Indiana cities are often in competition to attract new businesses to their communities. The City of Kokomo, Indiana has developed an incentive program it hopes will attract residents of nearby communities to purchase a house in Kokomo.
The city has enlisted the help of its major employers to draw employees who work in Kokomo, yet live elsewhere, to consider purchasing a home there.
The Kokomo Homeownership Investment Program provides homebuyers with incentives. Among those is a $5,000 reimbursement for exterior improvements on a newly purchased home. In addition a local moving company is offering a ten percent discount when moving a new resident or family to Kokomo.
Kokomo’s largest employers support the program and are promoting it to their workforce. Companies such as Chrysler, Delphi Electronics and Safety, and Haynes International were helped in recent years with municipal loans or abatements, and now these companies are returning the favor by touting Kokomo’s relocation incentives and benefits of living in the community in which they work.
Kokomo Mayor Greg Goodnight explains the economic data that inspired the program, “Twenty percent of our workforce lives outside of our community. The problem is compounded by the fact that this 20 percent earns 30 percent of the income generated here. We’ve been investing our city’s limited financial resources in quality of life projects. Now we are stepping up the campaign to attract our workforce to also live here.â€
More Kokomo Homeownership Investment Program details can be found at www.trykokomo.org.
WKDQ The Tri-State’s Country Station and 92.5 WBKR The Country Station invite you to the first ever Taste of Country Concert to be held at Ellis Park Race Course on September 10th. Josh Turner will headline the show with supporting acts Glen Templeton, Casey James and Josh Thompson.
INFORMATION
Tickets
General Admission Tickets are $25 per ticket and you can purchase them online at Eventbrite AND at the WKDQ studio located here or WBKR studio located here. We’re also offering a 100 best seats in the house brought to you by Batteries Now and are available for $100 a piece. These bag-chair seats truly give you the best seat in the house. They’ll be right in front of the stage and, when the concert’s over, you get to keep the souvenir chair! You can purchase these only at the WBKR studio or the WKDQ studio!
Date & Time
The Taste of Country Concert is on Saturday September 10. Gates open at 4:30PM and the main event kicks off at 6pm.
Venue
The Taste of Country Concert will be held at Ellis Park Race Course located at 3300 US Highway 41 North in Henderson, Kentucky. Get driving directions here.
In remembrance of the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the University of Evansville will hold a special interfaith worship service on Sunday, September 11 at 10:30 a.m. in Neu Chapel. The service, which will replace the chapel’s regularly scheduled University Worship, is open to all members of the UE and Evansville communities.
“September 11 and its aftermath demonstrated the importance of open, respectful dialogue among adherents of the world’s many faiths,†said Tamara Gieselman, University chaplain. “Ten years after the attacks, the need for unity and understanding is still great. The interfaith worship service in Neu Chapel will provide an opportunity for people to remember the lives lost on September 11 and pray together for a more peaceful future.â€
Representatives from the local Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and Hindu communities will participate in the worship service. Other speakers include UE President Thomas A. Kazee; Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel; and Steve Bugg, a 1986 UE graduate who was living in Manhattan when the attacks took place.
The first half of the interfaith worship service will be dedicated to remembering the 9/11 attacks and their victims, while the second half will focus on looking forward with hope. Special music will include bagpipes, percussion, and music from various religious and cultural traditions.
Anyone attending the service should “expect to be surprised,†said Gieselman, “and be challenged by different perspectives.â€
For more information, contact the University of Evansville’s Office of Religious Life at 812-488-2235.
Time 8:00 AM – 9:00 AM Subject ERC EXECUTIVE Location 307 Reminder 15 minutes
Lana @ 7894 Categories ROOM 307
Time 9:30 AM – 10:30 AM Subject COMMERCIAL REVIEW COMMITTEE Location 318 Reminder 15 minutes
KATHIE HOLLEY @ 5228 Categories ROOM 318
Time 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM Subject ZOO ADVISORY BOARD Location 301 Recurrence Occurs the first Tuesday of every 1 month effective 9/6/2011 until 9/6/2011 from 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM Reminder 15 minutes
DONNA BENNETT @ 6143 EXT 402 Categories ROOM 301
Time 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Subject DMD Location 318 Recurrence Occurs every Tuesday effective 9/6/2011 until 9/6/2011 from 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM Reminder 15 minutes
Ron @ 7884 Categories ROOM 318
IS IT TRUE that a quick search of the rates offered at some Hyatt Place hotels across the country in medium sized cities opened our eyes to the pricing that can be gotten for such rooms in comparable places?…that the rates that that follow were the best prices obtained in a search for rooms on the travel website Expedia.com?…that rooms in the Boston suburb of Medford, MA start at $93.00?…that rooms in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa, AZ start at $75.00?…that rooms in Orlando start at $75.00?…that rooms in Raleigh, NC start at $71.00?…that rooms in Topeka, KS start at $89.00?…that rooms at the new Hyatt Place adjacent to the Indianapolis Airport are available for $89.00 on nearly every night that was checked?…that the highest quote that we found for any Hyatt Place was for a room in Louisville for $132.00 on a day when Churchill Downs in running, UL has a home football game, and the Idea Festival is going on?…that the same room can be had for $89.00 on most days?
IS IT TRUE that the survey of 200 people that was being done by GAGE to help Evansville find its identity should be available soon?…that we just can’t wait to see what those tax dollars have taught us about who we are as a people?…that we were reminded yesterday of something that we are as a people and that would be a group that loves to eat?…that there are only 27 days until the West Side Nut Club Fall Festival?…that as eating goes here is a tip for those who like wine and BLT’s?…that Sangiovese complements a BLT perfectly?
IS IT TRUE that this rapid weather change will be giving us all an opportunity to save some significant money on the next couple of month’s Vectren bills?…that with days and nights like this week’s forecast and typical autumn are from a temperature perspective there is no reason at all to have either heating or cooling on until the nights dip into the 40’s which sometimes does not happen until late November?…that the next two months is a great time to find out exactly what it cost to do the basics like heating water, powering appliances, and keeping the lights on?…that we encourage each and every one of our readers to take advantage of this opportunity to save a couple of hundred bucks this fall to make up for the expensive hot summer?
IS IT TRUE that tonight is expected to bring us the official adjournment of the joint meeting of the Evansville City Council and the Vanderburgh County Commissioners?…that tonight’s meeting starts a 30 day window of opportunity to review the consolidation plan and to make your concerns or support known to our elected officials?…that all indications are that this plan which will be proceeding to a referendum in 2012 unless changes are initiated in the next 30 days in its present form is very much a “trust us, we will find the cost savings later†version of what could have been if the committee members would have worn their “big boy pants†when putting the plan together?…that the tangible cost savings that are absolutely identified and in the plan are 3 less elected officials and a $30,000 raise for the Mayor?…that these bold and courageous moves will save each resident of Vanderburgh County about 40 cents per year?
IS IT TRUE that the City County Observer will be announcing the date for a PUBLIC POLICY FORUM this week?…that this forum will be an opportunity for businesses and citizens to express their opinions to the candidates for office on what they think should be done from a policy perspective to make Evansville a better place to live?…that 5 tables for 10 were secured based on word of mouth only in 2 hours last Friday?
IS IT TRUE? September 5, 2011 Special Evening Edition
IS IT TRUE that there was an online poll held by the Courier Press yesterday posing the question, “How well do you think Evansville is positioned to bring jobs to the communityâ€?…that at the time of writing that only 7% of the respondents are reported to have selected the answer “very wellâ€?…that the other 93% either chose “needs work†or “faces serious disadvantages†with a full 54% choosing “faces serious disadvantagesâ€?…that even though there were only several hundred votes recorded, it seems as though the people who responded have a good grip on the reality of Evansville’s present capacity to attract outside businesses?
IS IT TRUE that 25 years after the death of Elvis Presley a poll indicated that 11% of the people surveyed believed that Elvis was still alive?…that is a full 57% more than believe that Evansville is very well positioned to bring jobs into the community?…that we have to wonder just how much of the “Kool Aid†that the 7% of the respondents who think that things are “very well†poised for Evansville to be a job attraction magnet have been drinking?…that even the most delusional of cock-eyed optimists should be able to realize that “needs work†is the most positive feasible answer that was in the survey?
IS IT TRUE that an Indiana State Championship is now beyond the grasp of the Indiana University football squad after their opening weekend to the Ball State Cardinals?…that with Notre Dame taking a home field thumping in a weather delayed game from South Florida and Purdue winning over Middle Tennessee by the skin of their teeth that the Indiana D-1 Football Championship might not mean much outside of Hoosier bragging rights anyway?…that the opening weekend performance of the Division 1 programs in Kentucky did not look much better?…that the always optimistic but seldom intimidating UK Wildcats played more like mildcats in their unearned 14-3 victory over the Western Kentucky Hilltoppers?…that only four teams in the entire country had a lower offensive output than UK did against a team that only won 2 games last year?…that the Louisville Cardinals also struggled to a 21-9 victory over instate FBS program Murray State setting up the battle for the Governors Cup in Lexington on September 17th?…that maybe there should be a matchup of the Indiana and Kentucky champions in a new bowl that is only played in years when no team from either state qualifies for a real bowl game?
IS IT TRUE that there are some people who are saying that the City of Evansville may be discussing jumping into the hotel ownership game?…that others are saying that the City of Evansville may be having serious discussions about being the bank (financier of last resort) for one of the groups that responded to the hotel RFP if the specified financing is not achievable?…that this is not a new idea as the City County Observer predicted over a year ago that the actual valuation of a 220 room hotel in downtown Evansville would make financing a deal privately very nearly impossible?…that we encourage the City of Evansville and the Evansville Redevelopment Commission to let the firms that you hired to do the VETTING do their job, make the results public, and then go forward in whatever way may become necessary to assure that a hotel is built?…that there is really no urgency to do so?…that we have waited 4 years for an achievable answer to this dilemma and that waiting a while longer to get this right will not be the end of the world?
“The president has been big on speeches, and another much-heralded speech on a new plan for jobs is scheduled before a joint session of Congress later this week. But Americans are getting teleprompter fatigue. They want to see new ideas and action.”
“The heart of the problem is that Obama’s idea of job creation largely revolves around public works projects that are rooted in Keynesian economics and driven by government funding and political payoffs.”
“First, the president could support the Freedom to Invest Act of 2011 (HR 1834)”
“Second, the president can ask his appointees at the National Labor Relations Board to fast-track the hearings and decision-making that would allow Boeing to open its 787 Dreamliner assembly plant in South Carolina”
“Third, President Obama can direct his Interior Department to cut through the red tape and renew the permit granted to ExxonMobil to develop the largest oil discovery in a decade located in the Julia field in the Gulf of Mexico.”
“Fourth, jobs are just waiting to be created by American companies eager to help tap the third largest proven oil reserve in the world, located in Alberta, Canada. The major holdup now is President Obama. He needs to approve the project and shepherd it through final State Department formalities.”
“We don’t need another speech on job creation that extols government investment. We need action that puts people to work in real jobs that help grow the economy, broaden the tax base and shrink our deficit and debt.”
The campaigns of Tom Leppert and Anne Raymond spent millions of dollars this spring wooing Dallas voters. Leppert and Raymond debated on radio and television. Both commanded a slate of city council candidates loyal to their causes.
But Leppert and Raymond weren’t running for office against one another. They weren’t running for office at all. They were arguing about a hotel.
Leppert is the mayor of Dallas. He’s also the biggest supporter of building a $500-million, 1,000-room hotel that will be adjacent to the Dallas Convention Center and will be owned by the city itself. Leppert believes the hotel will be the linchpin of Dallas’ downtown economy.
Raymond is an executive with Crow Holdings, a leading Dallas real estate firm. She was the spokesperson for a ballot campaign to block the hotel, arguing that city government should stay out of the hotel business. In that role, Raymond acted as a surrogate for hotel baron Harlan Crow, who spent an estimated $7 million of his own money to promote the measure. Ultimately, Leppert’s side won on a close vote, and construction has already begun. But the hotel debate became Dallas’ dominant political issue for months on end.
Strange as it might seem for a single hotel to command that much attention, it’s increasingly common. In the long war over government’s proper role in economic development, one of the most intense skirmishes has involved convention-center hotels paid for by cities. Today, new convention-center hotels are almost all publicly owned or heavily subsidized. In Texas alone, flagship hotels for convention centers have been approved with public help in Houston, Austin, San Antonio and Fort Worth. Elsewhere in the country, Chicago, Denver, Phoenix, St. Louis and Baltimore have done the same thing.
The elected leaders of these cities believe that by building fancy hotels connected to their convention centers, they can lure more visitors from out of state. The taxes and economic activity generated by these visitors, they wager, can make investments in hotels pay for themselves.
Critics, though, don’t merely say that hotel ownership is beyond the proper scope of government. They argue that cities have placed bets on a declining stream of revenue based on impossibly rosy forecasts. And, there is reason for caution. Some publicly funded convention-center hotels have been solid successes, but others have been colossal failures.
It’s nothing new for cities to fight desperately to attract conventions and trade shows. Conventioneers come, spend money and leave. “Visitors,” Mayor Leppert says, “don’t require schools, they rarely require our fire department. They don’t require our social services.” That appeal has prompted cities around the country to build larger and larger convention centers, even if the previous one is only a decade old.
But even the 1 million square feet of floor space that comes with the largest of the new convention centers isn’t enough for event planners. They want amenities. Chief among those are massive headquarters hotels. “Having a hotel that is literally adjacent, contiguous, connected to the convention center,” Leppert says, “is an absolute necessity.”
But while event planners are convinced they need massive hotels, private developers are less enthusiastic. Since long before the recent credit crunch, they’ve viewed new high-end hotels as a bad investment. With conventional private financing, it simply takes too long for hotel profits to pay off the massive debt that comes from construction of the building.
So cities offer non-traditional financing. They do that in either of two ways: subsidizing the hotels or, increasingly often, issuing tax-exempt bonds to fund them. The specifics of the deals vary dramatically. In some cases, the bonds are paid off exclusively from revenue brought in by the new hotel. In other cases, the city is, directly or indirectly, committing other pots of money to the project. In some cases, as in Dallas, the city actually ends up owning the hotel. Operation of the hotel is usually turned over to Hilton, Marriott, Hyatt or Omni.
The common thread, though, is that the projects wouldn’t have taken place without government intervention. But why intervene on such a massive scale to build a facility that private developers view as a bad investment? That, says Anne Raymond, was the question her side raised in Dallas. “If this was a good real estate transaction, the private sector would do it,” she says. “Dallas is filled with optimistic real estate investors, but no one would step up.” In her view, that’s because they knew more about the market than the local government did.
Of course, a city can make a better deal for itself in the bond market than a private developer can. The bonds cities issue are tax-exempt, and allow them to pay bondholders much lower interest rates. What’s more, says Mayor Leppert, cities simply have different standards of success than private hotel companies do.
For cities, the financial success of the hotel itself is secondary. The point is to have the convention center thrive and for the city to reap the benefits of increased economic activity and increased tax revenue. This, Leppert argues, isn’t some dramatic expansion of government: The hotel is really just an extension of the public convention center itself.
Heywood Sanders has heard all of this many, many times before. Sanders, a professor of public administration at the University of Texas at San Antonio, is the nation’s leading critic of publicly funded convention centers and hotels. He argues that conventions in general, not to mention the facilities that host them, are a declining business. He says that more and more meetings take place online rather than in gigantic buildings, that the recession has only accelerated this process, and that recovery is not going to bring back the old days of massive trade and professional shows with participants flying in from all over the country.
Sanders cringes as he sees cities betting on convention centers that cost hundreds of millions of dollars, then doubling down on that bet with hotels that cost hundreds of millions more. His research suggests to him that the link between new headquarters hotels and increased convention business rarely emerges. “You get to do a big project with big promises and lots of money for consultants and bond counsel and underwriters and engineers,” he says, “but you may do it at the expense of the very important things that may make a city’s future.” Sanders would prefer that cities invest in schools, roads and affordable housing.
This clash between big projects and basic services is a familiar one in municipal politics. In many ways, the current hotel debate is similar to the arguments traded back and forth over publicly funded sports stadiums. (Some of the hotels actually cost almost as much as stadiums.) But in both cases, business interests and labor unions nearly always join forces to promote the project. In Dallas, the new hotel had the backing of both the local chamber of commerce and the local AFL-CIO chapter. Opposition tends to come from a motley coalition of conservatives, who view the projects as government waste, and liberals, who view them as corporate welfare.
In Dallas, though, the clash was as much a personal struggle between two multi-millionaires, Mayor Leppert and developer Crow, as anything else. Opponents of the hotel ran ads calling Leppert arrogant. Hotel backers fired back that Crow’s intervention was mere self-interest–that he was trying to protect the fortunes of his own 1,606-room Hilton Anatole, one of the largest hotels in Dallas. Leppert’s forces carried the day, but just barely. The measure to block the hotel lost by only 2,000 votes.
Did Dallas voters make the right decision? It depends on where you choose to ask the question. Civic leaders in Denver would tell you yes, but those in St. Louis probably would disagree. The two cities illustrate the widely divergent results of past convention-center hotel projects.
By any reasonable measure, the convention-center hotel in Denver has been a success. Since it opened in 2005, the 1,100-room Hyatt Regency Denver has helped the city land major events, including the 2008 Democratic National Convention. The new hotel hasn’t hurt business at older hotels–just the opposite. Room rates and occupancy rates went up after the hotel opened, as more events attracted more visitors to town.
What’s the price tag for Denver taxpayers? “It’s cost them nothing,” insists Bill Mosher, CEO of the Denver Convention Center Hotel Authority. “There’s not a dollar of public money in the hotel.”
That might sound farfetched, given that Mosher’s public authority, a creation of the Denver government, issued $350 million in bonds to build the hotel. But Mosher’s point is that those were revenue bonds, meaning they’re being paid off from the hotel’s earnings, not out of the city’s general fund. If you don’t go to the hotel–and most locals don’t–you aren’t out anything. And since Denver didn’t exempt its hotel from city taxes, the project has been successful enough to redirect millions of dollars to the city treasury.
Given all of that, it’s no surprise that Leppert and his campaign cited Denver as a model to emulate. The
opposition, though, pointed to St. Louis.
Even before St. Louis’ 1,100-room, $265 million Renaissance Grand & Suites Hotel opened in 2003, things started going wrong. The terrorist attacks of 2001 weakened the convention industry. The home-based airline TWA ceased to exist, depriving St. Louis of its airport hub. The convention center’s developers were a little cagey in their claims of floor space: To get the total exhibit space to 500,000 square feet, they included the adjacent St. Louis Rams football stadium, which is unavailable for major events during much of the year. Underneath these problems lay the plain truth that not too many people wanted to visit St. Louis in the first place. It wasn’t Orlando, Chicago or Las Vegas. Or Denver, for that matter.
The end result was that, even with the headquarters hotel, the city’s convention business remained flat. Eventually, the hotel was able to turn a small operating profit, but it wasn’t nearly enough to pay off its debt. When the hotel went into foreclosure earlier this year, its bondholders bought it at auction, and kept it open. But that was only after St. Louis had dedicated millions of dollars of federal Community Development Block Grants to the hotel–money that could have been used to pave roads or build housing.
The failure in St. Louis wasn’t just a matter of bad luck but also wishful thinking. “There were four different consulting groups that wrote negative feasibility studies for the project,” says Gary Andreas, a St. Louis hotel consultant. “They found the one person who said that the other guys were idiots.” Andreas would know. He was one of the consultants who weighed in against the idea.
The question for Dallas–and other cities that are thinking about subsidizing convention hotels–is whether they, too, are engaged in wishful thinking. Dallas just broke ground on its controversial hotel in September. It will be years before we know how well it does.
Even the supporters of convention-center hotels say that cities should act with care. They warn that the deals to build the hotels are hugely complex and that small details come with large financial consequences. And while every city would like to be a hot convention destination, an opulent hotel next to the center doesn’t automatically make it one.