Joint Review Board approves East Village TIF

Today at 3:00, the Joint Review Board (JRB) approved the East Village Growth Cell (EVGC) TIF unanimously with no discussion. Dr. David Kinney, representing Peoria Public Schools District 150, voted “present.” The meeting lasted three minutes. A presentation on the EVGC TIF was given to the JRB at the last meeting on December 10, but according to the minutes of that meeting, there was “a desire to continue discussion between Peoria Public School District 150 and the City of Peoria[;] therefore, a motion to defer was requested.”

Any further discussion that took place apparently happened in private, because no public discussion was held. I asked Dr. Kinney afterward what message District 150 was wanting to send by voting “present” instead of coming out for or against the TIF. He replied that TIF districts are generally not good for school districts, and a residential TIF in particular is a “double whammy.” Nevertheless, the district wants to maintain a positive relationship with the City and try to work out an agreement where the school district can share in the TIF revenue.

Present at the meeting in addition to Kinney were Robert Gates (District 150 legal counsel), Stan Browning (Sanitary District), Jim Scroggins (Finance Director, City of Peoria), Patrick Nichting (Treasurer, City of Peoria), Scott Sorrel (Peoria County), Tim Riggenbach (3rd District, City Council Representative), Bobby Gray and Stephanie Doss (both Economic Development, City of Peoria).

Joint Review Board members who were absent included Debbie Ritschel (General Manager of the Civic Center, but officially representing the general public on the JRB), John Stokowski (Greater Peoria Mass Transit/CityLink), Edward Szynaka (Peoria Public Library), and Glen Olson (Airport Authority). These members were also absent from the previous JRB meeting on December 10.

According to the City of Peoria website, “The Joint Review Board (JRB) is made up of one representative from each taxing authority affected by a TIF (i.e. school district, park district, etc.) The JRB also includes at least one member of the general public. The JRB must meet at least annually to review the progress of each TIF. Also, before a TIF is created, the JRB must review the plan for redevelopment for the area.”

There was no other business discussed at today’s meeting, and no citizens addressed the board. No date was set for the next JRB meeting.

Hat tip: Martin Palmer for alerting me that this meeting was taking place today.

New York Times and George Will have different answers to state crises

Yesterday I read George Will’s column in the Journal Star (here’s the same article in the Washington Post), and then the New York Times editorial. They both happened to be on the same subject: States in crisis, with Illinois in the limelight.

The New York Times says the Feds should step in and give more money (emphasis added):

A state or city unable to make its bond payments would send harmful ripples through the financial system that could cause damage even to healthier governments. But if states act quickly to deal with their revenue losses and address their debt — and receive sufficient aid from Washington — there is still time to avoid a crisis.

…[F]ederal stimulus money — which has been keeping many states afloat — is largely scheduled to expire. Renewing a portion of that aid would be one of the most effective ways to assist the economy.

And they think states and cities should raise taxes on the rich — something they criticize the federal government for being unwilling to do.

In contrast, Will says the Feds shouldn’t give another penny to states or cities that have brought this all on themselves, unless they’re willing to reform.

San Francisco voters defeated Proposition B [which would have required city employees to contribute up to 10 percent of their salaries to their pension plans, and to pay half the health-care premiums of their dependents]. If they now experience a self-inflicted budgetary earthquake, there is no national obligation to ameliorate the disaster they, like many other cities and states, have chosen.

Furthermore, any existing aid they receive should come with strings attached, he says:

[Rep. Devin] Nunes’s bill [H.R. 6484] would require [states and municipal governments] to disclose the size of their pension liabilities – and the often-dreamy assumptions behind the calculations. Noncompliant governments would be ineligible for issuing bonds exempt from federal taxation. Furthermore, the bill would stipulate that state and local governments are entirely responsible for their pension obligations and the federal government will provide no bailouts.

Nunes’s bill would not traduce any state’s sovereignty: Each would retain the right not to comply, choosing to forfeit access to the federally subsidized borrowing that facilitated their slide into trouble.

Tough love, as it were. I’m more inclined to agree with Will. The problem with the New York Times’ solution is that it doesn’t do anything to deal with the root problem. In fact, it exacerbates it. Extending stimulus benefits to states and municipal governments without requiring any change in the way they operate will only help them slide into insolvency quicker and result in bigger losses. Will’s suggestion requires reform if federal benefits are to continue and mitigates losses to taxpayers and investors alike.