40 Votes in 40 Days

Kevin Kuros, candidate for State Representative in the 8th Worcester District, will be posting daily on his website roll call votes taken by his opponent, incumbent Paul Kujawski.

 

 



Kuros Criticizes Kujawski Campaign Finance Report

Kevin Kuros, candidate for Eighth Worcester district State Representative, is blasting incumbent Representative Paul Kujawski, after it was revealed in his campaign finance reports that Kujawski improperly used campaign funds, and accepted illegal contributions from registered lobbyists.

  “Our legislator is living a life of luxury off of contributions by lobbyists and Beacon Hill insiders. It is time for a change,” Kuros said. “This explains why Paul Kujawski does exactly what the Speaker tells him to do.”

Kujawski’s campaign finance report reveals he has leased a Ford vehicle at a cost of nearly $400 per month, and spent over $4,000 on gasoline from his campaign account. Based on average gas prices and miles per gallon, he is claiming to have driven over 34,000 miles… in 8 months. He also has over $2,200 in payments to Arbella insurance, presumably for insurance on the “campaign vehicle.” On a similar note, he has spent nearly $1,500 at a florist over the past 8 months, and last year spent over $700 on newspaper subscriptions.

In addition, Kujawski accepted contributions from at least 10 lobbyists. $400 was donated by lobbyist Roger D. Donahue, despite the $200 per person contribution limit for registered lobbyists. Kujawski has previously been cited several times by the MA Office of Campaign & Political Finance for campaign finance violations.

“The bottom line is: Rep. Kujawski has grown out of touch with the people of this district,” Kuros concluded. “It’s similar to the Cadillac that Governor Patrick leased on our dime. It shows a disregard for the campaign finance laws, and more notably, it shows a disregard for people trying to make ends meet. It has to stop.”



Stealing Harvard?

We’ve all heard about the large endowment over at Harvard University, which is usually mentioned within a sentence or two of the comment that Harvard doesn’t give scholarships. With $34 billion just sitting there, you can’t help but feel like Harvard is cheating someone.

Enter State Rep. Paul Kujawski, who thinks the State deserves a piece of that pie in the form of taxes.

“When an endowment exceeds our annual ($28 billion) state budget, you start to ask yourself: ‘When is a nonprofit no longer a nonprofit?’ ” said Kujawski, a Webster Democrat who wants to begin taxing large university endowments.

Kujawski hasn‚Äôt filed a formal proposal yet, but told the Herald he wants a sliding-scale tax on endowments larger than $5 billion. That would hit Harvard – which has the nation‚Äôs largest endowment – and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which has $10 billion on hand.

Kujawski said his proposal could add more than $1 billion to state coffers.

I can completely understand Kujawski’s concern, and his rationale for wanting to tax the Harvards and MITs out there, but it seems like what is going on here is just larger scale model for what happens to regular Americans–find out who’s got the money (meaning, the rich) and tax them. Clearly, Kujawski thinks that the state can do better with the money than Harvard can. Frankly, I’d almost be all for this proposal except for the fact that it puts the money into the wrong hands.

A recent congressional study found endowments earned $52 billion on untaxed investments in fiscal year 2006, costing the U.S. government $18 billion in lost revenues.

However, researchers found big endowments only spent 4.6 percent of assets on school needs. That’s below a 5 percent minimum that non-college foundations must expend annually to stay tax-exempt.

The study also found schools such as Harvard and MIT could have avoided 2006 tuition hikes had they used less than 0.1 percent of endowment assets to cover the increases.

If these endowments are not meeting their legal obligations to remain tax exempt, than I would agree that some level of disciplinary action would be appropriate–but that won’t please the likes of Kujawski. They see a big stack of cash and truly believe that the government can spend that money better.

It certainly seems silly for universities to be sitting on more money than God while they raise tuition on students who enter these universities accumulating large debt. Just because they can–even legally–doesn’t mean we can’t complain about it to our hearts content. We all want to keep as much of our hard earned money as possible, and just because Harvard has $38 billion, doesn’t mean they can’t do anything legal to keep their filthy hands on it.

That said, if they aren’t keeping up their end of the non-profit bargain, they should remedy that. If they need to spend atleast 5% of the endowment on school needs and they are only spending 4.6%, then I suspect they could be charged with back-taxes for every year they have been in arrears of their obligation. That would be fair. If they change their ways, and start using the full 5% of the endowment on school needs, then by law they can sit on that endowment as far as I’m aware.

AS weird as it is for me to be defending Harvard, as long as what they are doing is legal, it’s technically fair. They should be penalized for anything wrong they may have done and are still doing, but they also have the opportunity to remedy that situation–if they want to keep their cash.



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