-Caveat Lector-

There's no business like Snow business
http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?itemid=14458&CFID=5017584
&CFTOKEN=53732293
Arianna Huffington - Arianna Online

02.05.03 - Watching freshly minted Treasury Secretary John Snow, a
longtime promoter of balanced budgets, hit the Hill this week to flack for
the president's new red-ink-drenched budget, I felt like I had stumbled
across a Richard Simmons infomercial pitching Big Macs. Or Colin Powell
shredding the Powell Doctrine in order to sell the war on Iraq to the
United Nations.

Of course, saying one thing and doing another is a way of life in the Bush
administration -- so maybe Snow, as the "new guy," is just trying to fit in.

Take the president's outrageous assertion (there were so many to choose
from) during his State of the Union address that one of the greatest
accomplishments of his presidency was, yes, reforming corporate America.

"To insist on integrity in American business," said the president, "we passed
tough reforms, and we are holding corporate criminals to account."

He didn't even burst out laughing, though I thought I could see Cheney
struggling not to. Not only is the president not holding corporate Capones
to account, he's putting them in his Cabinet. Maybe he wants them where
he can keep an eye on them.

Exhibit A is Snow. During his 12-year tenure as chief executive at railroad
giant CSX, our new guardian of the Treasury helped himself to a vast array
of corporate indulgences. If CEO perks were pills, Snow would have OD'd a
long time ago.

Let's start with the fact that he was paid a king's ransom -- $10.1 million in
2001 alone -- for doing a downright crappy job. With Snow at the helm,
CSX's profits shriveled and its stock underperformed its competitors' by
two-thirds since 1991. His reign is a case study in one of the greatest
abuses of corporate America -- the anti-Pavlovian delinking of performance
and reward.

Snow was also the lucky winner of a $24.5 million sweetheart loan from CSX
-- precisely the kind of insider loan made illegal by the corporate
responsibility bill signed into law by the president last summer. But Snow's
gravy train of good fortune didn't stop there. You see, Snow, team player
that he is, used the 24 mil to buy stock in CSX. When the stock, under his
sure hand, plummeted in value, the company board, not wanting to see its
fearless leader suffer along with its beleaguered shareholders, promptly
forgave the massive loan. During his confirmation hearing last week, Snow
decried as "offensive" CEO loans used "to go out and buy yachts." But, in a
free country, the problem should not be what you buy with a loan but
whether you repay it. If Snow had bought a yacht, at least he could have
given some of CSX's shareholders a ride around the harbor for their money.

As if this weren't enough, Snow will also be rewarded for his mediocre
tenure at CSX with an extremely generous pension agreement. No need to
worry about him being forced to clip coupons on his $161,200 cabinet
salary -- CSX will pay him $2.47 million a year for the rest of his life. He also
has the option of taking a $30 million lump-sum payment instead. Unlike
most workers, Snow's benefits won't be based on his salary alone -- but
rather on his salary plus his annual bonuses plus the value of the quarter-
million shares of CSX stock the company board gave him. And his
retirement windfall will be greatly enhanced by a pension accounting
scheme that gives him credit for having put in 44 years at the company,
even though he's actually been workin' on the railroad for 25. I suppose he
was thinking really, really hard about the company during those other 19
years. Let's just hope his relationship to numbers improves at the Treasury
Department.

Last year, at a conference on retirement savings, President Bush said:
"What's fair on the top floor should be fair on the shop floor." I guess
Secretary Snow didn't get the memo, quite likely because it never went
above the shop floor. Indeed, at the same time Snow was stitching
together his golden parachute, he was cutting the health care benefits of
newly hired employees and, according to a lawsuit, revoking life insurance
benefits for some CSX retirees. And it goes without saying that the average
worker's pension at CSX is based on the antiquated "one year's work equals
one year's pension" principle.

This two-track take on retirement benefits is no small matter, since one of
Snow's first tasks as Treasury secretary will be overseeing new pension
rules the Bush administration wants to enact that could lead to a serious
loss in benefits for older workers. Two Democratic senators, Tom Harkin of
Iowa and Richard Durbin of Illinois, threatened to derail Snow's nomination
unless the White House withdrew its proposal, but caved in when Snow
promised the two senators that "fundamental fairness will be at the center
of any policy." I can't wait to see what that means.

During his warm-and-cozy rubber-stamping (I mean confirmation hearing),
much was made of the fact that Snow is giving up pay and benefits worth
$15 million to, as Sen. Charles Grassley put it, "serve the people of the
United States of America." I don't know about you, but the idea of a man
with a reported net worth of close to $100 million being forced by
government ethics rules to forgo a series of lavish, Jack Welchian
retirement perks -- including lifetime country club memberships, annual
physical check-ups, free rides on the CSX jet, and special room rates at
the Greenbrier, a company-owned resort in West Virginia -- doesn't exactly
put a patriotic lump in my throat. Sorry, Sen. Grassley.

And Snow's "sacrifice" will be cushioned by a clause that he presciently
had placed in his most recent contract making him eligible to receive an
additional $3.3 million should he ever leave CSX to "fulfill an appointment to
public office." And here I thought companies gave execs big bonuses to
keep them from leaving. Unless, of course, they are leaving for a lofty
position from which they can help enhance their former company's bottom
line. In that case, all aboard!

It turns out the only executive task at which Snow truly excelled was
ripping off the very same Treasury Department of which he is now head.
Despite raking in close to a billion dollars in pretax profits since 1998, CSX
paid no federal income taxes in three of the past four years -- magically
making all of its profits "pretax." What's more, thanks to a combination of
accounting gimmicks and tax shelters, the company was even able to score
a hefty $164 million in tax rebates during that time. This tax dodging
approach was such a part of the Snow mindset that it was enshrined in the
company's 2001 annual report: "CSX," the report proudly proclaimed, "will
pursue all available opportunities to pay the lowest federal, state and
foreign taxes."

As the federal deficit spirals into the wild blue yonder -- now and for the
foreseeable future -- is this really the kind of fox we want guarding the
corporate henhouse? Do we really need more of Snow's special brand of
little-guy-be-damned corporate arrogance around the cabinet table?

Having John Snow, a world-class tax dodger and the lamest railroad man
since Casey Jones, at the controls of our sputtering economy -- the
Disorient Express -- has all the makings of a world-class train wreck. Mr.
Conductor, let me off at the next stop.

Copyright � 1998-2003 Christabella, Inc.
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