A developer from Wisconsin, Phoenix Investors, renovated a warehouse that has sat vacant for 10 years, and had a ribbon cutting celebrating the accomplishment. Totaling 500k square feet, it could attract a supplier or distributor to work with Rivian, who leases the other 500k square foot building.
It was all done with no Federal grants or loans. A state grant was provided to upgrade the county road leading to it, and the land has been part of a TIF district in Normal.
https://www.centralillinoisproud.com/ne ... suppliers/
(Disclosure: I worked on this story today)
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How many times do we have to have this debate? Where does the TIF money come from?
So the business should avoid an ideal site because the City previously included it in a TIF zone? Do you have proof that Phoenix selected that site because of TIF incentives? Seems like they selected it to support Rivian and there just happened to be an existing TIF. But please, expound your insider knowledge of all business goings on @Tazewell.
You mean its not the flu!?!
My issue in this case is more with the bureaucrats that created the TIF in the first place, not the business. Does that answer your questions?RPlant wrote: ↑Sat Jan 07, 2023 4:09 pm So the business should avoid an ideal site because the City previously included it in a TIF zone? Do you have proof that Phoenix selected that site because of TIF incentives? Seems like they selected it to support Rivian and there just happened to be an existing TIF. But please, expound your insider knowledge of all business goings on @Tazewell.
No because it appears that you don't understand how a TIF works.Tazewell wrote: ↑Sat Jan 07, 2023 5:30 pmMy issue in this case is more with the bureaucrats that created the TIF in the first place, not the business. Does that answer your questions?RPlant wrote: ↑Sat Jan 07, 2023 4:09 pm So the business should avoid an ideal site because the City previously included it in a TIF zone? Do you have proof that Phoenix selected that site because of TIF incentives? Seems like they selected it to support Rivian and there just happened to be an existing TIF. But please, expound your insider knowledge of all business goings on @Tazewell.
You mean its not the flu!?!
The only "welfare" is a freeze on the local real-estate tax for a set period of time, often 5 years, after the investment is made.
Again, do you know how a TIF actually works?
You mean its not the flu!?!
You always say that, but that is not reality. The taxpayers are on the hook if the development fails which seems to happen more often than not. On top of that, TIFs give businesses in the TIF an advantage over those outside the TIF. That is corporate favoritism. Surely you're against that, right?
Yes. I also know how and why they fail, something you can't seem to grasp.