Riverside Info » About Riverside

May Day Landmark items...FYI

(7 posts)
  1. spatny
    Member

    Surprise voters! You thought you voted 4-1 against the TIF, any TIF, in Riverside. Well we fooled you...

    Riverside TIF moving forward, but slowly
    Trustees to tighten plan, delay formal acceptance vote

    By JESSICA GLOWINSKI

    Despite a referendum vote strongly against bringing a tax increment financing district to Riverside's central business district, the Riverside village board decided to continue pursuing the option, although in a revised form, at a special hearing April 23.

    At the meeting, the trustees recognized the results of the April 17 referendum vote, in which nearly 80 percent of voters rejected the option of establishing a TIF, but doubted the vote's usefulness as a measure of true residential opinion. Many argued that voters' perceptions of the issue were skewed because the TIF process had been halted before certain information could be gathered, leading to misinformation being spread in the community.

    "I don't know what TIF was being voted against, because the board has not yet constructed a plan for a TIF," Trustee William Scanlon said. "Whatever TIF was voted against, it may not be the one we decide upon."

    All but Trustee Kevin Smith expressed a desire to move forward with the TIF process, at least to the point of adopting a redevelopment plan and forming a Joint Review Board. That group is made up of representatives from each taxing district involved in the proposed TIF, and will provide the village with information on how each district would be affected by it. This question, specifically with regard to the school districts in the village, has been one of the main concerns of TIF opponents.

    For his part, Smith called for the board to walk away from the issue for a while longer, if only to calm the tensions that have been building between those for and against the TIF since last year.

    "I don't want the credibility of this board and the reasonable positions we've taken across four years to be risked over the TIF," he said. "I don't know that moving ahead right now is going to be in the best interest."

    The board does seem to be taking the controversy over the TIF into account as it restarts the process, however. The trustees decided to revise the redevelopment plan, which lays out the TIF budget and goals and lists certain projects TIF funds can support and must be adopted before the Joint Review Board can be called.

    Trustee Candice Grace especially pushed to make the plan more explicit as to the board's intentions for development in the business district, rejecting the argument that the plan should be left vague to give more flexibility to future boards.

    "Don't worry about tying future boards' hands," Grace said. "If their hands are tied, let them untie them."

    The trustees made their revisions using information from residential surveys distributed at the TIF workshops in January and February. The changes include removing the option of using TIF funds for an amphitheater or pedestrian tunnel under the railroad tracks at the train station.

    Trustees specified that no part of Centennial Park could be used to expand parking, and that any redevelopment done in that area must be historically accurate. The board also added a provision that TIF funds could not be used to support a free-standing parking garage.

    The board discussed adding landscaping as one of the TIF's main objectives, as well as making the preservation of the Frederick Law Olmsted's original design one of the redevelopment plan's goals.

    Trustees also decided to add a provision to the plan requiring the current and future boards to consult with experts when considering private redevelopment proposals in the TIF, and also to maintain a list of village-approved architects and landscapers for property owners interested in rebuilding or remodeling within the TIF district.

    Such approval would be based on the architect or landscaper's knowledge of the village's historical character and their ability to design projects that complement it.

    Those changes to the redevelopment plan will delay its adoption by the board, which was originally expected to happen at their May 7 meeting. Village Manager Kathleen Rush said she'd work with the village's TIF consultants to incorporate the board's revisions, and didn't know when the final vote would take place.

    As for residents, some at the meeting remained skeptical. Mark Shevitz said he appreciated the board being more specific in the redevelopment plan, but was disappointed that the trustees dismissed the election results so easily.

    "I was disappointed to hear the board insult the intelligence of voters by saying they were misled or they weren't clear on the issue," he said. "They need to give residents more credit, and the view of the residents is pretty clear."

    Posted Tuesday May 1, 2007 17:28 #
  2. Catherine
    Member

    Thanks. I see there is a related editorial and a number of letters to the editor also.

    Posted Wednesday May 2, 2007 07:59 #
  3. Flight
    Member

    "If" the TIF is truly a tool to encourage development their revisions to the plan actually would reduce the incentive to develop or revitalize a property within the TIF boundaries. Why would I want to be restricted to a list of architects and landscapers chosen by the Village? Who is going to "approve" these firms? Are we going to hire some more consultants to develop a multiple choice test? Will it be in English and Spanish?

    QUESTION #1: FL Olmsted was: A.) A famous Guantanamo Detainee B.) Designer of Riverside

    And I thought the main reason for the TIF was a parking garage. Now we don't need it? Then why do we need the TIF? If there was misinformation during the election I am more confused now that it is over.

    Posted Wednesday May 2, 2007 18:26 #
  4. spatny
    Member

    What you do is, you get a pea and three walnut shells. Then you put the P on a table, even an empty box will do. Then you put one of the shells over the pea, and move all three around as you tell the viewer to place his bet and guess which shell the pea is under. This is the same deal. First we are going to make the CBD "more vibrant", and to do that we need money to attract development, because, you know, "if you build it they will come" - that's a quote from the EDC. Then when people say, "Well, we just want a few restaurants and a carry-out food store, or a Trader Joe's, or a Crate & Barrel, or a Baby Gap for all the moms so they can drive the SUV downtown to buy new togs for the bambini and play soccer on the astro-turf, that's when we need the parking.

    So let's have a Parking Study. "No, I want a tunnel." Well you can't have one if they cost $4 mil said the mean voters. "Boo Hoo Hoo." said the Little Red Hen. Then I'll build in your parks, and I'll cut down your trees, and I'll have a Boutique Hotel AND a Community Center ... and I won't let you in." But the voters didn't want any of that garbage, and they loved their parks and trees, so they said, loud and clear - "Take your Tif and ----- it." But the Big Bad Bear said, "I know best, and I am going to have my bowl of porridge and eat it too." And I want my TIF. Bang! And the people wondered, WHO WON THE ELECTION? WASN'T ANYONE LISTENING? WHY ARE THEY TALKING ABOUT GIVING MORE MONEY TO THE HUNGRY CONSULTANTS? WHER ARE WE? ISN'T THIS AMERICA?

    Posted Wednesday May 2, 2007 18:48 #
  5. Catherine
    Member

    Flight, these two items are actually progress. The Board was going through the workshop items and restricting the TIF where they thought possible. The first item is that the flora and fauna will be Olmstedian and not, say, tacky petunias or other garish items. This is good.

    Second, they wanted to clarify that they are not seeking a parking structure, but ground level parking space. I still hope that the 1882 Queen Anne at 56 Pine will not be required for this purpose. Mr Wiaduck said the people on Forest, etc., DO need parking. I can think of a couple of buildings there that would make better parking lots.

    A number of other problematic items were eliminated as discussed under Trustees Speak TIF for the Second Time. Of course, we remain hopeful that the referendum will ultimately prove persuasive and the town will not continue to be ripped apart by this business. The VC is bad enough.

    Posted Wednesday May 2, 2007 19:07 #
  6. MikeT
    Member

    That exercise I witnessed on 4-23, when they were attempting to add specificity to the TIF, doing comprehensive planning in 3.2 hours, was...almost like they were making it up as they were going along.

    No tunnel. But I thought the TOD, their 'mini comprehensive plan', had a vision for a pedestrian oriented cbd. A pedestrian tunnel that connects the north and south sides of town is a self consistant and reasonable thing under that kind of vision or plan. Maybe that is not the vision the community wants. Adding specifics between yawns, before a room of 10 people who were not allowed to speak, is not the way to go.

    Declaring no parking structures when there was not even a parking study and when only two days prior to this obvious charade of comprehensive planning, they said that 56 and 60 Pine needed to be included in the TIF in case the VC needs parking down the road.

    Until there is an community agreed upon plan for the monies, I cannot see how they can even think of going forward, even one step, such as the jrb step, with this Frankenstein monster (no disrespect to Frankenstein's monster intended). You do financing after you know what you want to finance--except in the case of TIFs, as the Quigley report showed, specific and comprehensive planning are nary to be seen.

    The long and short of it:

    They want a captive and ready source of revenue that is beyond the examination of the electorate and that is needed because of the property tax caps. A TIF can provide this.

    Everything else is a charade.

    Yawn.

    Posted Thursday May 3, 2007 01:43 #
  7. spatny
    Member

    Absolutely correct, Mike. This is what it is all about. Period. I believe the residents will not stand for this. They read, they listened, they considered, they voted and they said - 4-1 - NO TIF. LOUD AND CLEAR.

    Posted Thursday May 3, 2007 16:55 #

RSS feed for this topic

Reply

You must log in to post.