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IS IT TRUE? December 20, 2011 McCurdy Redux

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IS IT TRUE? December 20, 2011 Part 2

IS IT TRUE that the McCurdy Hotel was back on the agenda of the Evansville Redevelopment Commission today?…that this time there was a discussion of the represented fact that there is another developer that has signed an agreement with City Centre Properties LLC to replace City Centre Properties LLC as the lead developer for the McCurdy project?…that attorney for the ERC Brad Salmon will not share with us who the supposed two interested developers are and did not even state whether the project will continue to be for apartments or for a Vintage Hotel that actually has a chance for financial success?…that this is of course the same Brad Salmon who advised us all that the financing for City Centre Properties LLC was in order and ready to go only a week before learning that it wasn’t?

IS IT TRUE that the ERC states that City Centre Properties will be responsible to pay the City of Evansville back the $800,000 incentive that was advanced to them for 80 loft apartments as part of the downtown loft program incentive offer if the subcontract deal falls through?…that if the ERC and their attorney really believe that is a realistic possibility then they need to do some basic investigation with respect to the ease with which an LLC can be placed into bankruptcy?…that the ERC is at the mercy of the successful assignment of some contract and the approval of 5th 3rd bank that holds superior debt on the building to even come away with a shred of dignity to hang their hat on?…that when it comes to old buildings that are not producing cash flow that getting a judgment is one thing and getting a dime is quite another?

IS IT TRUE that the City County Observer is quite aware of one investment group that is interested in going forward with a project that will be called McCurdy Place that will return the McCurdy Hotel to its former glory as a hotel and even utilize the flophouse formerly known as the Riverhouse and Jackson House for some constructive purpose as part of the project?…that the location would be quite perfect for tourists to enjoy downtown Evansville, Casino Aztar, the Museums, and the riverfront?…that this is the kind of project that takes vision and courage to implement but the impact can be quite high?

IS IT TRUE that there was no mention of the new hotel or the Kunkel Group in today’s ERC meeting?…that at last night’s meeting of the Evansville City Council that there was indeed discussion about two properties that Kunkel has not paid real estate taxes on due to the fact that they are appealing the valuations?…that one of those properties that is being appealed is the old Whirlpool facility that is assessed for over $10 Million even after Kunkel bought it for about $2.7 Million?…that as per the Indiana Constitution Kunkel will win this appeal which will reduce the taxes from over $300,000 to under $100,000?…that similarly the Walker Building was bought for $10 and with market rate assessment will be set at what they paid for it?

IS IT TRUE that this writer just ran PCMatic that is designed to optimize computers to get as much speed as possible from a computer with the infrastructure available?…that this computer is on a local wireless network and is paying for the best internet service available in Newburgh, IN?…that after putting the computer through a workout that the performance testing website www.speedtest.net was run to see how the speed stacks up?…that this site tested the speed of the overall system to be a D- on both national and global scales for upload and download speeds?…that as long as people and businesses in greater Evansville are only capable of a D- in this critical piece of infrastructure that is needed for doing jobs that required interaction with the outside world.

IS IT TRUE? December 20, 2011 “Paradise by the Dashboard Light Revisited”

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Mission Accomplished Moment Coming to Evansville in the next 11 Days

IS IT TRUE? December 20, 2011

IS IT TRUE that the “last dance of the puppet council” went off last night just as expected with Councilman Dan McGinn recording the only NO vote on a resolution that was characterized as being non-binding and having no legal standing whatsoever for the purpose of expressing support for a memorandum of understanding that explicitly states that it is, you guessed it, non-binding and with no legal standing?…that if and we do mean if the words of the Evansville City Council, the attorney for the Kunkel Group, and even the written words of the MOU are true one must really wonder what was the point to the last four days of urgency?…that if this little exercise had no meaning beyond expressing a willingness to work together in the future to get a hotel built that this was truly an exercise in futility for the sake of futility?

IS IT TRUE that the CCO and others suspect that other actions will be furthered by the Weinzapfel Administration in its last 11 days that will result in a “MISSION ACCOMPLISHED” moment for Mayor Weinzapfel?…that we furthermore expect that the whole urgent circle jerk was not as futile as the participants are portraying it to be?…that if and we do mean if the City Council and all of the supporting cast of characters in this so called meaningless charade are truthful that they have been indulged, the media has provided the desired adoration, and without further adieu the Winnecke Administration can get on with the business of hammering out a deal that can really ACCOMPLISH THIS MISSION that the Weinzapfel Administration has failed miserably with?

IS IT TRUE that in the “POLITICAL MACHINE LOVE FEST” that followed the final vote of the puppet council, Councilwoman Connie Robinson actually called Councilman Curt John “THE GODFATHER”?…that she actually said it two times while expressing brotherly love and giving him a hug to go with his service plaque?…that we wonder if Councilwoman Robinson has ever seen “THE GODFATHER” and if she knows that “THE GODFATHER” is a behind the scenes manipulator who directs criminal activities including, assault, extortion, theft, gun running, drug running, racketeering, election rigging, politician buying, gambling, prostitution, and even murder all for the purpose of acquiring a lavish lifestyle and maintaining control of his neighborhood?…that the CCO hopes that Councilwoman Robinson was not using the term “GODFATHER” in the same context that nearly any American or Italian understands it to mean about outgoing Councilman Curt John?

IS IT TRUE that in closing that the CCO wishes to include a song that is very reminiscent of the events of the last 4 days that culminated in last night’s vote by Evansville’s chosen ones (sans Councilman McGinn) enthusiastically chanting “AYE” for a supposed non-binding and unnecessary resolution that has no legal standing at all?…that Meatloaf could have written the words to “Paradise by the Dashboard Light” just for the Evansville City Council’s showboating self love fest last night?…that for those of you who have forgotten the song is about two teenagers rationalizing saying the words that just had to be said for them to justify their actions?

Ain’t no doubt about it we were doubly blessed! Enjoy the Meatloaf!

VHS Pet of the Week: “Sadie”

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Happy Holidays from Sadie. Sadie is a 6-year-old spayed DSH. She is also front-declawed. Sadie is quite a love bug and wants nothing more to be cuddled up next to her favorite person. She is used to being an only cat but with some adjustment time, should fit in quite well in a multi-cat household. Gentle children would be best for her. Sadie loves to play with toys and still considers herself to have many kitten like qualities. Her Christmas wish this year is to find a family to love and spoil her. For more information on Sadie and how to make her a member of your family, visit www.vhslifesaver.org or call (812) 426-2563.

Attorney General’s statement on hearing on school vouchers case

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Zoeller: Choice scholarships program Legislature created is constitutional

INDIANAPOLIS – Today a Marion County court heard arguments on several motions in a legal challenge to Indiana’s new choice scholarships law, sometimes called the school vouchers law, House Enrolled Act 1003 (Public Law 92). Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller’s office is defending the statute from the plaintiff’s legal challenge. Zoeller today issued this statement:

“In defending the statute as is our obligation, we contend the Legislature in creating broader educational opportunities followed the Indiana Constitution, since the scholarship funding is directed to students’ families, not to the private schools, and the program does not violate anyone’s rights. The state law that legislators passed has allowed approximately 3,900 students across Indiana to use choice scholarships to access wider educational options,” Zoeller said.

Arguing the State’s case today was Indiana Solicitor General Thomas M. Fisher. The State opposes the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, and the State has filed a motion to dismiss and motion for judgment on the pleadings. Judge Michael Keele took the case of Meredith v. Daniels under advisement and will issue a ruling at a later date.

Downtown Today: 12/20/2011

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Time 8:30 AM – 9:30 AM
Subject ERC
Location 307
Recurrence Occurs the third Tuesday of every 1 month effective 12/20/2011 until 12/20/2011 from 8:30 AM to 9:30 AM
Reminder 15 minutes
SARAH @ 7825
Categories ROOM 307

Time 9:00 AM – 10:30 AM
Subject SECURITY SUB-COMMITTEE
Location 318
Recurrence Occurs the third Tuesday of every 1 month effective 12/20/2011 until 12/20/2011 from 9:00 AM to 10:30 AM
Reminder 15 minutes
Angie @ 5233
Sgt. Vernon Lutz @ 7971
Categories ROOM 318

Time 5:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Subject COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Location 301
Recurrence Occurs every Tuesday effective 12/6/2011 until 12/27/2011 from 5:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Reminder 15 minutes
KRISTIN @ 5241
Categories ROOM 301

Bond Bank Meeting Called for December 22nd

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NOTICE OF REGULAR MEETING OF
THE EVANSVILLE LOCAL PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT BOND BANK

¬¬THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2011 AT 12:00 P.M.
ROOM 307
CIVIC CENTER COMPLEX
ONE N.W. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. BOULEVARD
EVANSVILLE, INDIANA

The Board of Directors of The Evansville Local Public Improvement Bond Bank will meet to conduct such business as may properly come before it on December 22, 2011 at 12:00 p.m. in Room 307 of the Civic Center Complex, One N.W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana.

For further information, contact Jenny Collins, Executive Director, The Evansville Local Public Improvement Bond Bank, 300 Civic Center Complex, One N.W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, Evansville, Indiana 47708-1833; Telephone: (812) 436-4919.

Evansville City Council Passes Hotel Resolution along Party Lines

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Councilman Dan McGinn who cast the lone no vote for tonight's hotel resolution

Tonight the Evansville City Council voted 8 – 1 along party lines to “support” going forward with negotiations with the Kunkel Group to eventually reach a binding contract to develop a downtown Convention Hotel.

Attorney for the Kunkel Group Krista Lockyear openly emphasized that the Memorandum of Understanding touted Friday by outgoing Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel as “the” hotel agreement was not binding and has no legal standing. The document itself confirms this. Ms. Lockyear made a case that the project was needed for the reported 850 jobs that is has been asserted to create along with the need for a hotel to be used to re-establish a convention business base in Evansville? Bob Warren, the newly hired CEO of the Convention and Visitors Bureau echoed Lockyear’s sentiment in stating that Evansville can only do small meetings and that convention attraction is essentially impossible with the facilities that Evansville has in place now.

Lockyear was explicit in here statement that by voting yes tonight that the City Council is not funding this project and is only giving its “support” for the Winnecke Administration to go forward in a negotiation with Kunkel along the lines of the MOU. She also committed that only upon closing of a $22 Million construction loan that Kunkel’s $2.5 Million in equity and the City of Evansville’s incentive of $8 Million will be placed into an escrow account. Councilman John Friend reported and Ms. Lockyear agreed that the City Council can put a 3rd Party manager in place to provide management oversight for the project much like John Kish did for the Ford Center.

Councilman Dan McGinn who was the only dissenting vote made it clear that this vote was not needed to go forward with negotiations and technically has not legal reason to be held asked many questions about the projects including one about the market for a 220 room hotel in downtown Evansville. Although Ben Kunkel stated that there was actually a need for more rooms it has been previously reported that a professional study indicated that the immediate need for rooms is only 160 and that the reason for the need to incent the project with public money is due to the indication that the additional 60 rooms are not needed at this time.

Councilman McGinn also made it a point to state for the public record that there are no other meetings of the Evansville Redevelopment Commission this year and that this project is not on tomorrow’s docket. Without a meeting of the ERC the Weinzapfel Administration would have difficulty in getting to a binding contract during the next 11 days.

The Council adjourned after passing this along party lines after a 30 minute series of expressions of appreciation to each other by current and past members for having served together. It was truly a democrats love fest joined by former council members Steve (Bags) Bagby and outgoing Fire Chief Kieth Jarboe.

IS IT TRUE? December 19, 2011 “The Last Dance of the Puppet Council”

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IS IT TRUE? December 19, 2011

IS IT TRUE that tonight will be the last meeting of the Evansville City Council for 2011?…that this will be the last time that Councilmen Curt John, Don Walker, B. J. Watts, and Councilwoman Wendy Bredhold will ever have to endure one of these meetings again?…that as their last act as members of the City Council it seems as though they are being asked to be the last rubber stamp on the cram through of the deal between the Evansville Redevelopment Commission to contract the Kunkel Group to build and operate a new downtown Convention Hotel?…that the language that these members of Council and the five incumbents who will be returning will have to vote Yeh or Nay on is as follows:

RESOLUTION C-2011-40 (DOCKET) SEQ CHAPTER \h \r 1 FRIEND

A Resolution of the City of Evansville, Indiana, Affirming the City of Evansville, Indiana, Redevelopment Commission’s Determination to move forward with the Downtown Hotel Development through the negotiation and completion by the City of Evansville, Indiana, Redevelopment Commission of definitive agreement addressing the matters set forth in a proposed Memorandum of Understanding, and related matters

IS IT TRUE that there are those who will say that since the Memorandum of Understanding announced by Mayor Weinzapfel last Friday explicitly states that it is non-binding and has no legal standing that tonight’s vote will also be non-binding with no legal standing?…that reading that over would cause one to say “not so fast” with that assumption?…that what passing this measure does is grants implied and explicit approval for the ERC and the Mayor of Evansville to finalize a binding agreement based on the incentives outlined in the MOU without having to come back to the Evansville City Council for affirmation or approval?…that this resolution as written commits the funding as it has been set forth in the MOU as having Evansville City Council approval?…that passing this tonight will not only be an affront to the newly elected Winnecke Administration but it deprives the next City Council of the opportunity to do a little vetting of their own?…that doing something like this that provides Mayor Weinzapfel and his puppets on the ERC a clear path to craft a binding agreement before the end of the year is the height of irresponsibility?

IS IT TRUE that incumbent members elect of the Evansville City Council Dan McGinn, Connie Robinson, Missy Mosby, Dr. Dan Adams, and especially John Friend, CPA need to take time to decide if they will join this last dance of the puppets and participate in jamming this through at the last hour or if they will start their duties as part of the Winnecke Administration tonight?…that the resolution may be subject to modification tonight that could make it less of a blank check for Mayor Weinzapfel’s last act?…that we are sitting on pins and needles to see if the puppetmaster can get one last dance out of his collection of 5 marionettes?

IS IT TRUE that whether they believe it or acknowledge it tonight’s vote will be what this Evansville City Council will be remembered for?…that the time is today to forever seal their legacy as puppets or to wake up and stand with the people of Evansville for accountability in government finance?…that Mole #44 tells us that Councilman Curt John was overheard at lunch jovially saying that tonight’s City Council meeting will be over in time to see the IU game in full?

IS IT TRUE that multiple Moles have provided us with links to the Vanderburgh County Assessor’s website that indicates that the Kunkel Group and Renaissance on Main are delinquent on property taxes?…that Kunkel officials have assured us that the taxes have been “paid for weeks” and that the Assessor’s website is not up to date?…that we do have an inquiry in to verify that?

UPDATE @ 4:29

IS IT TRUE that the CCO has confirmed with Vanderburgh County Treasurer Rick Davis that the taxes on the 4 propertied that the Assessor’s website indicates are in default WERE PAID BY THE KUNKEL GROUP ON DECEMBER 2, 2011 ALONG WITH THE 5% PENALTY FOR BEING LATE?

IS IT TRUE with respect to tonight’s City Council Meeting to post at 3:38

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The City County Observer will be posting an IS IT TRUE that addresses the resolution regarding the hotel today at 3:38. Please come back and read it as there is some pertinent information that we are verifying right now.

Tax Increment Financing: A Tool for Local Economic Development Richard F. Dye and David F. Merriman

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Tax Increment Financing: A Tool for Local Economic Development
Richard F. Dye and David F. Merriman

Tax increment financing (TIF) is an alluring tool that allows municipalities to promote economic development by earmarking property tax revenue from increases in assessed values within a designated TIF district. Proponents point to evidence that assessed property value within TIF districts generally grows much faster than in the rest of the municipality and infer that TIF benefits the entire municipality. Our own empirical analysis, using data from Illinois, suggests to the contrary that the non-TIF areas of municipalities that use TIF grow no more rapidly, and perhaps more slowly, than similar municipalities that do not use TIF. An important finding is that TIF has different impacts when land use is considered. For example, commercial TIF districts tend to decrease commercial development in the non-TIF portion of the municipality.

Designating a TIF District
The rules for tax increment financing, and even its name, vary across the 48 states in which the practice is authorized. The designation usually requires a finding that an area is “blighted” or “underdeveloped” and that development would not take place “but for” the public expenditure or subsidy. It is only a bit of an overstatement to characterize the “blight” and “but for” findings as merely pro forma exercises, since specialized consultants can produce the needed evidence in almost all cases. In most states, the requirement for these findings does little to restrict the location of TIF districts.

TIF expenditures are often debt financed in anticipation of future tax revenues. The practice dates to California in 1952, where it started as an innovative way of raising local matching funds for federal grants. TIF became increasingly popular in the 1980s and 1990s, when there were declines in subsidies for local economic development from federal grants, state grants, and federal tax subsidies (especially industrial development bonds). In many cases TIF is “the only game in town” for financing local economic development.

The basic rules of the game are illustrated in Figure 1. The top panel shows a land area view of a hypothetical municipality. The area on the western border is designated a TIF district and its assessed value is measured. The lower panel of Figure 1 shows the base-year property values in the TIF (B) and the non-TIF (N) areas. At a later point in time, assessed property values have grown to include the increment (I) in the TIF district and growth (G) in the non-TIF area of the municipality.

Tax increment financing carves out the increment (I) and reserves it for the exclusive use of the economic development authority, while the base-year assessed value (B) stays in the local government tax base. Thus,
Before-TIF value = before TIF local government tax base = B + N;

After-TIF value = B + N + I + G;

After-TIF tax base available to local governments = B + N + G; and

TIF district authority’s tax base = I.

Impacts on Overlapping Governments and Non-TIF Areas
The value increment (I) is the tax base of the TIF district. In most states (like Illinois, but unlike Massachusetts) there are multiple overlapping local governments, e.g., the municipality, school district, community college district, county, township, park district, library district, and other special districts. Figure 2 illustrates this situation with the school district representing all the nonmunicipal governments. To understand the economics and politics of TIF, it is crucial to note that while the municipality makes the TIF adoption decision, the TIF area value is part of the tax base of the school district and other local governments as well. Moreover, the TIF district gets revenues from the increment times the combined tax rate for all local governments together. The following hypothetical tax rates for a group of local governments overlapping a TIF district are close to the average proportions in Illinois.

Municipal tax rate = 0.15 %
School district tax rate = 0.60 %
Other governments’ tax rate = 0.25 %
Combined tax rate = 1.00 %

For each 15 cents of its own would-be tax revenues the municipality puts on the line, the school district and other local governments contribute another 85 cents. Thus, there may be an incentive for municipalities to “capture” revenue from growth that would have occurred in the absence of TIF (to collect taxes that would have gone to school districts). Or, municipal decision makers may favor inefficient economic development strategies that do not result in public benefits worth the full cost, since their own cost is only 15 cents on the dollar. TIF proponents would counter that nothing is captured, because the increment to the tax base would not exist “but for” the TIF authority expenditure. That argument, of course, turns on what would have happened to property values in the absence of TIF.

If, as municipalities are often required to assert when they adopt TIF, all of the increment is attributable to the activities of the TIF development authority, then TIF is fair, in that the school district is not giving up any would-be revenues. If, as critics of TIF sometimes assert or assume, none of the increment is attributable to the TIF and all of the new property value growth would have occurred anyway, then the result is just a reallocation of tax revenues by which municipalities win and school districts lose.

The impact of TIF on growth in property values requires a careful reading of the evidence. It is wrong, as those who look only at growth within the TIF district in effect do, to assume to know the answer. Part of the solution is to use appropriate tools to statistically control for other determinants of growth.

It is also necessary to take into account the potential for reverse causality. We want to know the extent to which TIF adoption causes growth. But the causation could go the other way; anticipated growth in property values could lead to TIF adoption if municipalities attempt to capture revenues from overlapping governments. Or there could be reverse causation bias if TIF is adopted in desperation by municipal decision makers in areas where low growth is anticipated. Either way we should ask: Are the municipalities that adopt TIF systematically different from those that do not? If the municipalities are systematically different, we must statistically disentangle the effect of that difference from the effect of the TIF using a technique that corrects for what economists call “sample selection bias.”

Impacts on Growth and Property Values
There are two sides to any government budget: revenues and expenditures. As a revenue-side mechanism, TIF is a way of earmarking tax revenues for a particular purpose, in this case local economic development. The effectiveness of economic development expenditures depends on opportunities, incentives, and planning skills that are specific to each local area and each project. By combining data from a large number of TIF and non-TIF municipalities, we can ask: On average and overall, is TIF adoption associated with increased growth in municipal property values? We have addressed this question in two research studies, both of which use statistical controls for the other determinants of growth and for reverse causation due to sample selection bias.

The first study (Dye and Merriman 2000) uses data from 235 Chicago area municipalities and covers preadoption, TIF adoption (or not), and postadoption time periods. We control for the selection bias (reverse causation) problem by first predicting which municipalities adopt TIF and then using that information (a statistic called the inverse Mills ratio) when estimating the effect of TIF adoption on property values in a second stage. Use of selection bias correction was first applied to the study of TIF by John Anderson (1990) and is now standard practice.

Our estimates of the impact of TIF have a number of additional variables controlling for home-rule status, the combined tax rate, population, income per capita, poverty rate, nonresidential share of equalized assessed value (EAV), EAV per square mile, distance to the Chicago loop, and county of location. We found that property values in TIF-adopting municipalities grew at the same rate as or even less rapidly than in nonadopting municipalities. The study design did not get at this directly, but the offset seemed to come from smaller growth in non-TIF area of the municipality (lower G).

Our findings were a surprise to those, especially nonacademics, who naively had inferred TIF caused growth by observing growth within a TIF district (I) without any statistical controls for the other determinants of growth (in I or G). Our findings were quite threatening to those with an interest in TIF, such as local economic development officers who spend the earmarked funds or TIF consultants who are paid for documenting findings of “blight” or “but for.” Our findings were also at odds with an Indiana study that found a positive effect of TIF adoption on housing values (Man and Rosentraub 1998).

Because our findings were controversial, because the effect of TIF was unsettled in the academic literature, and particularly because we wanted to pursue the possibility of a negative cross relationship between growth in the TIF district (I) and growth outside the TIF district (G), we undertook a second study (Dye and Merriman 2003). In addition we wanted to look at whether there are different TIF effects when more municipalities are included and different types of land uses are considered. We used three different data sets: property value data for 246 municipalities in the six-county Chicago area; less complete property value data for 1,242 municipalities in all 102 Illinois counties; and property value data for 247 TIF districts in the six-county Chicago area.

For the six-county sample (similar to our earlier study, but with more years and more municipalities), Table 1 presents the pre- and postadoption growth rates for the TIF-adopting and nonadopting municipalities. These calculations are from raw data, before any statistical controls for other growth determinants or corrections for selection bias. The first row compares EAV growth rates of the TIF-adopting and nonadopting municipalities in the period before any of them adopted TIF. EAV grew slightly faster for municipalities that would later adopt TIF.

The second row shows that in the period after TIF adoptions took place, gross-of-TIF EAV grew less rapidly for TIF adopters. The last row shows that the net-of-TIF EAV growth rate for TIF adopters was even lower, suggesting that growth (I) in the TIF district may come at the expense of property values outside the development area (G). In summary, if we make no statistical adjustment for the effects of other determinants, TIF adopters grew more slowly than nonadopters.

When we use the more recent six-county data in a multivariate regression model with statistical controls for local characteristics and sample selection, we no longer get the earlier provocative result of a significantly negative impact of TIF adoption on growth, but we still find no positive impact of TIF adoption on the growth in citywide property values. Any growth in the TIF district is offset by declines elsewhere.

The second study was designed with particular attention to land use. The property value data is broken into three land use types: residential, commercial, and industrial. Each TIF district also is identified by one of five development purpose types: central business district (CBD), commercial, industrial, housing, and other or mixed purpose. Thus, we can look separately at growth in municipal EAV by type of land use and type of TIF. Unfortunately, the data do not record EAV by land use within TIF districts, so we must settle for the growth in the tax base that is available to local governments. Most of the estimates of effects by land use type are not significantly different than zero. However, commercial and industrial TIF districts both show a significantly negative impact on growth in commercial assessed values outside the district.

The second study also extends the analysis to all 102 Illinois counties, which results in a much larger sample of municipalities (see Table 2). The TIF-base EAV (B) is unavailable, so we look at growth in available EAV. The simple means from the larger sample again suggest a negative effect of TIF on growth in property values. When we use this all-county sample to estimate the impact of TIF in a multivariate regression with statistical controls for other growth determinants and for TIF selection, there is a significantly negative impact of TIF adoption on growth in overall available (non-TIF) property values. This revives the earlier hypothesis that TIF adoption actually reduces property values in the larger community.

When we run separate regressions for available EAV growth by type of land use for the all-county sample, we see more evidence of a zero or negative impact of TIF on property value growth. Again, there is a significant “cannibalization” of commercial EAV outside the TIF district from commercial development within the TIF district.

The TIF district sample of the second study includes 247 TIF districts in 100 different municipalities in the six-county Chicago area. We match TIF base (B) and TIF increment (I) in each year to information for the host municipality. The key results are:
Enormous variation in TIF district size, with an average base of around $11 million.

Enormous variation in TIF district EAV growth rates around an average of 24 percent growth per year.

TIF districts that start with a smaller base tend to have higher rates of growth.

Most of the TIF growth occurs in the first several years, and growth rates decline an average of about 1 percent per year after the initial surge.

Growth rates in the host municipalities are generally much smaller in the TIF district (an average of 3 percent compared to the TIF average of 24 percent).

The estimated relationship between TIF growth and municipality growth is U-shaped; starting from zero, higher growth in the host municipality means lower growth in the TIF district, but the relationship turns positive at a host municipality growth level of about 6 percent.

Conclusion
Tax increment financing is an alluring tool. TIF districts grow much faster than other areas in their host municipalities. TIF boosters or naive analysts might point to this as evidence of the success of tax increment financing, but they would be wrong. Observing high growth in an area targeted for development is unremarkable. The issues we have studied are (1) whether the targeting causes the growth or merely signals that growth is coming; and (2) whether the growth in the targeted area comes at the expense of other parts of the same municipality. We find evidence that the non-TIF areas of municipalities that use TIF grow no more rapidly, and perhaps more slowly, than similar municipalities that do not use TIF.

Policy makers should use TIF with caution. It is, after all, merely a way of financing economic development and does not change the opportunities for development or the skills of those doing the development planning. Moreover, policy makers should pay careful attention to land use when TIF is being considered. Our evidence shows that commercial TIF districts reduce commercial property value growth in the non-TIF part of the same municipality. This is not terribly surprising, given that much of commercial property is retailing and most retail trade needs to be located close to its customer base. That is, if you subsidize a store in one location there will be less demand to have a store in a nearby location. Industrial land use, in theory, is different. Industrial goods are mostly exported and sold outside the local area, so a local offset would not be expected. Our evidence is generally consistent with this prediction of no offset in industrial property growth in non-TIF areas of the same municipality.

Richard F. Dye is a visiting fellow at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy in 2005–2006. He is also the Ernest A. Johnson Professor of Economics at Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, Illinois, and adjunct professor at the Institute of Government and Public Affairs, University of Illinois. Contact: dye@lakeforest.edu

David F. Merriman is professor of economics at Loyola University of Chicago and adjunct professor at the Institute of Government and Public Affairs, University of Illinois. Contact: dmerrim@luc.edu

References

Anderson, John E. 1990. Tax increment financing: Municipal adoption and growth. National Tax Journal 43: 155–163.

Dye, Richard F., and David F. Merriman. 2000. The effects of tax increment financing on economic development. Journal of Urban Economics 47: 306–328.

———. 2003. The effect of tax increment financing on land use, in Dick Netzer (ed.), The property tax, land use, and land-use regulation. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 37–61.

Dye, Richard F., and Jeffrey O. Sundberg. 1998. A model of tax increment financing adoption incentives. Growth and Change 29: 90–110.

Johnson, Craig L., and Joyce Y. Man (eds.). 2001. Tax increment financing and economic development: Uses, structures and impact. Albany: State University of New York Press.

Man, Joyce Y., and Mark S. Rosentraub. 1998. Tax increment financing: Municipal adoption and effects on property value growth. Public Finance Review 26: 523–547.