A great newspaper article about St. Paul Minnesota's options for revenue generation | How about Packaging, Marketing, and Branding them into a Program?
-- "How might St. Paul boost its tax base and stabilize property taxes?" in the St. Paul Pioneer-Press
One of the ideas is what's called a Payment in Lieu of Taxes, or PILOT, by nonprofits. This is done by cities to help to cover the cost of services to nonprofits not paying property taxes. It's a voluntary program and most places feel they aren't getting enough--which is probably true.
Boston's probably the best example. To get around an unwillingness to agree, Providence proposed a "capitation tax" per college student, since so much of the city's property is owned by Brown University.
Interestingly, there was an article in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, "O’Connor’s partnership approach brings millions to Pittsburgh from tax-exempt nonprofits, corporations," about PILOTs which has been a big issue there because the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Allegheny Health System, the University of Pittsburgh, and Carnegie-Mellon University control so much of the property.
Rather than focusing on negotiating a broader PILOT, which could include funding for annual operations, he has moved to getting various institutions committed to putting money towards capital projects. For example, UPMC is paying for new ambulances--some of the trips the new ambulances make will end up at one of their facilities. The Heinz Foundation, a strong supporter of the city and region, gave money to the city to finish its stalled new Comprehensive Land Use Plan. Etc.
Map of St. Paul from Etsy.In St. Paul, it turns out almost 60% of the nonprofit land is government owned, where no PILOT would be derived. And the rest of the organizations are generally much smaller than those in Pittsburgh.
Making it harder, St. Paul is small, about 315,000 population, while the rest of Ramsey County is only 226,000 more. Plus, the county has lost population since 2020.
Building the tax base through capital investment. The article goes on to describe various options. Some are what I call investment oriented, in that "you need to spend (invest) money to make money."
One of the items discussed is Tax Increment Financing, where you sell bonds to support development based on the idea that the new development will raise tax revenues. So you get the loan against future benefits, which pay off the bond.
According to the article, a number of groups oppose more TIF, even though the city has the capacity for more, because they see it disproportionately benefiting developers, which I suppose it does.
Neighborhood TIF, Minneapolis. But I couldn't help but think of the counter example of Minneapolis, which created a TIF system to fund neighborhood improvements. Called the Neighborhood Revitalization Program, resident associations worked with the city, school district and parks district to make physical improvements with long term positive effects (case study, "Empowered Participation in Urban Governance: The Minneapolis Neighborhood Revitalization Program," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research).
Perhaps St. Paul could look at multiple approaches to TIF, neighborhoods as well as more traditional development projects.
Some MPAS4 projects.Metropolitan Area Projects, Oklahoma City. Another program, although more in terms of packing, is the MAPS program in Oklahoma City.
It's an add on sales tax, which in different phases each with a preapproved capital projects plan, has funding major projects, from a sports arena, to a streetcar, to canal and river improvements, and physical improvements to schools ("Big League Cities: Small Cities," "Change isn't usually that simple: The repatterning of Oklahoma City's Downtown Streetscape").
From the Daily Oklahoman article, "What MAPS projects will start in 2024? Everything to know about ongoing OKC projects":
For three decades, Oklahoma City’s Metropolitan Area Projects program, better known as MAPS, has played a key role in ongoing development of the city.
The debt-free MAPS program is funded by a one-cent sales tax, approved by voters and currently expected to raise more than $1 billion between 2020 and 2028. The funds are used for capital projects, neighborhood improvements and job-creating initiatives.
Various projects for MAPS 4, the program’s current iteration, are underway, with all of them in different stages of development. Passed by voters in 2019, MAPS 4 encompasses 16 projects that address issues like homelessness, post-incarceration programming, youth and senior well-being, along with traditional MAPS projects like the fairgrounds coliseum and updates to the NBA Thunder's arena.
Note that the current MAPS4 program is less focused on big capital projects, and includes a number of social service facilities, transit development, and "beautification" projects, as well as providing operating funding for some programs ("Some OKC MAPS 4 programs will receive annual operating funds. Here's how that will work," Daily Oklahoman). Operating funds will be provided long term, through a creation of a trust funded by MAPS. (Although I think that many of the funding commitments should instead be paid through a larger property tax.)
MAPS might not work that well for St. Paul as it's small, whereas OKC is as large physically, as many US counties. A city exclusive tax wouldn't generate enough money. But could the city and county develop a similar program, jointly?
Hennepin County Community Works. The county next door to St. Paul (which is in Ramsey) is the home to Minneapolis. In the 1990s Hennepin County realized that population leakage from Minneapolis as a result of suburban outmigration would also hurt its revenue stream.
It studied the areas of the city that best retained their value, and found them proximate to lakes, parks, rivers, and trails. So it created a program to make investments in the city to extend those qualities of livability to more places, both to retain population and to gain it.
Faced in the nineties with a growing imbalance between the declining prosperity of its core city (Minneapolis) and suburban municipalities, Hennepin County, Minnesota, pioneered a different path. In 1994, Hennepin County launched an urban redevelopment program, “Hennepin Community Works” (hereafter HCW) that clearly supplemented the more common models of county activity. HCW devised an entirely new redevelopment role for the county, and has consequently had a major impact on Minneapolis and its suburbs.Since its inception, Hennepin County commissioners have committed close to $200 million of infrastructure spending into a targeted redevelopment program with five goals: (1) to enhance the tax base; (2) to reshape troubled neighborhoods; (3) to improve transportation within the county; (4) to protect and develop green space; and (5) to create new jobs. While much of the U.S. urban past since the eighties has featured decreasing levels of public sector funding and involvement with urban affairs, Hennepin County voluntarily took on substantial additional financial and political commitments with this program... HCW began here in 1994 as a public works program initially intended to address declining property values. Since then, HCW has significantly transformed portions of the county through major housing, transportation, parks, and environmental restoration investments. Through 2008, HCW launched nineteen projects, totaling $197.5 million in investments.
Later they added creating a light rail transit system as part of their overall investment program.
The city's peak population was 522,000 in 1950. From 1980 to 1990 it was about 370,000. It grew to 382,000 in 2000 and today is 435,000. They have a ways to go to equal their peak but at the same time Hennepin County's population in 1950 was only about 150,000 people outside of Minneapolis. Today the non-city population is almost 850,000 people.
Allegheny County Regional Asset District. The Regional Asset District in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania is funded from a county-wide sales and use tax ("How the Regional Asset District rode to the rescue of Allegheny County attractions," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette).Historically, the City of Pittsburgh paid for and provided regionally-serving cultural assets (museums, zoo, etc.) without support from other area jurisdictions. As cities lost population and business activity, funding such facilities became an increasing strain. The RAD, also supporting cultural assets in the County, was a way to spread out the cost.
- Ensure Saint Paul puts people first
- Encourage vitality through investment, private and public alike
- Create accessible places where people want to connect and spend time
- Promote healthy living
- Celebrate the city’s cultural diversity
Conclusion. These programs show various ways St. Paul could work with Ramsey County to develop a long term investment approach for the city and county based on creating a package of programs and funding sources.
Labels: building a local economy, creative economy, economic development, public finance and spending, tax increment financing districts, urban design/placemaking, urban revitalization






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