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1998-08-10 Regular Meeting and Workshop of City Council
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1998-08-10 Regular Meeting and Workshop of City Council
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City Meetings
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City Council
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Minutes
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8/10/1998
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<br />.1 <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />The redevelopment agency may designate specific projects <br />for implementation and solicit investors and developers to <br />respond to a request for proposals. If the developer's proposal is <br />congruous with the redevelopment plan, the developer may <br />request assistance from the agency on important aspects of the <br />plan. The agency will then make an agreement with the <br />developer to build in accordance with the plan and within a <br />designated time line, at which point the agency should agree to <br />provide specified services in support of the development. In <br />Rock Island, Illinois, TIP funds can be used to pay for interest <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />MISSISS IPPI RIVER <br /> <br /> <br />l~ <br /> <br />~ <br />C <br /> <br />MIa ~ mnIIIm <br />I Eij~~r;:l_ ~II <br />.~ i ~UIIIIIIIIII mm:mQIlll][]]IS.! <br />~ I ~ amm llJIIllIUHM IDIIlI1IBllIIiIlIiIIIEI <br />'~L. ~-_. . _ IDIIIJ. 1llIllIlIlrllIIIII][]llIIIlIIIIIIITI II <br />~ ~ ~ IIIIIIIIIIIIH OIEIIIlIDllIIIIIIIlEI <br />~ I=l:J ~p 1JIIIIIlDE:::':=IIJ DIEI <br />- . ~ (lllIWIIiI n:::::J <br />=-=! ~ ~ IIIIlDlD 1 ' . QlII]J[] <br />. ------ r- .... ~ --..-.. r <br /> <br />Increment Finance District <br /> <br />i <br /> <br />I' <br /> <br />costs incurred by the <br />developer in a redevelopment , <br />project. The funds may also <br />be used to pay for the costs of <br />job training. <br />Washington, D.C., <br />developer Herbert S. Miller <br />feels that TIP districts make <br />mixed-used development <br />affordable for developers. <br />"Without it, you can't afford to <br />compete against an office <br />building." Miller is the <br />developer of Gateway Square, a <br />planned retaill entertainment <br />complex in Washington, D.C., <br />where TIP is being employed to <br />revitalize the city's downtown area. The D.C. council's TlF bill <br />targets a downtown area of approximately 100 blocks. . <br />The Saint Louis Galleria retail complex in Richmond <br />Heights, Missouri, is a TIP success story. The project was <br />funded in part by TIF to help create ciey services such as no-fee <br />ambulance service, high-tech firefighting equipment, van <br />shuttles for the elderly, and routine sidewalk and road repairs, <br />all of which occurred without an increase in real estate taxes <br />over the past 1 0 years. <br /> <br />I, <br /> <br />R ...... <br /> <br /> <br />lanners can play <br />a central role in <br />the TIF process by <br />providii1g technical <br />expertise, including <br />knowledge of state <br />statues, local zoning <br />laws, and land-use <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />Issues. <br /> <br />. . . . . . <br /> <br />- <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />The Downslele of TIF <br />The TIP approach is not without opposition. Much controversy <br />has been generated over the varying definitions and broad <br />interpretations of "blight" in some TIF statutes. One unfortunate <br />consequence of the ambiguity is that municipal officials have <br />been allowed to unilaterally make critical financial decisions that <br />affect the tax base of school districts and other overlying districts. <br />Pennsylvania's statute defines blighted areas as, "unsafe. <br />unsanitary. inadequate, or overcrowded conditions of an area's <br />dwellings; lacking in proper lighting and open space; defective in <br />the design or arrangement of the buildings; fauley in street or lot <br />lay-out, and economically or soCially undesirable land uses." <br />While this definition provides several specific criteria for blight, <br />"undesirable land uses" may be considered tOO vague and <br />therefore provide a loophole for TIP misuse. <br />S~!2.~~e quick to note the misuse ofTlF, and claim that many <br />officialS do not recognize TIP as a redevelopment tool for blighted <br />areas. but rather an economic development tool to attract developers <br />and investors to the community. Another concern is that TIP moves <br />development from one city to the next, resulting in no net gain for <br />" the larger region. Misuse ofTIF can be largely attributed to poor <br />~ understanding on the part of municipalities, lack of dedication [0 the <br />[ elimination of urban blight. few resources for local planners, or even <br />~ the absence of a planning department altogether. <br />~ Insufficient planning of a TIP district can result in a legal <br />~' disaster for a municipality. In October 1994, a group of <br />~ nonprofit organizations and concerned citizens filed a lawsuit <br />~ against the town of Addison, Illinois. The lawsuit charged the <br />~, village with attempting to demolish Addison's only two <br />~ predominantly Hispanic neighborhoods by misusing powers <br />~ acquired through the enactment of a TIF district. The village <br />1 had no specific redevelopment plans for these areas other than <br />t:: the seizure and demolition of all or most of the 827 apartments <br />1 in the two neighborhoods, which were home to almost half of <br />~ the village's nearly 5,000 Hispanic residents. Despite a promise <br />- by municipal officials that no buildings would be razed without <br />public input, the Hispanic residents were faced with leaving <br />their homes because the village was forcing landlords to sell <br />within two weeks after the creation of the TIF district. Owners <br />were given the option of selling at a price set by the village. <br />Addison immediately demolished eight four-unit apartment <br />buildings. with four others anticipating a similar fate. The <br />village also filed a lawsuit to condemn at least eight more. <br />Demolition was halted the week that the lawsuit was filed. <br />The plaintiffs in the case-Hispanic and open housing <br />groups-were criticized by the village and its supporters who <br />claimed that their intent was to stop all redevelopment and <br />improvement efforts. The plaintiffs responded by saying, "all the <br />plaintiffs in this case are advocates of urban renewal. . . as long as <br />that renewal does not cause inexcusable homelessnesS, displacement <br />and economic harm. which was the case in Addison." <br />The $4.3 million settlement was reached in August 1997 and <br />is the largest settlement of any private fair housing suit in the <br />nation. The consent decree provides for the demolition of a <br />limited number of additional buildings to make way for <br />neighborhood parks and new affordable housing. Homeowners <br />will receive reimbursement at 110 percent of fair market value <br />and local tenants will receive substantial relocation assistance. In <br />addition to preserving the vast majoriey of the existing housing, <br />the settlement provides for the construction of up to 81 new <br />units of housing with ownership and occupancy prioriey given <br />to displaced owners and tenants. None of this was included in <br />the original TIF plan. <br /> <br />- <br />iii <br />.. <br /> <br />
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