Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Jesse Orr's avatar

I'm pretty sympathetic to this argument - especially since the (already high!) amount raised by the RPM TIF will continue going up every year.

On the other hand, I'd like to see CTA take advantage of the TIF's guaranteed capital funding stream to pursue incremental RPM Next Phases projects *without* seeking federal funding and therefore avoiding the extensive admin burdens that come alongside (NEPA, Buy America Provisions, etc.) - thinking projects like Sheridan and RPM improvements Thorndale and north.

Of course they'll still need federal funding for other projects, but in theory this sort of dedicated funding *could* allow faster and cheaper construction. (I'm not holding my breath though).

Anaximander's avatar

Early cancellation of this TIF would also align with the administration's plan to leverage "new" revenue from expiring TIF districts to pay for the economic development bonds issued a year or two ago. Sticking to that plan will take some political discipline given that CTU and CTA will be whispering in the other ear like a Siren. This exact scenario is why I thought that bonding plan was risky in the extreme.

6 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?