RPlant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 3:52 am
Congratulations, you posted multiple links to anti-government opinion pieces for a handful out of hundreds, if not thousands of TIFs.
What you call anti-government is actually pro-taxpayer. Do you really expect me to find links to every failed TIF or ones where taxpayer money was misused by bureaucrats?
RPlant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 3:52 am
No, I've never personally or professional benefited from a direct TIF project
I don't believe you.
RPlant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 3:52 am
however I have seen many a small town without two nickels to rub together benefit from the formation of a TIF. The article from Chesterfield, Missouri is the school district grousing about them not receiving the incremental tax resulting from that development. Again, a formation that they approved in the first place,
Example of a small town that benefitted from a TIF?
So because a past Chesterfield school board approved the project, you're saying tough luck? That's your argument for TIFs in this case?
RPlant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 3:52 am
Let's go back to Normal, the start of our story. How is an empty factory depriving the school district of revenue? Is the factory sending kids to their school? Employees are coming from miles around the area to work there. Even with employees from Normal, those employees live in a house that pays property tax - which helps to fund the school.
It sounds like this particular building was a great deal for whoever bought it even without the TIF incentives. Why not let the market work like it should? Why throw away years of tax revenue to entice development that would have happened on its own?
Those jobs and the people that come with it cost money in infrastructure, education, etc. That's fine if it happens slowly and organically. When it comes about by government manipulating the market, growth can be too fast. Then what happens when Rivian folds up, which is a real possibility?
RPlant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 3:52 am
At best, the opinion piece from Illinois Policy dot Org claims that TIFs are nothing more than slush funds. Know what happens if the locals sit on that slush fund until the TIF expires? The remaining TIF funds are distributed back to the local taxing bodies at their respective taxing rate percentages.
When has a municipality ever given tax money back to citizens? If it has happened, it's certainly not a regular occurrence.
RPlant wrote: ↑Mon Jan 09, 2023 3:52 am
Throwing the baby out with the bath water is just silly. Prosecute the underlying crime when it occurs. I suspect that a corrupt politician would find some of other source of public funds to abuse, regards of it being TIF, General Fund, ...
Many, if not most politicians involve themselves in at least some level of corruption. Very few actually put taxpayers first in their decision making.
When it comes down to it, TIFs (and other tax incentives) use taxpayer money for towns to compete against each other in a massive shell game instead of competing with each other on a level playing field.
You never answered my questions about California and the advantage given to one business over a competing business when TIFs are used.