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    Entries in mining (14)

    Saturday
    Apr092011

    Decent person's urge to do the right thing dumbfounds other children at biennial Carson City band camp

    Normally, I would put this under the Impurely Maven page with the other re-posted stuff by other serious people. However, Hugh Jackson’s comments and observations regarding our efforts to make sense at the Nevada Assembly Taxation Committee hearing on AB 428 the other day deserves a wider audience - like everybody who is not getting a check from the mining industry.

    I sat there watching the glazed over looks of the Committee members as Hugh bravely soldiered on through chapter and verse of just what the foreign mining behemoths weren’t paying to the state of Nevada. They didn’t give a rats ass. The mining lobbyists in the room were busy checking their Blackberries and taking bathroom breaks. They didn’t give a rats ass either - they know that they’ve butter the right slices of bread and that they’re probably pretty safe.

    I’ve tried to make the point to one and all on ‘our side’ of this, that taking the facts straight to the electorate via the public media - even if we have to pay for it - might be the only way to get mining to pay something - anything! Silly me, I somehow remain naive enough to think that average people, once armed with the sad truth of how mining has stuck it up the backside of Nevada’s citizens, might get angry enough to insist on passage of AB 428 in addition to Ms. Pierce’s other bills to take mining out the Constitution and otherwise hold them accountable.

    You’d think that gaming might want to help push this trolley up the hill, since they’re actually paying a higher effective tax rate despite the fact that their revenues are down in the toilet due to the economy.

    Sign me ‘still hoping for a miracle’.

    -maven

    Post by Hugh Jackson, The Las Vegas Gleaner

    Decent person’s urge to do the right thing dumbfounds other children at biennial Carson City band camp

    A legislative committee held a hearing the other day on Assemblywoman Peggy Pierce’s bill to make mining pay some taxes for a change. After months of batting their big doe eyes at legislators during romantic dinners, pretending to be impressed with the intelligence and wit of lawmakers and otherwise softening up/wearing down your elected officials, mining lobbyists used the hearing to fill the air with artificial arguments and disingenuous diversions designed to lead the committee far off into the weeds and well away from any trenchant discussion. For the most part it worked, and questions asked of the industry’s lobbyists tended to range from the innocuous to the irrelevant.

    If Pierce’s bill is ever sent to the Assembly floor and legislators vote on it, people would find out: What do elected officials value more, wealthy investors around the world with huge financial interests in multinational mining corporations, or Nevada?

    Ha ha trick question. The answer is none of the above.

    Read the rest at Hugh’s website. The man’s trying to make a living while telling the actual truth. That deserves your support.

    Friday
    Apr082011

    Friday Fish Wrap: April 8. 2011

    Before you even continue reading this, I want you to go to the following website: ALERTID.

    Here’s what it’s about:

    AlertID uses the newest online technology to create instant, two-way communications between citizens and federal, state, and local authorities to provide immediate information on crime, terrorism or natural disasters that can threaten the safety of your family and community.

    Using the unique AlertID system, you are constantly connected to neighbors, local police and fire departments, as well as federal and state agencies to exchange critical information that can help keep your family and community safe, whether the threat is national, local, or personal such as a missing child.

    Take action now to make your home, your neighborhood and your country a safer place to live.

    And, I can tell you, it rocks big time. I signed both of us up, and took a look at their map which showed our home … and a home burglary just up the street that I never knew about. This is one of the ways the internet and cellphones can help keep us safer, and make our communities more responsive in the event of something of immediate concern.

    Now, back to what I was going to say.

    The ‘Shutdown’. Obama regrets the possibility of a shutdown. Unfortunately, that’s all he seems prepared to do. You’d think there was no alternatives to Obama’s lame, middle-center budget - which keeps the Bush tax cuts or the looming meat-axe and artless bludgeoning of America by Rep. Paul Ryan, R-WI. But there is another way. It’s the Peoples Budget, put forth by the Progressive Caucus.

    Here’s what it can accomplish:

    The CPC proposal:

    • Eliminates the deficits and creates a surplus by 2021
    • Puts America back to work with a “Make it in America” jobs program
    • Protects the social safety net
    • Ends the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
    • Is FAIR (Fixing America’s Inequality Responsibly)

    What the proposal accomplishes:

    • Primary budget balance by 2014.
    • Budget surplus by 2021.
    • Reduces public debt as a share of GDP to 64.4% by 2021, down 16.9 percentage points from
    a baseline fully adjusted for both the doc fix and the AMT patch.
    • Reduces deficits by $5.7 trillion over 2012-21
    • Both outlays and revenue equal 22.3% of GDP by 2021

    You can read more about this budget, what it hopes to do and how, by clicking here.

    It never ceases to amaze me that anybody other than the far to the right TeaBagger fringe would even consider Paul Ryan’s budget - which will destroy many of the social safety net programs that have served generations of Americans very well indeed. It will get rid of Medicare and Medicaid, food stamps, child care and pretty much anything that benefits the working American - except for the military budget.

    Even Ryan is afraid to go after that sacred cow.

    But Ryan has no fear when it comes to thrusting older Americans back into the eager arms of a for-profit health insurance market. PPO’s and Medicare Advantage programs have been shown to increase health care costs for seniors. So why is Ryan proposing to hand them an entire generation of Americans? Is that the way to hold ballooning healthcare costs down?

    This is called ‘anything except a public option’. What nonsense.

    And the war on women is another nasty part of this showdown. Bending over and dropping trou to the far rightwing ideology about abortion - they figure that defunding and closing down Planned Parenthood will play well to that base. What they’re not telling them is that if fewer abortions are really the goal, shutting down family planning services provided by Planned Parenthood will have exactly the opposite effect. The problem is that this right-wing TeaBaggers are too damn stupid to connect the dots.

    Sheesh.

    The biggest part of the big dig out here is over. We now have a septic system and leach field that should last about 50 years longer than the two of us.

    All I have to do now, is figure out what to do with the lawn, and get the sprinkler system repaired. Monday, they will return to put in a new paver driveway over where the septic leach field had to go. Well, there went about $10K.

    If anybody out there has a suggestion on somebody to repair the sprinkler system lines and the sod, let me know about it.

    The way that I deal with stress from projects like this is riding my bike. The good news is that the weather is getting good enough - not perfect, mind you. It spit snow pellets all day today - that I can get at least two or three days in per week. It’s been really great to be back out there.

    Today’s Reno Gazette-Journal says that Gov. Brian Sandoval wants to be prepared for how the federal government shutdown might affect Nevada. This is a good thing to be doing, since his budget will essentially be a shutdown for the state - this will give him practice in running a state with the lights out and doors locked.

    The way things went down in Carson City at the Taxation Committee hearing on mining tax deductions yesterday didn’t give me much hope either.

    Like I said, it’s cycling weather. Get out there and relieve the stress of staying informed.

    Sheesh. Try and have a good weekend despite all of it.

    -maven

    Thursday
    Apr072011

    Doing Battle Against Mining Special Interests

    Here’s the takeaway from today’s hearing down in Carson City: Mining doesn’t want to be singled out and treated special - you know, taxed differently than other Nevada businesses. If that were true, then why hasn’t mining taken themselves OUT of the Nevada Constitution - uh, where they have been treated special and differently - by their own design - for 130 years?

    Today, I went down to the Nevada Legislature to offer my support to Bob Fulkerson and the folks from PLAN. I had a very short, concise statement that I wished to offer to the committee.

    I’ve gotta tell you, Assemblywoman Peggy Pierce took on Goliath with AB 428, the bill that would cut the outrageous collection of deductions mining has collected over the last 130 years, which essentially enable them to pay about one-half of one percent taxes on massive amounts of gold extracted from Nevada.

    The chamber was a sea of dark suits and sleek black spiked heels. White men in power suits, and youngish women in Manolo Blahniks, armed with laptops and self-assured, knowing smirks. They’d be easy to spot without all the trademarks of dress. Their blue nametags proclaim: PAID LOBBYIST.

    That makes you want to throw up your hands and run right there, but that’s probably what they’re counting on. As Sen. Bernie Sanders says, the only right we don’t have as citizens is the right to give up. I kept telling myself that.

    When citizens were invited to testify, first up was Hugh Jackson down in Las Vegas. Hugh - aka The Las Vegas Gleaner - has done the heavy lifting, putting together a damning set of numbers to show that, clearly, mining has been getting a free ride for many years. When times were good, nobody seemed to care that mining was treating Nevada like one of their Third World countries.

    Times are hard now, and if Nevada’s future means anything at all, it’s time to care. but I digress.

    Hugh began his remarks - citing chapter and verse. Then I saw how this was going to go. Assemblyman John Ellison, R- Elko, launched the first attack. In Mr. Ellison’s world, you couldn’t possibly know anything about mining or mining taxes unless you’ve actually worked in the mines - as he pointed out to Mr. Jackson.

    This is a favored refrain from the Rightwing, and PR flacks these days. Most recently, BP used this canard against a well-respected scientist who studied and analyzed the faulty oil well blowout preventer. How could he possibly have any knowledge unless he’s been an oil rig worker?

    Right here, I want you to bookmark a fascinating website I found the other night: The Denialist’s Deck of Cards. It’s a brilliantly straightforward playbook to Lobbyist Speak and Tactics. They were all on display during this mornings circus.

    But back to Ellison (see the Newmont and Barrick constributions on his campaign C&E here). He introduced a refrain that would be later picked up by his Nevada Mining Association cronies - mainly Tim Crowley - that there are other minerals being mined in Nevada besides those HUGE amounts of gold. True. But gold is kinda the 900 lb gorilla in the room:

    Newmont and Barrick produced more gold here in Nevada than in any other nation on earth. The combined net income of the two foreign mining behemoths are more than the governor’s proposed budget, dwarfing the insignificant effects of any mining tax increases.

    No matter what Mr. Jackson could offer in the way of actual facts, Mr. Ellison would not be satisfied. How many times has Mr. Jackson actually been out to a Nevada mine? Again, back to proximity necessarily equaling informed opinion. We couldn’t possibly know about the sun and it’s makeup since we haven’t been there either!

    Mr. Ellison went on with red herrings that would be brought up time and again: Rural Nevada counties would go broke if mining had to pay more taxes (the presumption that mining would leave), and that the sheer magnitude and complexity of mining investment and risks taken should somehow justify paying zip to the state.

    But here’s a question: How many other businesses get to deduct nearly 100% of their business costs as our Canadian friends Barrick and Newmont have been doing? Hmmmm.

    Finally, it was time for a few of us from the north to take to the microphone and voice our concerns. Since I knew most of the others would be talking about numbers - they had that part down pat - I thought I would talk briefly about who we’re doing business with - as in the corporate citizenship of Barrick and Newmont.

    Committee Chair, Marilyn Kirkpatrick (Click here for her campaign C&E, noting mining dollars) didn’t like that, interrupting me about 20 seconds into my remarks, asking what my remarks had to do specifically to mining tax deductions. If she had allowed me to continue for another minute, I could have made that connection. Alas, it was not to be. She also stepped on the Hispanic woman that followed me. I’ll put my complete remarks at the bottom of this post.

    Too bad she didn’t hold the mining industry lobbyists to the same standard. Maybe that’s the price we pay, as taxpayers, when our legislators are beholden to mining contributions.

    Most of the last hour was wasted debating just what the verbiage in the bill related to marketing’ meant - page 2, line 16 in AB428. Apparently ‘marketing’ in mining isn’t ‘marketing’ the way you and I and most other people think of it. It doesn’t mean advertising or promotion. It means transporting gold to the point of sale - Barbados in this case. Mining doesn’t think flying to Barbados should be tax deductible.

    Sigh. This is also covered under the Denialists Deck of Cards - The Fourth Hand: Spread Confusion.

    Finally, the discussion centered around ‘what are microscopic flecks of gold in the ground really worth? The premise being that they are essentially worthless until mined, processed and sold - for this mining brought in the big gun tax attorney from Jones, Vargas in Las Vegas. Instead of paying taxes to the state to save us from financial ruin, they’ve invested in high-priced lobbyists and tax attorneys.

    His bottom line was that gold is simply potentially valuable. It’s all just dirt that we’re trying to tax them on. Nevada’s mining tax is simply a property tax - on the dirt.

    Let me know how it works out when you have to make your next property tax payment, and tell the county that your home is unrealized potential and just dirt - and that you’ve had a lot of expenses that you’ll take deductions on dollar for dollar. Tell the assessor that you won’t be paying any property tax this year.

    Let me know how that works out. It does for mining.

    -maven

    Oh, you should know how to work the handy dandy C&E (Contributions and Expenses) Financial Disclosure Report Search database on all the Nevada legislators at the Nevada Secretary of States office. It’s nifty - just plug in the name and pull up the report. Scan carefully on the badly handwritten ones, so you don’t miss the mining money. I noted that Ms. Kirkpatrick also took a lot from the NRA so don’t expect her to be completely impartial when it comes to gun related issues.

    And for even more fun with data, check out all that Barrick, Newmont et al have given:

    Click on the image to open original source

    Here are the members of today’s Nevada Assembly Taxation Committee:

     

    Here is the statement that I would have made, had I been allowed to:

    A few years ago, I was prominently involved in searching for a missing multi-millionaire aviator in the rugged Nevada wilderness.

    After it was all said and done, a lot of us wondered if we were given the whole story.

    Today, I’m joining thousands of fellow Nevadans searching for a little justice … from multi-billion dollar foreign mining corporations that are removing non-renewable resources at record rates and historic prices, and apparently paying almost nothing to state in return.

    Looking at how much mining pays to other states, such as Wyoming, I’m wondering if we’ve been getting the whole story from mining.

    During the good times, when tourists were streaming into Nevada, and the housing boom was in full swing, apparently Nevada was just fine being treated like a third world country by Foreign Mining Concerns  - happy to just ask for a modest 5%.

    Yet,  Peru is talking about raising royalties beyond their current  1 to 3 %, and Chili has already introduced amendments to increase mining royalties from 5 to 14% .

    You might feel some sympathy for mining, but according to MiningWatch Canada, they will continue to effectively loot countries like the Congo, for example.

    Canada’s Barrick Gold is the world’s largest producer of gold. In a 2005 Human Rights Watch report entitled The Curse of Gold, Barrick Gold and other mining companies are accused of making mining agreements in 2002 with two eastern DRC militias that had control of the mines.

    Both militias were also in the midst of murdering hundreds of civilians. In return for the gold mines, the militias were given housing and trucks, and more. Incredibly, as highlighted by independent journalist and Congo-expert Keith Harmon Snow, Barrick’s and one its partners, Anglo-Ashanti, even sent in lawyers to help represent leaders of the militias after some were apprehended by the DRC government.

    Yes. That’s mining. Always looking out for the little people.

    Unfortunately, Barrick has had tax evasion issues in other African countries – Tanzania, for example. Tanzania is now trying to raise its minerals severance tax to a modest 10%.

    Barricks’  net revenues in Africa still continue to climb anyway.

    These are the kind of people we want to encourage and foster closer economic relationships with right here in Nevada.

    A report obtained by MiningWatch Canada reveals that Canadian mining companies are implicated in four times as many violations of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) as mining companies from other countries. The report was commissioned by the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) in 2009 but was never released to the public.

    Yes.

    As the Canadian government introduced stricter regulations for mining companies operating within Canada – their mining companies simply went on to pillage on a global scale.

    They’ve found an excellent home in Nevada.

    They can treat Nevada like any other third world, developing country – with impunity- and since times were good all over, it didn’t seem to matter so much.

    Yet, there is only ONE Carlin Trend. It is unique in all the world. Mining has looked worldwide for other analogies and have found none.

    Times have changed in Nevada. Things are tough all over.

    We can continue to sit and wring our hands, and scrap our education systems … the DRC gets by without an educational system, after all.

    Or we can act like a world leader and insist that since we’re all in a belt tightening mood, that Foreign Mining Concerns operating in Nevada pay their share -  lest we start looking at them as global corporate criminals and treat them accordingly.

    It’s time to say YES to AB428.

    Thank you.

    Sunday
    Mar272011

    Monday Musings: March 28. 2011

    I write this powered by ginger ale. As regular readers might’ve noticed, there wasn’t a Friday Fish Wrap this week, since yours truly was laid very low by your friendly gastroenteritis - aka Norovirus. The mere idea of sitting upright, at the computer, made my stomach turn. It was horrible, but I’m sorta, kinda back up and running - just not on all cylinders.

    Queasy tummies are not helped by the day’s news headlines.

    Like this morning, when I found myself in agreement with Bill O’Reilly on Libya. That would’ve sent me reaching for ginger ale on a good day.

    Here’s the Maven’s take on Libya: This isn’t Iraq or Afghanistan. Up to now, it’s been apples and oranges. There was not, apparently, time to dither. Qaddafi was, reportedly, about to make good on an insane promise to commit mass murder - PDQ. A ‘No-Fly Zone’ was crafted in short order - by  U.N. resolution and NATO coalition of which we are a part. Last time I checked, simply declaring a ‘No-Fly Zone’ doesn’t make it one. Some enforcement is called for. As I understood it, the ‘goal’ was to prevent imminent - as in ‘any moment now’-  harm to thousands of people. And to throw a bit of breathing space around Benghazi.

    Authorizes Member States that have notified the Secretary-General, acting nationally or through regional organizations or arrangements, and acting in cooperation with the Secretary-General, to take all necessary measures … to protect civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack in the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, including Benghazi, while excluding a foreign occupation force of any form on any part of Libyan territory, and requests the Member States concerned to inform the Secretary-General immediately of the measures they take pursuant to the authorization conferred by this paragraph which shall be immediately reported to the Security Council” (emphasis mine.)

    Although I’m not a Constitutional scholar - like say, Sharron Angle - I’m okay with giving the President a temporary pass on this one in regard to Presidential War Powers. Are we ‘at war’? Did we declare war on Libya? Are there boots on the ground ala Lebanon or Somalia? I must of missed that. I thought it was more of a quick strike police action sponsored by the UN and prosecuted by NATO. We are a part of NATO. Now, the French and others of the coalition have seemingly taken the lead - which was the intention all along as I understood it.

    I get ‘mission creep’, and the very real fears in Congress of an erosion of their Constitutional power to ‘declare war’. It’s now time for Mr. Obama to come to the American people and Congress to make his case. For any actions going forward from this point, I think Congress has every right to assume it’s Constitutional authority under Article 1, Section 8.

    As I said the other day, people from both the right and left - most notably Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-OH - need to take a deep breath. Let’s listen in on Monday night. Let the man make his case, and then move on with deliberate speed.

    Or, as my late father used to say: “Stop. Back up, and proceed with caution.” Words to live by.

    Now, on to the Nevada Budget Theatre. Act II - Mining for Deductions.

    In this mornings Reno Gazette-Journal, Tim Crowley, President of the Nevada Mining Association, sent me reeling for yet more ginger ale. “Nevada mining has been an active participant in helping to solve Nevada’s fiscal issues”. On which planet?

    Mr. Crowley has been listening too much to Gov. Brian Sandoval - or is it the other way around? Yessir, there is a sliding scale of 2 to 5 percent of Net Proceeds of Mineral Tax. Yup. It’s mandated by the Nevada Constitution. Then Mr. Crowley goes on to explain how hard and expensive it is to get all those itsy-bitsy flecks of gold and other minerals out of the spaces between grains of sand.

    Wow. And yet, despite this difficulty, Nevada’s mining companies still somehow managed to walk away with BILLIONS. And pay nada, zero, zip in the way of any portion of that 5 percent. You can audit this until the cows come back home, and they’ll explain that “it’s the deductions, stupid!”

    Pad enough tax deductions into any tax rate and you’ll end up paying zero taxes. This is what companies like all-American General Electric have done so well … leaving you and me to pick up their share. We may not have hundreds of tax attorneys at our beck and call, but we weren’t born yesterday - well the TeaBaggers were, but that’s another story.

    The hands down best research and scholarship on this has been done by The Las Vegas Gleaner - It’s not the audits, it the deductions … - where he points out that 111 times in the last 10 years, the mining industry, although managing to squeak out of the state with a mere $4.3 BILLION in minerals, paid nada, zip, nothing in taxes on those minerals. As the price of gold skyrocketed to historic levels.

    Here’s how the Gleaner stated it:

     
    ”- From 2000 through 2007, the mining industry in Nevada extracted and sold gold
    worth $25.5 billion, and paid taxes to the state general fund totaling $125.3
    million, an effective gross state tax rate of one-half of one percent.  
     
    - Mine owners are allowed to write off expenses as deductions. Over the last
    eight years, the Nevada mining industry has deducted 79 percent of the value of
    gold production, and paid taxes only on the value of the remaining 21 percent.
     
    - In any given year from 2000 through 2007, one-third to one-half of all the
    mines operating in the state produced gold worth hundreds of millions of dollars
    but reported zero taxable proceeds.
     
    - Nevada’s two largest gold mines, the Barrick Goldstrike mine and Newmont’s
    Carlin Trend project, have reported zero taxable values during years when the
    mines have produced gold worth a half billion dollars or more.
     
    - While the 5 percent Net Proceeds of Minerals (NPOM) tax rate is written in the
    Nevada Constitution and would take years to change, the deductions by which the
    mining industry avoids so much taxation are written in state statutes (NRS
    362.120) and can be eliminated through legislation, raising tens and possibly
    hundreds of millions of dollars for the state budget as early as the next biennium.”
    Las Vegas Gleaner

    You have expenses. I have expenses. Somehow they just don’t add up to zero taxes - at least ours didn’t this year.

    When I moved to Nevada, I realized that I might be moving in with people that were cynical, greedy and were here to avoid paying their share somewhere else. What I didn’t realize was that I was also moving in with people who were amazingly, profoundly stupid - as in letting the mining companies walk away leaving us all holding the bag for the rent.

    Meanwhile, Nevadan’s elect ninnies like the bobble-headed Brian Sandoval to mouth morally satisfying deficit reduction, cutting and saving platitudes while making excuses about how highway robbery by mining is simply ‘the law’. He might as well have told Jon Ralston “Hey, Jon … it is what it is”, got up, tore off the ‘mike’ … throw it down and walk off the set for dramatic effect. I could have respected him for that.

    But shit rolls downhill. What the Bizarro World GOP/TeaBagger Party hath wrought in Washington, holding the wimpy Dems hostage to their warped fiscal worldview, pushes the pain down to the beleaguered states, who - as in Nevada - would push it further to the cities and counties.

    Lyon County is in a world of hurt, leading the way among Nevada counties in the pain parade. A report from Moody’s Investors Service, a rating agency, noted the trend, saying that states are “increasingly pushing down their problems.” They continued, saying that this coming year would be the “toughest year for local governments since the economic downturn began.”

    What the citizens of Nevada need to do is ask Gov. Sandoval, and Tim Crowley, how far they plan on pushing down the state’s problems before facing reality? I mean, what happens when they get to the bottom?

    Other Stuff.

    Sharron Angle is back. She reminds me of the crazy relative. Every family has one. This is the one (usually with an ‘substance abuse’ problem) who shows up at family events - and everybody holds their collective breath hoping against hope that she doesn’t make a scene. Of course, if you’re me … I’m hoping for the opposite, under the banner of always having something to blog about.

    Concealed Weapons on Nevada Campuses? WTF? Are they crazy? Answer: See above discussion about mining taxes. Talk about a tragedy waiting to happen.

    Spending a Day With NPR. Friday, I was actually too sick to watch television or read. So I just left NPR on low in the background for the whole day, as the cat lay wrapped around my head. Now I understand why the GOP wants to gut their funding. It’s because NPR actually has a lot of content that is A) Fascinating, B) Professional, C) Fair and Balanced, D) Engaging, Entertaining and Educational,  E) Relavant and F) Highly addicting. In other words, everything that regular radio isn’t. Somebody tell Rush Limbaugh.

    The Weather. I’m so over this winter. I’ve also had more than enough of the wind howling around the house, sounding like the roof is coming off any moment.

    Psychic Fair. When the weather turns warm and sunny, I’ll be looking foward to turning a Skeptical eye to the upcoming Reno Psychic Fair. Maybe they can look into the Tarot Cards or chicken guts and divine just how Gov. Sandoval can find the money to balance the budget, feed the hungry, fight fires, keep the lights on in the university system, educate the little children - all without raising taxes, even on mining.

    Maybe I’ll get a ‘reading’ and let you know.

    Cheers.

    -maven

    Thursday
    Feb032011

    Vote for Mining. They need your tough love right now!

    Here’s a little email that the Northwest Mining Association has sent out to members, regarding a poll that the Reno Gazette-Journal has asked Nevada Citizens to take regarding the financial future of our sad, sad state …

    NWMA Members:

    The Reno Gazette Journal is running a poll asking
    if taxes must be raised in Nevada, who should pay increased taxes? Please support Nevada’s mining industry by voting for any category except mines.

    http://rgj.posterous.com/take-poll-if-taxes-must-be-raised-who-should


    Note that the only industries specifically named are Mines and Casinos with other groups such as cigarette smokers and the wealthy.


    Thank you for participating,


    Northwest Mining Association

    So that said, take the poll, dear reader and vote for MINING! Give Mining your tough love and tell them that it’s time they stepped up to the plate and helped Nevada drag itself up from the bottom of every ranking - education, social services, medical care, number of uninsured children et al.

    Take the Poll NOW: If Taxes Must Be Raised, Who Should Face the Biggest Burden?

    Last week’s poll was on which suggestion for diversifying Nevada’s economy would have the best chance of success. The biggest vote getter was expanding not just green energy but expanding the manufacture of green energy equipment. No. 2 was legalizing gay marriage to capitalize on related tourism.

    This week, the topic is raising taxes. Although there are promises not to raise taxes, Nevada has the worst gap between its budget and projected revenues of any state in the nation. We’re hurting and, some say, to not raise taxes would be foolish in the long term because the depth of cuts, if that’s the only method of balancing the budget considered, would devastate Nevada in the long run. Regardless of whether you oppose raising taxes, let’s say they must be raised. If that’s the case, who do you think should take the biggest hit for the team?

    Note that the RG-J said ‘bear the biggest burden’. Not me. I don’t think Mining needs to support the entire state budget. BUT.  I think Mining should make up way more than the pittance they’ve been getting away with for nearly a century - Then let’s talk about Gaming again. Fair is fair. Let the mining companies operating here in Nevada pay taxes on a par with what mining pays in other western states. Now, there’s a thought.

    Let’s say that you don’t really understand why Nevada mining should ante up a bit more in the way of tax share. That’s why I’m here - to help you understand the issues.

    Nevada’s budget deficit. The numbers speak for themselves

    The New York Times weighs in on the Nevada Mining Tax Initiative

    Nevada is drowning. Revising mining taxes are the answer.

    Budget shortfall and Nevada mining: Money talks and ….

    We just love boom and bust. Right?

    Here’s why you all need to express your tough love for Nevada’s mining industry - they would love to see these results continue, with ‘everybody’ (meaning me and you) taking the brunt of any tax increases.

    How’s that work for you?

    Oh, and Cigarette Smokers? Gasoline Users? Is the RG-J nuts? Talk about putting an unfair burden on those who can least afford it. Only the poor and uneducated are still smoking, and damn near everybody drives a car to work - except the uber wealthy. Aviation fuel for the corporate jet is a different tax.

     

    Wednesday
    Jan262011

    Nevada's budget deficit: The numbers speak for themselves

    Just as all the yapping about the federal budget deficit can’t be taken too seriously without a frank and open discussion about our military adventures in Iraq and Afghanistan - enriching our military-industrial complex - neither can our Nevada budgetary woes be solved without being honest about how much the mining industry doesn’t pay up. Then we’ll talk about gaming.

    This much must be understood. The mining interests - which are mostly foreign owned (Canadian) - aren’t about to pack up and leave for South Africa anytime soon. The gold they’re getting out of the Carlin Trend has paid off very handsomely. The Carlin Trend is America’s most productive gold field, and gold stock touts on the internet say there could be many millions more ounces of the pretty stuff to be had. Then there’s the Battle Mountain-Eureka Trend, the Rabbit Creek Trend and on and on.

    According to geologist friends, who are knowledgeable about gold in Nevada, the end of profitable production is still decades away, depending on many factors such as the price of gold.

    Here’s a ClifNotes version that you can take to the bank.  It’s been culled from Nevada Department of Taxation data by the LasVegasGleaner:

    From 2000 through 2007, the mining industry in Nevada extracted and sold gold
    worth $25.5 billion, and paid taxes to the state general fund totaling $125.3
    million, an effective gross state tax rate of one-half of one percent.  
     
    —Mine owners are allowed to write off expenses as deductions. Over the last
    eight years, the Nevada mining industry has deducted 79 percent of the value of
    gold production, and paid taxes only on the value of the remaining 21 percent.
     
    In any given year from 2000 through 2007, one-third to one-half of all the
    mines operating in the state produced gold worth hundreds of millions of dollars
    but reported zero taxable proceeds.
     
    Nevada’s two largest gold mines, the Barrick Goldstrike mine and Newmont’s
    Carlin Trend project, have reported zero taxable values during years when the
    mines have produced gold worth a half billion dollars or more.
     
    While the 5 percent Net Proceeds of Minerals (NPOM) tax rate is written in the
    Nevada Constitution and would take years to change, the deductions by which the
    mining industry avoids so much taxation are written in state statutes (NRS
    362.120) and can be eliminated through legislation, raising tens and possibly
    hundreds of millions of dollars for the state budget as early as the next biennium.

    Click here to see more facts and figures on mining revenues and taxes in Nevada.

    Now, that’s a fair deal, right? Knowing this, you’d still be happy to let the new Governor further cut education, right? And social services? As long as it isn’t you or yours that are coming up on the short end?

    I’m not suggesting that the mining industry be held hostage to Nevada budgets, but … but they’ve gotten off far too lightly for far too many years. Yes, they employ a lot of fine Nevadans. Many are friends of mine.

    All I’m saying is that Nevada Regulatory Statutes  (NRS 362.120) vis a vis the mining industry need to be revisited with a ‘come to jesus’ moment. It’s like this - the mining companies will gladly walk away with whatever we allow them too. If we are willing to allow them to walk away with all the chips … then that’s our fault. We’re the fools. Unfortunately, our children and the economic future of Nevada will pay the dearly. Not Barrick. Not Newmont.

    At the end of the day, just how much of the quality of life in Nevada are you willing to sacrifice to mining?

    -maven

    Friday
    May142010

    Friday Fish Wrap: May 14, 2010

    First things first: Bistro 7 is having a benefit, this Sunday, for one of their employees - Sarah Pugh - who is battling Stage IV breast cancer. Maven will be there, and I hope you will too!

    Here is the notice with all the details:

    EAT TO SAVE SARAH!  This Sunday May 16th at Bistro 7 in Reno from 3pm -8pm.

    We will be having a gathering on the patio (weather permitting) of Bistro 7 that will include music, food, and good times. Bistro 7 will be donating a percentage of all sales this Sunday to help SAVE SARAH
    The music will start at 3pm with dj’s Jeremy Curl, Sean Murray and Andrew.

    Sarah Pugh is facing a serious return of stage 4 breast cancer. She is only 30 years old but has been fighting breast cancer since she was first diagnosed 4 years ago at age 26. She beat it the first time and everything has been getting back to normal over the past 2 years…but sadly its back and has spread. The first round fight put her through over 12 surgeries.  Please help us raise money for Sarah’s medical bills.

    Today is a banner day here at Rancho Maven.

    Click to read more ...

    Wednesday
    Apr212010

    Statewide canvass for Fair Mining Tax initiative coming up

    JOIN US for a massive day of action for tax fairness in Nevada!

    On Tuesday, April 27th, Nevadans for Fair Mining Taxes will take to the streets so that the people can vote in November to remove the mining industry’s sweetheart tax loopholes! Mining is the only industry in Nevada that is singled out in our constitution for protection from taxation. And it shows in the state’s general fund. It’s time to demand fair solutions to Nevada’s budget crisis!

    Over the last few weeks we’ve seen an amazing show of support: Over 200 volunteers are already circulating the petition to their friends, family, and neighbors and as a result we already have over 12,000 signatures! But now it’s time to go the next level. Will you give two hours of your time to help us? We’ll give you everything you need and pair you up with an experienced canvasser.

    We’ll be at the following locations for the following times:

    Click to read more ...

    Thursday
    Apr152010

    Fire Massey Energy's Blankenship, and send a message

    Union busting CEO’s like Don Blankenship are an unfortunate vestige of the tragic past that have to go. Please join Public Citizen in helping to make that happen - and send a message to management across the country that safety can’t be compromised on the backs of labor.

    The following is from Public Citizen:

    “It was a tragedy waiting to happen.

    When a corporate scofflaw operates coal mines without meaningful government supervision, regulatory oversight or a unionized workforce, the tragic result is shattered families in the coal fields of West Virginia.

    Last week, 29 miners lost their lives in Massey Energy Corporation’s Upper Big Branch mine. Massey CEO Don Blankenship must be held accountable.

    Sign the petition: Tell Massey’s board of directors to fire Don Blankenship at www.FireBlankenship.org.

    Click to read more ...

    Friday
    Feb262010

    Friday Fish Wrap: February 26, 2010

    Updated on Saturday, February 27, 2010 at 00:12 by Registered Commentermavenandmeddler

    No matter the extent of the healthcare drama inside the faraway beltway, we in Nevada have more drama than we need right here at home. In so many ways it’s the national story writ very small and nasty.

    We have an crazy, embattled Republican Governor - trailing a laundry list of tawdry divorce, women and grope stories like toilet paper from his shoe - blocking damn near anything a desperate legislature suggests to mitigate the effects of an $880 million deficit.

    Nevada is unique in many ways. One of them is our stubborn grip on a bi-annual legislature. Back in the day - like the 1800’s when there were few folks here and they were spread thin - it was no easy trick to mosey in to Carson City to legislate and commiserate.

    You’d think this woulda’ changed with the advent of new-fangled airplanes and interstate highways, but no.

    So, the Governor has called them into Special Session - a five day marathon intended to plug the gap. If this sounds impossible to you, welcome to my life in Nevada.

    Click to read more ...

    Monday
    Feb082010

    Hey, Jim! How's the "no new tax" thingy gonna work for us?

    “He wants to share his ideology with the citizens. He will make all of his proposals known in the days ahead,” said Governor Jim Gibbons press secretary, Dan Burns.

    No, no Dan. Thanks, gaaack, but I don’t need any more of Jim’s, urp, Tea Party ideology.

    A dose of reality and critical thinking might be better as we slide down the rat hole to bankruptcy. Nevada Governor Jim Gibbons did another amazing impersonation of this man:

    Delusional and deranged.

    First things first:

    Click to read more ...

    Thursday
    Feb042010

    Friday Fish Wrap: February 5, 2010

    On this eveings KOLO-TV evening news, Tad Dunbar was doing a lead-in for his Dunbar Report show, d offering the following:

    Nevada First Lady, Dawn Gibbons - First Lady until the divorce is final, that is - will be hosting her last official function at the Governor’s Mansion in Carson City, Nevada.

    She will be hosting a benefit for former prostitutes. The effort is designed to help the’ ladies’ find both  self respect and a path to a better life.

    I sat there thinking “Wait for it.

    Tad paused artfully, and went to say what had just raced through my brain,

    Only in Nevada.”

    LOL

    ###

    I have a question.

    Click to read more ...

    Tuesday
    Jan192010

    Nevada is drowning. Revised mining taxes are the answer.

    This is a complete no-brainer.

    Just in from PLAN - Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada:

    The mining industry sold $5.7 billion in minerals from Nevada in 2008, 95 percent of it in gold. The industry paid $40 million in net proceeds taxes to the state’s general fund – an effective tax rate of less than 1 percent.  In contrast, the tax on baby formula sold in Clark County is nearly 8 percent.

    Click to read more ...

    Friday
    Jan152010

    PLAN to eliminate limits on mining revenue taxation

    This is so long overdue. It’s time to revamp what mining pays to the State of Nevada, and it’s time for us to help PLAN (Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada) get the ballot initiative through.

    As PLAN’s state director, Bob Fulkerson says, the mining industry will fight this tooth and nail. Nevadans will be bombarded with multi-million dollar, slick advertising campaigns trying to defeat this. But the truth is that mining has for far too long had a virtually free ride in this state.

    We can’t afford to subsidize what mining should be paying for.

    Don’t put this on the back of Harry Reid, either. We as Nevadans must make it clear that we need this change.

    This isn’t about being vindictive in regard to mining. This is about ‘times are tough all over’, and it’s past time for mining to pay their share.

    Read what PLAN has to say:

    Click to read more ...