ST. PAUL COMPANIES ARE SPENDING THEIR TAX BREAKS ON SUPER BOWL SPONSORSHIPS. TEACHERS ARE CRYING FOU
JANUARY 26, 2018
With more than a million people headed to the Twin Cities over the next 10 days for the Super Bowl, local corporations, St. Paul school district officials, and civic leaders are bracing for what may be a public relations nightmare: the first teachers strike in St. Paul in over 70 years.
The St. Paul Federation of Teachers, nine months into its contract negotiation, authorized a strike vote for January 31. The move comes amid the unions unconventional strategy of linking declining school funding to corporate tax cuts and narrowing in on local companies on the Super Bowl Host Committee as a potential source of funding for the cash-strapped school system.
The argument the teachers are making in their contract negotiations is straightforward. Cuts, they say, are not the answer. The school districts financial situation can never really improve until corporations start paying their fair share. In particular, teachers are focusing on the companies that make up the founding sponsors of the Super Bowl Host Committee companies the union says have avoided paying $300 million in state income taxes over the last five years alone.
The companies say they have made up for some of that with donations, but the generosity has limits. According to a public records request filed by the teachers union, only seven of the 25 Super Bowl Host Committee founding partners donated to the St. Paul public school district last year for a total of $1.1 million. All 25 companies, by contrast, paid $1.5 million to be founding Super Bowl partners.
More:
https://radiofree.org/st-paul-companies-are-spending-their-tax-breaks-on-super-bowl-sponsorships-teachers-are-crying-foul/