Despite numerous public concerns, the De Soto City Council on Thursday unanimously approved a Taxpayer Increment Financing District (TIF) to redevelop nearly 6,000 acres of the former Sunflower Ammunition Plant.
The 20-year TIF will capture increases in property taxes from higher property values in the District and re-direct them to developer Sunflower Redevelopment, LLC (SRL) to pay for property improvements, beginning with demolishing over 420 decaying buildings on the site.
Johnson County Commissioner Charlotte O’ Hara warned that area property owners could be subjected to decades of property tax increases from taxing authorities trying the recoup taxes re-directed by TIF.
Those property tax increases would be on top of enormous increases already imposed on taxpayers. Since 1997, property tax increased 753%, which is almost six times as much as the combination of inflation and population.
Sheriff Calvin Hayden questioned why the federal government and Congresswoman Sharice Davids have not been involved in the cleanup, demolition, and redevelopment since the Army used it to manufacture ammunition and gunpowder from World War II through American involvement in Korea and Vietnam until its closing in 1992.
Subsidy programs don’t measure up
Taxpayer subsidies are shown to be far less beneficial than government officials claim.
A study of the state’s PEAK program (Promoting Employment Across Kansas) by Nathan Jensen at Washington University in St. Louis found that PEAK recipients were no more likely to create jobs than non-PEAK recipients
Dr. Arthur Hall, Executive Director of the Brandmeyer Center for Applied Economics at the University of Kansas, reached a similar conclusion in a study of STAR bond projects in Wichita. New jobs in the STAR bond areas mostly resulted from a shift in economic activity to a different part of the city.
Mayor Rick Walker and all five Council Members endorsed the TIF proposal, citing both immediate and long-term employment, business expansion, and economic development from the incentive.
The Sentinel asked the Council to discuss its philosophy of apparently choosing “winners and losers” in awarding the TIF to SRL, giving them a competitive advantage over their competitors and if members would pledge to return the increased property taxes captured by the TIF to property owners once the incentive was paid off.
No council member commented on either question.