop and export products from the region’s natural resources and increase development of the Port of Eastport as one of Maine’s three principal seaports:

A) Lower the cost of living and doing business in Downeast Maine by lowering the cost of electricity and health care. (Please see my proposals for an energy finance authority and a Maine Wellness plan on www.cutler2010.com). Doing so will make Downeast Maine a more attractive location for investment in facilities to process and add value to the region’s natural resources, including lobsters, blueberries and wood fiber.

B) Develop export markets for these natural resources products. In particular, we need a focused effort to develop Chinese and other Asian markets for the export of lobsters and blueberries.

C) Establish a profitable aquaculture industry in Downeast Maine.

D) Vigorously look for opportunities to increase activity at the Port of Eastport, particularly by improving railroad links into Easport.

II. Develop the region’s energy resources in a responsible manner:

A) Establish an LNG terminal in Washington County if it meets tough safety and environmental standards.

B) Support accelerated research and development of cost-effective technologies for the generation of electricity from tidal energy.

C) Investigate opportunities for additional cooperation between the Maine Indian Tribes and private sector developers on the development of wind energy projects on both surplus federal lands and other lands controlled by the Tribes.

D) Create the Maine Energy Finance Authority, so that we can bring down energy and electricity prices in Maine, so that we can keep open plants like the Domtar mill in Baileyville, and so that we can develop in Maine processing plants for fish, lobsters, blueberries and other Maine products.

III. Promote Downeast Maine as a unique and welcoming area for visitors and retirees:

A) Aggressively promote the unique natural beauty and culture Downeast Maine to visitors, retirees and potential year-round residents.

B) Develop additional snowmobile, cross-country skiing, hiking, fishing, hunting, kayaking canoeing, and boating opportunities in Downeast Maine.

C) Investigate incentives for retirees to establish year-round residence in Downeast Maine communities.

IV. Provide equal opportunities for a quality education to all children in Maine.

V. Invest in high-speed Internet and telecommunications infrastructure across the state.

VI. Reform Maine’s tax system at levels so that communities like Eastport and Lubec are not unfairly penalized for being on the coast.

These efforts will require close cooperation among the state and every town, city, and county in Downeast Maine. I am committed to this effort and to making that happen.

Sincerely,

Eliot


RELEASE: More Fiction from the LePage Campaign

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Portland, Maine - Demonstrating once again the LePage campaign’s tendency to simply make things up, Democrat-turned-Republican Party Chair Charlie Webster today made totally false accusations about where Independent candidate for Governor Eliot Cutler stands on taxes.

Cutler has never once in the past year of campaigning called for raising broad-based taxes. He repeatedly has called for reducing state spending and comprehensive tax reform.

Webster’s attack came in response to an op-ed in last Saturday’s Bangor Daily News in which former state controller Ed Karass shattered the myths about Paul LePage’s record as mayor of Waterville. Karass is a highly respected financial expert who has served under six Maine governors,

Maine voters deserve a response from candidate LePage about Mr. Karass’ analysis of his mediocre record as Waterville’s mayor. Instead, his handlers are keeping him muzzled while unleashing partisan attack dogs like Webster

Instead of trying to defend LePage’s record, Webster is trying to spin a year-old quote from Mr. Karass about the sorry state of Maine’s finances into an accusation that Cutler supports higher taxes.

Here is what Webster quotes Karass as saying:

“We may find ourselves in a position where taxes have to be increased but no new programs are brought on board. We may have to increase taxes just to pay for what we currently have.”

Ed Karass did not call for higher taxes in that statement and neither has Eliot Cutler. Eliot agrees with the statement in that it reflects the truth that Maine has a government and a set of programs that we no longer have the money to pay for. That is not a call for higher taxes, but an honest assessment of out-of-control state spending; you either raise taxes or cut spending.

Eliot has always come down on the side of reducing spending and has put forth a bold plan to spur investment and create jobs in Maine by lowering our high costs of living and doing business. That is something that will help working Maine people far more than Paul LePage’s and Charlie Webster’s partisan rhetoric and made-up stories.


RELEASE: Ed Karass, Former State Controller, Endorses Eliot Cutler

Friday, August 6th, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

AUGUST 6, 2010
CONTACT: TED O’MEARA OR MONICA CASTELLANOS
207.699.4401
ted@cutler2010.com

PORTLAND, Maine – Ed Karass, a former state controller who served under the last six Maine governors, has endorsed Independent candidate for Governor Eliot Cutler.

“I have looked carefully at all the candidates for governor this year. In my estimation, Eliot Cutler is the only one who has the competence, experience and toughness to deal with Maine’s looming budget crisis,” Karass said, noting that Maine’s new governor will face a budget shortfall of more than $1 billion over the next two fiscal years.

Karass said that Cutler’s service as associate director of the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB), as well his extensive experience in business, will serve him well as governor. At OMB, Cutler made decisions about how to spend, re-allocate and cut out hundreds of millions of dollars in federal spending. He went on to establish three major law offices and to help start up and turnaround several successful businesses.

“I am honored to have Ed’s support,” Cutler said. “There is no one in Maine with a better understanding of Maine’s finances and how we need to change the ways we use the tax dollars of hard working Maine people. Maine is headed for a fiscal train wreck unless we change our spending habits and make some tough decisions about what we can, and can’t, afford.”

The Office of State Controller reviews, approves and consolidates all accounting transactions for all agencies within the Executive, Legislative and Judicial branches of government. It also establishes and monitors State accounting policies and procedures and reviews, compiles and reports all statewide accounting information.

Karass said that neither of Cutler’s two main opponents, nor the other two Independents in the race, have the ability to responsibly address the financial challenges facing Maine.

“Maine can’t afford more of the same policies and programs that got us into this mess, and we can’t afford to turn these immense problems over to someone who has neither the experience nor the demeanor to build a new consensus around tax and spending priorities,” said Karass, who is now the CEO of Karass Financial & Accounting in Gardiner. “Eliot Cutler stands out as a leader who can make the tough decisions and develop a new way forward for Maine.”

In a commentary published in Saturday’s Bangor Daily News, Karass said that a close examination of Paul LePage’s performance as Waterville mayor “reveals more mediocrity than miracle.”

“While Maine taxpayers have been pumping money into his city, Waterville’s spending for municipal services has increased by 22 percent, and school performance is suffering. The publicly acclaimed Waterville property tax rate turns out to have fallen less than it did in comparable Maine cities that have wrestled with similar economic and financial challenges while the City of Waterville’s economy has underperformed most of those cities, and its bond rating is worse,” Karass said in his commentary.


Campaign trail: Cutler visits Biddeford (Journal Tribune)

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

The Journal Tribune covered Eliot’s visit to Biddeford yesterday to meet with local business owners and listen to their concerns about the business environment in Maine. Here is an excerpt:

[Cutler] believes he has some answers about how to rein in the high cost of health insurance in the state. The health care reform package passed by the U.S. Congress provides an opportunity to set up an insurance co-op for small businesses, he said. If small businesses could be bundled together and purchase insurance in a group, Cutler said, he believes costs would become more manageable.

You can read the full article here.


OP-ED: Talk Centers on Teachers, not Students (Bangor Daily News)

Monday, July 5th, 2010

The following op-ed appeared in the Bangor Daily News on July 1st, 2010.

Libby Mitchell got the endorsement of the teachers’ union last week, and she should have. The union that represents teachers in Maine — the Maine Education Association — recently interviewed four candidates for governor. Since the room was full of teachers, you would have thought that the questions would be about improving education, preparing young people for the future, growing Maine’s economy, rewarding good teachers, stretching our education dollars and so forth. But you would have been wrong.

Throughout four pages and eight long questions, the word “student” appeared twice in just one question, and even then only in asking whether teacher evaluations should be based upon measures of student performance (of course they should, but the teachers’ union says no.) There was not another mention of students or any reference to parents, taxpayers or creating jobs.

Here is what the MEA wanted to talk about: raising taxes, protecting the union’s first-class health plan, easing working conditions, higher teacher salaries (regardless of competence and performance) and a tax exemption for retired teachers.

There was one other question: Would I support or oppose the establishment of charter schools in Maine? I strongly support charter schools, but the teachers’ union has used its clout to block them in Maine. We are just one of a handful of states that don’t allow public charter schools, and it is one of the principal reasons Maine schools have been denied a share of the hundreds of millions of dollars in the federal “Race to the Top” education reform program.

At a time when we need to be focused on growing the economic pie in Maine so that our kids will have a future here, the MEA’s only concern is how to grab for themselves an even bigger slice of a pie that already is much too small.

Without Libby Mitchell at the helm in Augusta for much of the last 30 years, the MEA never could have succeeded in driving the costs of public education in Maine higher and higher, blocking public charter schools, preserving tenure and lock step salary increases for teachers and sidetracking other needed public education reforms — all while student enrollments and performance have been falling.

So take the MEA endorsement of Ms. Mitchell with a grain of salt and a heavy dose of caution. The endorsement was paid for upfront by years of steadfast support from Ms. Mitchell for higher taxes, more spending and opposition to reform. Unfortunately, it is our children who will foot the bill.

I am convinced that the leadership of the teachers’ union does not reflect the views of thousands of dedicated, hardworking Maine teachers. More than anyone, our teachers have been marginalized and their professional status compromised by the failure of their own union leadership.

Teachers should have a prominent role in setting educational policy. But they don’t, because the MEA is more concerned about propping up a political party in decline.

Good teachers should be paid more than mediocre ones, as in other professions, and student achievement should be somehow reflected in compensation. Teachers should help design the system that rewards excellence with compensation and advancement. But the MEA wants to make sure that every teacher, regardless of effectiveness, is treated the same.

Good teachers should be free to innovate, and we should make more clinical and professional training available to help them do that. But the MEA wants to keep every teacher in the same narrow box.

I had hoped to be able to talk with the MEA about important issues like education reform, ensuring that every child — wherever they live in Maine — has access to a quality education, improving student performance and operating our schools more efficiently as enrollments decline.

Instead, the meeting turned out to be one more example of the kind of special interest politics that we simply can’t afford any longer.

So, if you like things the way they are and want to continue paying more and getting less, cast your lot with Libby Mitchell and the MEA. If you want change and reform, I hope that you will join me in creating an education system in Maine that is innovative, affordable and focused on results — a system that truly respects our teachers as professionals and gives every Maine child an equal opportunity to succeed.

Eliot Cutler is an independent candidate for governor. Learn more at www.Cutler2010.com.


Eliot Cutler’s Initiative (Times Record)

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

An editorial in the The Times Record opines that Eliot’s “leadership qualities” currently “tower” over the party candidates and serve as a strong opening salvo in the Maine gubernatorial race. Here is an excerpt:

In an early contest to display leadership qualities so sorely lacking in state government for the last eight years, Cutler towered above the Democratic and Republican standard bearers by reaching out to potential trade partners while his two chief rivals in the Nov. 2 general election surrounded themselves with uncomfortable party primary losers.

You can read the full article here.


Giving China a Taste of Maine (Portland Press Herald)

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

The Portland Press Herald reports that Independent gubernatorial candidate Eliot Cutler invites potential Chinese importers to see the state’s lobster industry up close and personal. Here is an excerpt:

“I want them to understand Maine lobster is better than Australia and New Zealand lobster, that we produce enough to export to China, and that it is a sustainable fishery — which is very important to China — and that they and we can make a lot of money with trade going that way,” Cutler said.

You can read the full article here.


VIDEO: Chinese Business Delegation Gets First Hand Look at Maine Lobster (NBC-6 Portland)

Friday, June 18th, 2010

A delegation of businessmen from China today are taking a first hand look at two of Maine’s most well-known exports, lobsters and blueberries.

Here is a video of today’s visit to Portland Shellfish, including interviews with Eliot Cutler, Independent candidate for governor, and Ning Gaoning, Chairman of China’s biggest food importer: