ANDERSON — Local business leaders told Rep. Mike Pence on Friday that fear and uncertainty about the economy and the direction of policies in Washington are smothering prospects for growth.
Anderson firefighter and landlord Brent Holland said he has been unable to take advantage of a good market to grow his rental business, despite a high credit score. “No one is doing this type of loan,” he said. “I cannot expand.”
It was a refrain Pence heard repeatedly during an hour-long town-hall-style meeting of businesspeople Friday at the Flagship Enterprise Center.
“People are just afraid to spend money, afraid to expand their businesses,” said John Weymouth, president of Anderson-based Medisurg, which buys, sells and services new and refurbished medical and surgical equipment.
“There’s a real sense of, ‘I don’t know what’s going to happen, so I’m going to hold tight,’” he said.
“We went from a $450,000 credit line to — as soon as we paid it off — zero,” said Pete Bitar of Xtreme Alternative Defense Systems. “Uncertainty is feeding into decisions.”
Jerry Gassen, president and CEO of Ameriana Bank, said banking regulations arising from the financial meltdown and concern over more economic regulations are partly to blame for tight credit.
“All of those factors are just causing people not to do anything,” Gassen said.
Jim Alexander of the Senior Corps of Retired Executives said, “There’s no shortage of people who want to go into business. ... They go to the bank, and it’s a dead end.
“Right now, a lot of them don’t have any money left,” he said of would-be entrepreneurs. “It’s kind of disheartening.”
Pence said he expected Congress when it reconvenes in September to begin talks about extending tax cuts that would expire in 2011 without action. He said there are indications from the Obama administration and leading Democrats in Congress that there is an appetite to extend the cuts that apply to families earning $200,000 or less.
Pence, R-6th District, is the No. 3 Republican in the House and is serving his fifth term. He faces a November election challenge from a familiar opponent in Democrat Barry Welsh, who twice has unsuccessfully sought to unseat Pence. Also running for the seat is tea party activist Talmage “T.J.” Thompson Jr., in the race on the Libertarian ticket.
In answer to a question about whether health care legislation could be stopped, Pence said, “the American people can stop it.
“If the majority (party in Congress) changes hands, we will use the power of the purse to slow it down,” he said, “until we can have a national referendum in 2012.”
Pence has been mentioned as a possible candidate for governor in 2011, and when asked Friday, he would not rule the option in or out.
“I’m completely focused on electing a Republican Congress,” he said as his entourage left Anderson, headed for Fort Wayne.
Contact Dave Stafford: 648-4250, dave.stafford@heraldbulletin.com
Breaking News
Business leaders: Fear, uncertainty stifling growth
Pence hears frustrated voices during visit to Flagship
- Breaking News
-
-
Folk musician Doc Watson dies in NC hospital at 89
Doc Watson, the blind Grammy-award winning folk musician whose mountain-rooted sound was embraced by generations and whose lightning-fast style of flatpicking influenced guitarists around the world, died Tuesday, according to a hospital spokeswoman and his manager. He was 89.
-
Trump overshadows Romney with 'birther' talk
Mitt Romney's presidential campaign collided with Donald Trump's "birther" rhetoric on Tuesday as the reality television star hosted a fundraiser for the Republican while claiming again that President Barack Obama is foreign-born.
-
Hundreds pay respects to slain Indiana soldier
Hundreds of people turned out for the funeral of a northeastern Indiana soldier who was killed by enemy rocket fire in Afghanistan.
-
Four companies to pay $5M in FEMA trailer settlement
Four FEMA contractors that installed or maintained government-issued trailers for storm victims after Hurricane Katrina have agreed to pay a total of $5 million to resolve claims that the temporary shelters exposed Gulf Coast residents to hazardous fumes, according to court filings Tuesday.
-
Allisonville Road bridge project in Indianapolis begins Wednesday
The already rough commute on the Northeastside of Indianapolis will only get longer this summer.
To complete a $19 million road improvement as quickly as possible, state highway officials Wednesday will close the Allisonville Road bridge over I-465 for up to 110 days.
-
A rare gain for the Dow on hopes for China growth
The stock market is desperately looking for good news.
On Tuesday, oil prices fell, the euro sank to a 22-month low, and the yield on the U.S. government's 10-year Treasury note fell near a historic low after a report suggested that Spain will have more trouble repaying its debts.
-
Romney to clinch GOP nomination with Texas win
Mitt Romney is set to clinch the Republican presidential nomination Tuesday night with a win in the Texas primary, a triumph of endurance for a candidate who came up short four years ago and watched this year as voters flirted for months with a carousel of GOP rivals.
- New cyberweapon discovered; Iranian computers hit
-
Delaware County grandstand likely done by July
Delaware County says the show will go on this summer with new fair grandstand after it demolished the old one because of safety concerns found during an inspection prompted by the deadly Indiana State Fair stage collapse.
-
UN: Most of 108 killed in Syria were executed
The U.N.'s human rights office said Tuesday that most of the 108 victims of a massacre in Syria last week were shot at close range, some of them women, children and entire families gunned down in their own homes.
- More Breaking News Headlines
-
Folk musician Doc Watson dies in NC hospital at 89




