It's had to train a chimp to juggle.... What's obvious about you is your ignorance. And I'm being VERY kind.
Ummm, property taxes? Private colleges don't pay them. NH residents complain about property taxes all day every day. Of course, they complain about paying for anything. Harvard, MIT, BC, BU, Northeastern and the Boston hospitals pay no property taxes for some of the most valuable property in the country. You do understand that means others assume the lost revenue through other forms of taxation? Oops, you're Elwood, you wouldn't.
The fact that you don't understand how taxes work at all says so much about your "way of life" in the woods with Buford.
Not all properties of a hospital are tax exempt. Not all taxes of a church are exempt from taxes depending on use but I’m sure Potty will try and argue the opposite being the smartest in the room.
Meathead, stop digging. The PILOT program is it's own outrage and purely voluntary. It's a joke and typically only results in the municipalities recovering a tiny fraction of what's lost is property taxes.It is not 100% accurate that nonprofits don't pay property taxes. Depending on the use of a property, it may not be 100% excluded from property taxes.
And these colleges and hospitals that don't pay taxes, pay PILOTS. In 2024 there was millions paid to the City of Boston from these nonprofits
Less than two weeks until Groundhog Day!Seems this convo comes up almost on a yearly basis and the interesting part is nothing changes.
Revenue generating college sports is undergoing massive changes. Hockey is, too. Between the transfer portal, NIL, and the new OHL recruiting rules, the difference between the wealthy and not so wealthy schools will grow greater over time. UNH is certainly the type of school that tries to take action too late. After all, change and staying ahead of the game requires vision, ambition and investment - three things NH doesn't understand or respect.The idea that UNH should consider leaving Hockey East, no matter how much they struggle, is outrageous. Would be a massive unforced error.
Great to learn that SteveF is alive and well. Brings to mind the classic 1897 Mark Twain quote “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.”A few things here,
SteveF is alive and well and yes he handled the last installments of HE Rookie of the Weak, I think something recently was linked around here going back into the archives; just absurdly funny and he had the best writing on this topic. In the early days, we all would scour box scores for weekly submissions and coordinate back and forth and make the decisions and put in some clever remarks as a rough draft that someone would finish. Eventually the torch was passed to him as we all got busy with kids. At some point, the blog, which was also legendary, was created and it was posted there along with extremely elementary photoshops of the "winners" on a milk carton. The blog was interesting and went beyond hockey to troll other hillbilly fanbases that we shared a conference with (think West Virginia) and it was just wild what kinds of people would find it and leave comments, the most memorable of which I cannot even post for risk of being banned. The Milk-Carton photoshop was inspired by THE legendary photoshop on this board, the beach ball Mike Ayers photo from the 2003 Frozen Four (I still remember poor Chuck in the arena after that game). Who knew we'd end up with Ayers on our staff choking away championships here with a modern-day ginger version of Dick Umile guiding the Eagles to April and March disappointment.
Steve is a legend and one of the funniest guys you'll ever meet, going to games with him are some of my all-time favorite memories.
Maybe we need to bring it back.
edit - come on guys, Steve is fine, please delete this BS about him being gone. JFC
You are saying these places are flush with cash because they don't pay taxes, but there is an expense. Also there are locations that pay property taxes. The only thing I am digging is your grave.Meathead, stop digging. The PILOT program is it's own outrage and purely voluntary. It's a joke and typically only results in the municipalities recovering a tiny fraction of what's lost is property taxes.
Ummm, property taxes? Private colleges don't pay them. NH residents complain about property taxes all day every day. Of course, they complain about paying for anything. Harvard, MIT, BC, BU, Northeastern and the Boston hospitals pay no property taxes for some of the most valuable property in the country. You do understand that means others assume the lost revenue through other forms of taxation? Oops, you're Elwood, you wouldn't.
The fact that you don't understand how taxes work at all says so much about your "way of life" in the woods with Buford.
Maybe we need to bring it back.
1000% agree here. Also given UNH was one of the founding members of the conference back in the 80s, I would think (even if UNH was contemplating leaving) that the conference would REALLY try to persuade them the other way.The idea that UNH should consider leaving Hockey East, no matter how much they struggle, is outrageous. Would be a massive unforced error.
It seems the demise of SteveF has been greatly exaggerated ... mostly due to me. I thought I'd qualified it with an IIRC, but regardless ... apologies, sorry!!A few things here,
SteveF is alive and well and yes he handled the last installments of HE Rookie of the Weak, I think something recently was linked around here going back into the archives; just absurdly funny and he had the best writing on this topic. In the early days, we all would scour box scores for weekly submissions and coordinate back and forth and make the decisions and put in some clever remarks as a rough draft that someone would finish. Eventually the torch was passed to him as we all got busy with kids. At some point, the blog, which was also legendary, was created and it was posted there along with extremely elementary photoshops of the "winners" on a milk carton. The blog was interesting and went beyond hockey to troll other hillbilly fanbases that we shared a conference with (think West Virginia) and it was just wild what kinds of people would find it and leave comments, the most memorable of which I cannot even post for risk of being banned. The Milk-Carton photoshop was inspired by THE legendary photoshop on this board, the beach ball Mike Ayers photo from the 2003 Frozen Four (I still remember poor Chuck in the arena after that game). Who knew we'd end up with Ayers on our staff choking away championships here with a modern-day ginger version of Dick Umile guiding the Eagles to April and March disappointment.
Steve is a legend and one of the funniest guys you'll ever meet, going to games with him are some of my all-time favorite memories.
Maybe we need to bring it back.
edit - come on guys, Steve is fine, please delete this BS about him being gone. JFC
My concern for the last few years is that "hockey version of Cignetti" is currently running the program up in Orono, and our previous AD (Blue Skies) screwed the pooch on that opportunity when he was giving MS7 his first (undeserved) extension. Opportunities like that only come up so often, and if you're lacking vision, you can very easily miss your best (only?) real shot ...Building off what Chuck mentioned yesterday: While NIL certainly played a role, I don’t think you need to look much further than what Indiana and coach Cignetti just did at proving just how quickly things can change in college sports, and what a difference good coaching can make (all with no 5 star recruits to boot). The hockey equivalent to Cignetti may be out there somewhere, and there’s no reason UNH can’t find them and return to glory atop HE and div 1 hockey.
Heading into this year, I would have agreed with you, albeit their performance in the NCAAs has left a lot to be desired the last few seasons. Still, making hay in HE is WAY more than we can say over the last 10+ years.My concern for the last few years is that "hockey version of Cignetti" is currently running the program up in Orono, and our previous AD (Blue Skies) screwed the pooch on that opportunity when he was giving MS7 his first (undeserved) extension. Opportunities like that only come up so often, and if you're lacking vision, you can very easily miss your best (only?) real shot ...
You are saying these places are flush with cash because they don't pay taxes, but there is an expense. Also there are locations that pay propertyMeathead, stop digging. The PILOT program is it's own outrage and purely voluntary. It's a joke and typically only results in the municipalities recovering a tiny fraction of what's lost is property taxes.
JB I have known you for 30 years now (holy shit we are old) and we converse all the time. We keep fighting someone who is obviously intellectually inferior to us and can't have an adult conversation. I think we all just ignore the responses and he will drift back into the Revere shithole that he lives in.I know it is hard but it would really be nice if you would stick to one argument and stop conflating things. It would also help if you grew up and also stopped trying to intimate you are the smartest person in the room.
In Short:
Your argument has been the STATE of NH needs to spend more on UNH to commit to the hockey program. You seem to want an income tax so that NH stops leaching off Mass to fund UNH. You have implied that the STATE of Mass investments in Universities is what has driven the economy and NH should do the same.My reference to property taxes is the TOWN or CITY collect those not the STATE in Mass. In that case the STATE isn't subsidizing the private universities by not charging property tax. Now MIT still paid $96.7M in 2024 real estate taxes on commercial properties and $2.4M to Cambridge in voluntary "Payments in Lieu of Taxes". All of those funds again went to TOWN and CITY. So again how is the STATE of Mass subsidizing these private schools like they would fund a state school?
The extension of your argument is NH should get credit for its commitment to subsidizing Dartmouth and in this case a percentage of property taxes does go to the state.
As to the innovation engine around Boston it is driven by the private schools, not STATE of Mass subsidizing.
P.S. Honestly your dishonest approach to open debate makes me think I need to just start ignoring you, at least when the pinheads were doing it, it was for humor
I came to the house in the fall of 1996, so 29.25. We can just round upAre you sure it is 30 years.... I am thinking 29 ....
Hahaha.... It is 29 years, I was just being funny/stupidI came to the house in the fall of 1996, so 29.25. We can just round up
Instead of breaking up HEA, I think that HEA should add three teams, say Bentley, Holy Cross, and Sacred Heart, or if those teams do not want to leave Atlantic Hockey, HEA could add Stonehill, Long Island U., and another bottom feeder, which would give UNH a better chance of escaping from time to time their perennial HEA basement status.Revenue generating college sports is undergoing massive changes. Hockey is, too. Between the transfer portal, NIL, and the new OHL recruiting rules, the difference between the wealthy and not so wealthy schools will grow greater over time. UNH is certainly the type of school that tries to take action too late. After all, change and staying ahead of the game requires vision, ambition and investment - three things NH doesn't understand or respect.
Nevertheless, a complete assessment of the hockey program, the future of D1 hockey, and HE would be smart. If UNH is headed in the wrong direction, which we all agree is the case, change is necessary. I think UNH's future, pretty clearly, is in a league with competitive but less ambitious, less expensive (most importantly) and not nationally competitive programs.
I'm thinking UNH, Sacred Heart, RPI, St Lawrence, Colgate, UVM, Bentley, Holy Cross and perhaps Merrimack. That's a solid league. Fewer scholarships, less traveling less pressure to improve/maintain faciliities.
UMass Lowell and UMass travel in tandem (see state legislature) and UMass has first rate funding and facilities. UMaine and UConn are well funded, have good facilities and are very ambitious. UNH no longer is a fit with them. Let's not even consider comparing UNH to BC, BU, NU and Providence from the standpoint of funding, facilities and ambition.
That leaves, UNH, UVM and Merrimack as excellent candidates to break off into another league that is less expensive and less ambitious. They have less in common with the other 8 teams as time goes on.