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10-28-2015 Council Packet
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10-28-2015 Council Packet
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OTHER CONSIDERATIONS <br />Geographic Restrictions <br />Pooling Limits. For districts created after June 30, 1995, no more than 20 percent of the increment (25 percent in the case <br />of redevelopment districts) may be spent outside the boundaries of the TIF District, However, increment from housing TIF <br />districts may be spent to finance "housing projects" located anywhere in the broader Project area. Administrative costs are <br />considered spent outside the district. Increment from districts created before May 1, 1990 may be spent anywhere within the <br />Project boundaries, which permits "pooling" of increment from more than one district, <br />Time Restrictions (other than duration) <br />3 -year rule, Within three years after the date of certification, one of three things must happen for the district to remain alive: <br />bonds are issued to aid the Project (excluding industrial revenue bonds); the authority acquires property within the TIF <br />District; or the authority causes public improvements to be constructed within the TIF District, <br />4 -year knock down rule. Increment will not be collected from a particular parcel unless, within four years after the date of <br />certification, demolition, rehabilitation or renovation of property or other site improvements has taken place by either the <br />authority or the owner in accordance with the TIF Plan, Construction or major construction of an adjacent street qualifies as <br />an improvement to a parcel, but utility improvements do not, If the parcel is "knocked -down" and later improved, it is re- <br />instated in the TIF District but at the market value at the time of the reinstatement. <br />5 -year rule. For increment to be considered a spent expenditure within the TIF District, one of the following must occur <br />within five years after certification of the district: (1) increment is paid to a "third party" for a TIF -eligible "activity"; (2) <br />bonds, the proceeds of which are used to finance an activity, are sold to a third party and proceeds are reasonably expected <br />to be spent within the five-year period (with certain limited exceptions); (3) binding contracts are entered with a third party <br />for performance of an activity, and increment is spent under the contract; (4) costs are incurred by a "party" and revenues are <br />spent to reimburse a party; or (5) expenditures are made for housing purposes. <br />The term "third party" excludes the party receiving TIF assistance and the "municipality or the development authority or other <br />person substantially under the control of the municipality." Therefore, clause (4) permits the typical "pay as you go" <br />reimbursement where the initial costs are incurred by the developer with the 5 -year period. See Section IILB, <br />Note: The 5 -year rule applies only to districts requested for certification after April 30, 1990, <br />Parcels Excluded from TIF Districts (the "Green Acre Exclusion"), <br />For districts filed for certification after June 30, 1995, parcels in the seven -county metropolitan area may not be included in <br />a TIF district if they qualified for special tax treatment under green acre, open space, or agricultural preserves provisions in <br />any of the five calendar years before the request for certification, Outside the metropolitan area, such parcels may be included <br />in a TIF district if' at least 85 percent of the planned facilities (on a square footage basis) are used in manufacturing. <br />Legislation in 1996 changes this rule and makes it uniform statewide for districts filed for certification on or after August 1, <br />1996. Now, any parcel receiving special tax treatment mentioned above in the five years before the request for certification <br />may be included in a TIF district anywhere if: <br />(1) At least 85 percent of the planned facilities (on a square footage basis) are for manufacturing or distribution facilities <br />(distribution facilities were added by the 1998 Minnesota Legislature); or <br />(2) The district is a "qualified housing district," <br />Ehlers & Associates, Inc. - TIF Basics 8 <br />
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