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Sunday, April 15, 2007

The doozey of ‘06 and what now may be the world’s richest animal rights charity

The Legislature’s mad dash for the exit this week will end with a flurry of bills and money thrown hither and yon.

Somewhere in that chaos will be at least one unintended consequence — a good deed gone bad. It happens, like clockwork, every year.

Today, in point of fact, the Senate will be asked to fix the doozey from last year.

It was admirable legislation. Goodwill Industries wanted relief from property taxes on its facilities in Savannah. The Legislature was happy to oblige with an exemption for “charitable institutions.”

The bill, passed overwhelmingly by both chambers and approved in a statewide referendum last November, resulted in a loophole big enough for several hundred lumber trucks to pass through.

Over the last few months, timber baron Holland M. Ware of Hogansville has donated 67,000 acres in Georgia to his favorite do-good entity, the Fayetteville-based Holland M. Ware Charitable Foundation, dedicated to animal rights and anti-cruelty movements.

The charity’s last tax statement, signed by Ware a year ago, put its assets at about $300,000. Ware’s spokesman at the state Capitol said the value of the new round of gifts was “maybe $100 million.”

Consequently, the foundation — controlled by Ware, his wife and a third party — has also applied for nearly $700,000 in property-tax exemptions for land it now owns in 18 of the poorest counties in South Georgia.

These are counties that already struggle to fund schools and the bare essentials of government.

State and county officials fear a stampede of timberland into the protective arms of similar charities.

“It could be devastating statewide if this continues to happen,” state Rep. Richard Royal (R-Camilla) told members of the Senate Finance Committee last week, during a hearing that brought the issue into public view.

Royal has introduced H.B. 445, to close the loophole.

At the hearing, everyone agreed that Royal’s bill is necessary. The question was whether the foundation of the animal-loving timber baron should be allowed to keep its tax break.

The charity is real, argued Pete Robinson, Ware’s lawyer-lobbyist. “It gives money to the Auburn University school of veterinary medicine. [Ware] built the LaGrange animal shelter,” he said.

And the donation? “It was done legally, it was done honestly, it was done charitably, and it was done because of the passage of this law by the General Assembly and its people,” Robinson said.

State Sen. Chip Rogers (R-Woodstock), chairman of the committee, agreed. “I’m prepared to state for the record that [Ware] did operate within the bounds of the law we passed.”

Rogers proposed to “grandfather” Ware’s tax breaks into law, which prompted a near-snort from Royal. “It rewards somebody for finding a loophole in some legislation. I don’t think it’s right, and I don’t think it’s fair to these counties,” Royal said.

As for legalities, Royal said he had an opinion from Attorney General Thurbert Baker that “raises some questions of whether [Ware is] acting within the law.”

At which point Bart Graham, commissioner of the state Department of Revenue, stood up from his seat in the audience to add his doubts.

“This foundation was set up for the protection of abandoned animals. You hardly need 65,000 acres to do that,” Graham said.

Dave Wills, chairman of the Webster County Commission, was among the last to testify. The Holland foundation has 2,733 acres in Webster, worth $20,000 in taxes to the county government.

That exemption alone would mean a half-mill property tax increase for the 2,400 residents of Webster, he said.

In the end, the Senate committee sided with Royal and the 18 rural counties. Holland Ware and his foundation lost. The full Senate is scheduled to vote on the bill today.

Don’t think that you’ve seen the end of this unintended consequence. A lawsuit is certain.

Elsewhere, good intentions may pave the road to hell. In the Legislature, they’ve built an interstate leading to the courthouse.

So much for critics who say the General Assembly doesn’t care about transportation.

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First word on money: Whitehead raises more than $250,000

While the Legislature’s been spinning its wheels, state Sen. Jim Whitehead (R-Evans) has been on the phone.

Word is that Whitehead, a candidate for the 10th District congressional race, will report raising $264,521.87 from 491 individual donors. He’s also taken out a $100,000 line of personal credit.

It’ll be a few days before we can compare those numbers with other candidates, both Democrat and Republican, in the formally non-partisan race.

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Meanwhile, down in Macon, John Edwards met with his lawyers…..

While Barack Obama was in Atlanta stirring up an army, rival Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards stopped in Macon, where, in the offices of a local law firm, he promised to keep in touch with rural America.

“It’s where I’m from and I take it very personally,” Edwards said, according to today’s Macon Telegraph. “I grew up with eating fried chicken for dinner, going to Friday night high school football games, going to church on Sunday morning, Sunday night, Wednesday night.”

U.S. Rep. Jim Marshall (D-Macon) was there, and threw his weight behind Edwards.

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