TUA’s work fighting home rule was mentioned in a letter-to-the-editor to the Southern.
To the Editor:
West Frankfort, please don’t make the same mistake the people of Mount Vernon made. Don’t choose to be over taxed and over regulated by a handful of people on your city council. Take back you right to vote on local taxes and ordinances. Take back state tax caps on property tax increases. Follow the lead of Harrisburg, Anna, Westmont, Rockford and Kenilworth. These towns stopped their city council members from running a-muck, by stopping Home-Rule.
Jim Tobin, of Taxpayers United of America (TUA), and Robert S. Redfern of near by Fairfield, have been fighting Home-Rule for decades. Tobin has said many times that Home-Rule is one of the most financially disturbing schemes Illinois politicians have ever come up with. Home-Rule literally, gives a town unlimited taxing powers.
In 2012 the Illinois Association of Realtors and RVOICE worked to stop Home-Rule because it can lead to new inspection fees, and transaction fees on real estate; and hig! her property taxes, leading to more regulations, and red tape for their realtors, all without voter approval. As someone living under Home-Rule, and seeing tax increases and wasteful sending in my town of Mount Vernon, I would urge you to not make the same mistake the uninformed voters of Mount Vernon did in not taking the time or did not care about democracy and their right be heard. West Frankfort this may be your only chance to stop the madness of out of control government, Vote to END Home-Rule this Nov. 4.
Steven Casper Sr.
Mount Vernon
TUA’s Illinois pension project is featured in this letter-to-the-editor from Journal-Standard.com.
Several things. The $3.3 million Highland College back-door referendum. The name alone sounds suspicious. The money taken in from real-estate taxes is a great barometer of the financial health of the county. This is called the “levy,” and that is what governing bodies should run on. Any bond or referendum that passes is an extra tax beyond the levy. Highland has made it a practice of retiring one bond and replacing it with another bond. With the help of our politicians, this process in many cases has been reversed to the “back door.” To force this on the ballot, we need more than 6,000 signatures, and we have only 30 days from the publication — due Sept. 22 — to get them, which is nearly impossible.
The campaign is on. We support Bruce Rauner over Pat Quinn. We support Jim Oberweis over Dick Durbin. We support Bobby Schilling over Cheri Bustos. What do these three gentlemen have in common? They are all private businessmen. They know how to run and manage a business.
The main difference is that a private business expansion is limited by the profit that it makes. Government is limited by how much money it can extort from you, the taxpayer.
Another way you can tell who to vote for is to support whoever the public unions are running down. The $200-billion public union pension debt cannot be sustained. Our politicians are hiding under their desks on this question, as this is how their re-election coffers are filled. Wisconsin’s pension and health care was not nearly as bad as Illinois’, yet Gov. Scott Walker made it so teachers would pay in a little bit more to each fund and save their jobs.
Taxpayers United of America’s public pension study shows that in 2012, Illinois state workers earned an average $63,669, versus private-sector workers at $52,000 — along with job security and a pension that private workers can never hope for!
The Stephenson County Tea Party welcomes its representative Rae Ann McNeilly to address these issues and how to save the Illinois public pension system at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 23 at 111 E. Mason St., Lena.
— Bill Dietz, Lena
TUA President Jim Tobin was quoted by Sauk Valley Media about TIF districts in Sterling, Dixon and Rock Falls, Illinois.
This week brings to a close the fourth month of the Dixon downtown streetscape project. Much of its $6 million cost will be paid for with money from the city’s Central Business District TIF district.
The project includes new streets, curbs, sidewalks, water and sewer lines, and landscaping throughout downtown.
The project has a dual purpose, to beautify the downtown and improve infrastructure, which in turn could attract new economic development downtown that would not have been there without the improvements.
People familiar with the complex laws on tax increment financing know this as the “but for” test – but for the improvements from the TIF district, the development wouldn’t have happened.
Dixon and Rock Falls each have two tax increment financing districts, and Sterling has three. The TIF districts, which are intended to spur economic development, were made possible by the state’s Tax Increment Allocation Redevelopment Act in 1977.
When a TIF district is established, a base equalized assessed valuation (EAV) is set. As the area is developed and vacant properties or blighted conditions are removed, the EAV – along with property taxes – often increases. That tax income garnered above the base level goes to the city to pay for the development that caused the increase.
While TIF districts have been criticized for misuse, many experts agree that they can be valuable tools of economic development for cities.
Mike Peddle, an associate professor in the division of public administration at Northern Illinois University, focuses on economic development tools and policies and public finance.
He said that despite the prominence of TIFs and their impact on cities, there’s much disagreement about interpretation of the laws and how to evaluate their success.
“As difficult as it is, I don’t think there’s any one-size-fits-all answer,” he said. “I like to say there are probably more good TIFs than bad TIFs, but the bad ones stick out like a sore thumb.”
Critics say TIF districts missallocate resources or are used to benefit politically connected businesses.
Jim Tobin, president of the Chicago-based Taxpayers United of America, said TIFs are another form of subsidies for businesses.
“They’re a taxpayer ripoff,” he said. “We’re totally opposed to them.”
TIFs can become subsidies for businesses if they’re used for development that would have happened anyway, which would fail the “but for” test, said Ralph Martire, the executive director of the Center for Tax and Budget Accountability, a Chicago-based bipartisan, nonprofit research and advocacy think tank.
Martire said that evaluating the value of TIFs can come down to whether the expenditures to promote economic growth are more important at any given moment than investing in schools, police departments, or fire departments.
That’s a discussion that doesn’t often happen, he said, because of a lack of transparency. And that lack of transparency and discussion leads to the perception of impropriety.
“I think that’s a real significant problem,” Martire said. “But whether or not it’s happened, it appears as if it’s a slush fund for politicians – it’s what it looks like. That makes it really hard for communities to trust it.”
TIFs could be made more transparent, he said, by more analysis leading up to establishing a TIF, and by more third-party reviews and public accounting.
Likewise, Peddle agreed that transparency can be an issue with TIF districts, mainly because they’re complex and involve property taxes. Even the annual TIF reports can be difficult for citizens to understand, he said.
Citizens should know what’s being collected and what that money is being spent on, he added.
“There’s a difference between opaqueness from what the documents represent and opaqueness created by the desire to not be straightforward,” Peddle said. “You can hide behind accounting methods and the like. The best practice would at least explain, in narrative fashion, what’s going on in the TIF.”
The local TIFs
Sterling, Dixon and Rock Falls have seven TIF district’s total. But they aren’t the only municipalities in the Sauk Valley with TIFs, and that highlights their popularity.
Theresa Wittenauer, executive director of the Blackhawk Hills Regional Council, said that in the six-county area she works with, at least a third of the 72 communites have at least one TIF district.
“Even communities under 1,000 population are able to successfully utilize TIF (or multiple TIFs), when it’s managed properly,” she said in an email.
The TIF districts in Sterling have been used to develop retail space for businesses in the area around the library, the Kohl’s and PetSmart site, and for environmental and redevelopment work along the riverfront where the factories once were.
Dixon’s TIF districts have been used to pay for the current streetscape project, provide assistance for the construction of the Townhomes of Rivershore, and help to redevelop the former USF&G Building, which became the current KSB Town Square Center building.
The Rock Falls TIF districts have been used to redevelop and clean up sites of former factories along the riverfront and provide assistance to businesses moving into the districts.
Peddle said an appropriate use of TIF districts is to get a business that has no preference on location to move downtown or into a district instead of out by the interstate or outside of the city.
TIF districts can provide an economic jumpstart, Wittenauer said.
“Ideally, this tool should be used in deteriorating (blighted) areas where development of new business or retention of existing businesses would not otherwise happen,” she said. “TIF allows communities to reinvest the district’s incremental property value increase in the area without having to use general funds from the community or raising taxes to make the needed improvements.”
A recurring theme in the goals each city determined for its TIF districts was to eliminate or reduce blighted conditions and encourage or assist private investment and redevelopment in the districts.
In May, the Rock Falls City Council entered a redevelopment agreement for construction of a $6.1 million Holiday Inn Express & Suites at the east end of its riverfront.
During the next 10 years, the 68-unit hotel to is expected to generate $1 million in property taxes for the TIF district, which will go toward green space that, when completed, will include an entertainment venue, restrooms, a splash pad, and a bike path.
Those quality-of-life benefits, Peddle said, are the secondary benefits of TIF districts.
Uses and evaluation
Cities can use bonds to pay for improvements or developments designed to attract businesses. The increase in property taxes above that base then goes to pay off the bonds.
While TIFs can create new economic growth, Peddle said, they can also have collateral advantages for residents.
“You get the benefits of that [economic development],” Peddle said. “If done correctly, you get value that expands beyond financial value. You get jobs, quality of life, new firms to the city that wouldn’t have been there.”
Reconditioning some of the former factories is exactly how TIF funds should be used, Peddle said. Infrastructure upgrades, if work hasn’t been purposely neglected, is another positive use of TIF funds.
Evaluating the success or failure of TIF districts is difficult because they’re designed for longterm benefits, not immediate results.
But there are some early indicators that a TIF district is working.
An increase in the EAV in the district could be a sign of success, but experts note that the same increase might have happened anyway. And even if the EAV in the district has decreased, Peddle said, the TIF district could have prevented it from declining at a quicker rate.
A lot of the evaluation can come from the “but for” test – “But for” the TIF district, would what’s going on there be better or worse? Would the development have occurred or the blight have been eliminated without a TIF district?
Additionally, Peddle said, signs of success could be economic development near to, but not inside, the TIF district and an increase in jobs in the district. But he warned that those indicators were “circumstantial evidence,” and he emphasized the longterm nature of TIF districts.
In addition to new jobs and development, there’s another indicator that a TIF district could be working, Wittenauer said.
“As simple as it seems, a lot of times you can visually tell if a TIF is doing well,” her email said. “If the area is experiencing improvements and is alive with redevelopment, often times the TIF district area is active, vibrant and doing what it’s supposed to.”
A closer look at TIFs
In the coming months, Sauk Valley Media will take a closer look at TIF districts in Sterling, Dixon and Rock Falls, reviewing economic development they’ve spurred in each city where they’ve been used.