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09-22-1999 Council Agenda
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09-22-1999 Council Agenda
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Fact Sheet: 1999 Business Subsidies Law <br />✓ Business subsidies must meet a public purpose other than increasing the tax base. The law <br />specifies that job retention may be used as a public purpose only where job loss is imminent and <br />demonstrable, but does not otherwise restrict allowable public purposes (see examples on page 4). <br />✓ Grantors must determine that the recipient is eligible to receive assistance by reviewing DTED's list <br />of past recipients ineligible to receive a business subsidy because they failed to meet the terms of <br />another subsidy agreement. (This will not take effect until DTED makes the first list available after <br />receiving the 1999 reports in 2000.) <br />✓ Before granting a business subsidy that exceeds $500,000 for a state govemment grantor and <br />$100,000 for a local govemment grantor, the grantor must provide public notice and hold a hearing <br />on the subsidy unless a hearing and notice on the subsidy is otherwise required by law. <br />✓ If a business subsidy benefits more than one recipient, the grantor must assign a proportion of the <br />subsidy to each recipient signing the agreement. If the grantor is a local govemment agency, the <br />agreement must be approved by the local elected goveming body, except for the St. Paul Port <br />Authority and a seaway port authority. Also, subsidies in the form of grants must be structured as <br />forgivable loans, and agreements for other types of business subsidies must state the fair market <br />value of the subsidy or other in -kind benefits. <br />✓ In addition to any criteria developed in compliance with this law, agencies may be subject to <br />additional criteria required by specific assistance programs such as the Community Development <br />Block Grant (HUD) and Minnesota Investment Fund programs. Agencies may or may not choose to <br />address specific program criteria in the criteria developed in compliance with this law. <br />What happens if a recipient does not meet business subsidy goals? <br />✓ Business subsidy agreements must specify the recipient's obligation if the recipient does not fulfill the <br />agreement. At a minimum, a recipient failing to meet goals must pay back the assistance plus <br />interest, although repayment may be prorated to reflect partial fulfillment of goals. The interest rate <br />must be set at the Implicit Price Deflator rate as defined in Minn. Stat. §275.70, subdivision 2. DTED <br />will provide information on the Implicit Price Deflator on its website. <br />✓ Recipients failing to fulfill business subsidy agreements may not receive business subsidies from any <br />grantor for five years or until they have satisfied their repayment obligation, whichever occurs first. <br />Who is required to report business subsidies, and how? <br />✓ Recipients must provide grantors with information on their progress toward goals outlined in the <br />agreement, and will be subject to a penalty as defined in Minn. Stat. §116J.994, subdivision 7(d) for <br />failing to report. <br />✓ Grantors must submit the annual Minnesota Business Assistance Form (MBAF) to DTED for each <br />business subsidy agreement signed on or after August 1, 1999. DTED will ask grantors to file an <br />MBAF each year for each agreement for two years after the benefit date or until all goals outlined in <br />the agreement have been met, whichever is later. <br />✓ Local govemment agencies in communities with a population of more than 2,500 and state <br />government agencies must submit an MBAF regardless of whether they have awarded business <br />subsidies. The form will ask agencies whether they have awarded any subsidies. Local govemment <br />agencies in communities with a population of 2,500 or less are exempt from filing the MBAF if they <br />have not awarded a subsidy in the past five years (i.e. those with a population of 2,500 or less who <br />have not signed an agreement after December 31, 1994, will be exempt from reporting in 2000). <br />✓ DTED will develop a new MBAF in fall 1999. This form will ask grantors to report, at a minimum, the <br />information that Minn. Stat. §116J.994, subdivision 7 requires recipients to provide to them, including: <br />• the type, public purpose, and amount of the subsidy, and type of district if the subsidy is TIF; <br />• the hourly wage of each job created with separate bands of wages; <br />• the sum of the hourly wages and cost of health insurance provided by the recipient, broken <br />down by wage level; <br />the date(s) by which job and wage goals will be met; <br />a statement of goals identified in the agreement and an update on progress toward them; <br />the location of the recipient prior to receiving the business subsidy; <br />information on why the recipient did not complete the project outlined in the subsidy <br />agreement at its previous location, if previously located at another site in Minnesota, <br />the name and address of the parent corporation of the recipient, if any; <br />and a list of all financial assistance by all grantors for the project. <br />Department of Trade and Economic Development July 27, 1999 <br />Page 88 <br />
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