You're 100% right. They received public dollars because the numbers didn't work for the original design they pitched - which would not pass Bricktown Urban Design - and the City suggested TIF as a way to close the gap and make it a building that met the City's design ordinance. TIF funding had absolutely zero to do with how many or what type of shows would be booked into the venue.
And IMO set a very, very dangerous precedent.
The idea that the City is now going to pay developers to build something correctly and that fits within our guidelines and desires is just a bad idea.
All anyone has to do is come up with a cheapo design then claim they can't afford to do it right. No matter that there is nearly an identical facility almost directly next door that never needed a dime of public money.
We just need to stop with this altogether except for very rare circumstances like First National or the Skrivin. We keep jacking with the free market to the point it has become completely bastardized.
BTW, pretty amazing that pretty much every single developer comes to the City with a 5-9% gap, which happens to be the exact range of virtually every TIF award. Simple truth is they know the game, know how to write their pro formas and know what they can get. And if that wasn't obvious enough, that has been told to me by more than one developer.
Well acquainted with the way a democracy versus a representative democracy works. However when Cathy O'Conner is pitching the TIF behind closed doors and it is "approved" before a formal vote, a meaningful discussion with citizen input then is just a moot point. That is not the way a representative democracy works. That is closer to the way a plutocracy operates. An intiative petition and a succesful vote could very easily take TIF approval out of the hands of those who are circumventing open meetings and put it in voters hands.
City officials negotiate deals with third party companies all of the time before it is brought to City Council for formal approval. I listed in my post a few of several thousands of negotiations that happen on your behalf every year, assuming you are an OKC resident. Every Tuesday you are likely to see a contract approved that was previously negotiated by City staff or on the City's behalf by one of their partners with City staff input, before being put to Council. It is the way cities all over America work, by the way.
Again, if you want TIF (or other incentives) negotiated in the open, you are welcome to advocate this change with your elected officials. There are of course many reasons why that would be a terrible idea and put the City at an extreme disadvantage in all sorts of negotiations.
It is totally fair to question whether or not TIF is good policy for a city. That is open to debate. Also it is fair to look at refining how TIF is used, and such analysis should always be in the minds of public officials too. But there is nothing about the way OKC uses TIF that is especially unusual or violates any laws, ethics or standards as accepted in municipal governance nationally.
By the way this discussion is seriously off-topic.
This is the debate equivalent of starting a personal argument then saying "I don't want to talk about it".
I'll move some of this to the TIF thread because that Newsok article you posted is almost championing that TIF be used in this way (a horrible idea IMO) and the writer uses a definition of TIF that is completely and totally incorrect.
I restate: TIF (like most dedicated economic development dollars) is money that goes looking for a problem.
Petition drive seeks to overturn Stillwater TIF District:
http://www.stwnewspress.com/news/upd...e7c29cb57.html
Looks like Norman is ending the huge TIF for University North Park.
Anticipates the city will getting an extra $4.8 million per year as a result.
https://journalrecord.com/2019/03/27...o-end-unp-tif/
Maybe this belongs in the other thread, but which TIF is the "Thunder Alley" TIF request targeting? There are just so many TIF districts to keep track of.
Pete, it feels like the Downtown TIF hasn't spit out any money towards any projects for a while. Shouldn't it be in its greatest period of earnings right now towards the end of its lifesepan?
On other threads, there were questions about the total amount that OKC has spent on TIF thus far.
As of 6/30/22, that number is $1,149,336,498.
On top of that are several big awards that have been obligated but not paid, such as the $120,000,000 for the first phase of OKANA; not to mention there will almost certainly be similar sums for Phases II & III.
Wheeler District will get at least $120,000,000 in TIF which is yet to be paid.
And very recently, other awards have been given such as $3,888,000 for the Eastpoint Hotel and $2,700,000 for Channel 9's new studio in the Century Center. There are millions more that are obligated (as in approved by city council, which is the last step) but not yet paid out.
An article in the Oklahoman today stated that Cathy O'Connor is serving as a consultant on the Strawberry Fields project and helping to negotiate their TIF awards, including the one in the process of being approved for $16 million in infrastructure improvements.
I believe O'Connor is serving in the same capacity for OKANA which just received a $120 million TIF award; you can bet she's involved in other projects seeking public funds. And OKANA and Strawberry Fields are just getting started and you can be sure much more TIF is still to come.
So, she runs the entire TIF program for years, then flips to being a consultant to maximize the TIF grants to her paying clients.
Conflicts of interest aside, Cathy O'Connor working for the Strawberry Fields people give me the first hope that the Strawberry Fields people might actually build something someday.
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