By CHRIS POWELL
Apparently afraid that Democrats in California and Illinois are getting ahead of them, Connecticut’s Democratic state legislators have pushed into overdrive their campaign to destroy the private sector and turn the state into a people’s republic.
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Not only have the Democratic legislators revived their bill to award unemployment compensation to strikers — that is, to have government pay people for walking off their jobs (except state government jobs, of course) — legislation Governor Lamont vetoed last year, but now they want state government to control the intricacies of the supermarket business.
A bill approved last week by the General Assembly’s Labor and Public Employees Committee would require supermarkets to operate one cashier-staffed checkout station for every two self-checkout stations and to limit self-checkout stations to eight per store.
What is the point of taking these decisions away from supermarket management? The supermarket business has a low profit margin, there is fairly good competition in the business in Connecticut, and customers have choices if they are not satisfied with checkout arrangements. If checkout is too slow for them, they’ll shop elsewhere.
The legislation’s only point seems to be to guarantee cashier jobs by suppressing automation. So why not also prohibit supermarkets from using universal product codes on the goods they sell? Entering prices manually into the cash register, as was done in the old days, would force supermarkets to hire many more cashiers while lengthening checkout times. How have the Luddites on the labor committee missed that idea?
Of course restricting checkout automation in supermarkets would drive up costs and prices even as Democratic legislators prattle about making Connecticut more affordable.
But many supermarket employees are unionized and their unions support the Democrats, so protecting supermarket employees against technology comes first.
Meanwhile Democrats are advocating a bill that has been cleared by the legislature’s Housing Committee and would essentially expropriate owners of apartment buildings.
The bill would restrict landlords from evicting tenants at the end of their leases. A landlord would have to allege some specific fault on the tenant’s part. A landlord’s wanting to raise the rent without risking a bogus racial or religious discrimination complaint wouldn’t be a good enough reason. Nor would a landlord’s simply disliking a tenant’s demeanor be good enough, though tenants would remain free to terminate their lease for not liking their landlord’s demeanor. While requiring landlords to be loyal to their tenants, the bill would not oblige tenants to be loyal to their landlords.
Such expropriation of rental housing is the real Democratic response to Connecticut’s housing shortage. The only way of alleviating the shortage is to build housing, and expropriation of landlords will discourage new rental housing. But getting more housing built is more controversial politically than demagoguing against landlords, so the Democrats choose demagoguery.
Their expropriation legislation shows that Democrats aren’t serious about “affordable” housing despite their defense of the controversial state law that limits use of municipal zoning against housing construction in towns that lack inexpensive housing. Despite the controversy, that law isn’t getting much housing built.
If Connecticut was serious about housing, the Housing Department would be directed to get aggressive — to condemn and acquire some of the hundreds of dilapidated or vacant former industrial and commercial properties around the state that are already connected to roads and utilities. The department would put the properties out to bid to developers for multi-family housing construction and exempt the projects from municipal zoning.
No pristine areas would be chewed up by new housing and no environmental damage would be done. Only blighted and under-used areas would be reclaimed.
Yes, getting new housing this way would be controversial too, since, while people say they want more housing in general, few want it near them, even if it would replace the ruins of a factory.
So instead Democrats propose to expropriate landlords, which will only pretend to address the housing shortage, and the shortage will worsen unless more people get fed up and move out of state, as is happening in California and Illinois.
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)