Politics & Government
Hill Joins GOP Jobs Tour to Push Responsible Legislation
Several GOP legislators from north of Boston, including state Rep. Brad Hill, R-Ipswich, visited Andover on Monday night to discuss how to create jobs and cut costs for both small business owners as well as larger employers in the state.
State Rep. Brad Hill joined several other Republican state representatives who spoke with small business owners at in Andover on Monday to discuss what can be done about the lack of jobs and healthy business throughout the state.
Andover was one of the last stops on the GOP jobs tour, which had already been down on Cape Cod as well as the South Shore.
Many business owners, including state Rep. Jim Lyons, stated how a laundry list of fees, taxes and permits must be dealt with in order to run a business in Massachusetts. Legislator at the forum in addition to Hill, R-Ipswich, who represents Hamilton and Wenham, included Lyons, R-Andover, Paul Adams, R-Andover, House Minority Leader Brad Jones, R-North Reading and Donald Wong, R-Saugus.
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“A job, and a good job, is the most preferable program out there,” said Jones at the start of the meeting.
The group of legislators spoke with the audience about individual circumstances having to do with job creation and the difficulties of being a small business owner. Most commonly, the group spoke about countless regulations and bureaucracy that make the process to own a small business burdensome and expensive.
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Adams talked about responsible legislation that would make it easier for businesses, large or small, to operate in the state. He mentioned rolling back to the sales tax to 5 percent as well as the corporate income tax to 5 percent, calling it a tax on success.
By the end of the night, the group of legislators said they would be interested in forming a committee specifically to identify the rules in place that make it difficult to do business in Massachusetts.
“We are going to try to put together a commission to look at state statutes and regulations that are anti-jobs and anti-growth,” Adams said after the meeting.
Adams said they group is hoping to make it back to Andover in a couple months to report back to the public on what they’ve learned.
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