House Bill 5766
Sponsor: Rep. Janet Kukuk
Committee: Economic Development
Complete to 5-12-00
A SUMMARY OF HOUSE BILL 5766 AS INTRODUCED 5-10-00
The bill would amend the Local Development Financing Act to provide for the creation of "certified technology parks", expand the use of tax increment financing under the act, and make other general amendments to the act.
Under the Local Development Financing Act, a local government may create a local development financing authority to finance public improvements in a given area, by capturing increases in property tax revenues due to increased value. Currently, a tax increment finance plan adopted by an authority can only provide for the use of tax increment revenues to pay for public facilities for eligible property whose captured assessed value produces the tax increment revenues, or, if the eligible property is located in a certified industrial park, for public improvements for other eligible property located in the certified industrial park. "Public facility" includes a) infrastructure, such as roads, bridges, sewers, rail lines, utilities, and the like; b) acquisition of land, demolition, site preparation, and relocation costs; c) administrative costs; and d) improvements made to comply with the barrier free design requirements of the State Construction Code. "Eligible property" means land improvements, buildings, machinery, equipment, furniture, and the like located within an authority district whose primary purpose is a) manufacturing; b) agricultural processing; c) a high technology activity (however, the high technology provision expired January 1, 1993); or d) certain energy production activities. The bill would make the following changes in these provisions.
Business development areas. The term "certified industrial park" would be replaced with the term "business development area". The bill would delete the current specific requirements for certified industrial parks (including minimum size, zoning, and so forth) and specify instead that a business development area would have to be zoned to allow its use as "eligible property" (i.e., manufacturing, etc.); have an approved site plan; and include contiguous or adjacent parcels of property. A "certified business park" would be a business development area that had been designated by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation as meeting certain standards set by the MEDC, including use, types of building materials, landscaping, setbacks, parking, storage areas, and management.
Eligible property. The definition of "eligible property" would be expanded to include "business incubators" and "high technology activities". A business incubator would be defined to mean buildings and structures, machinery, equipment, furniture and fixtures that were located in a "certified technology park" (see below), and that were developed for the purpose of attracting high technology businesses and supporting businesses, services, and products. A "high technology activity" would be defined as that term is defined in the Michigan Economic Growth Authority Act.
Public facilities. The bill would expand the definition of a "public facility" (that can be paid for using tax increment financing revenues). Under the bill, if approved by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation, the following would be considered to be a "public facility":
The bill would specify that property could not be acquired as a public facility (with tax increment finance revenues) unless it was intended to be used in the development of eligible property. Property that was acquired as a public facility by an authority could be sold, conveyed, or otherwise disposed of to any person, public or private, for any consideration established by the authority; this could be payable in cash or noncash consideration, or for no consideration other than to assist the authority in fulfilling the purposes of its tax increment financing plan. Unless the property was located in a certified business park or a certified technology park, any proceeds from the sale or disposition of the property (to the extent it was acquired with tax increment revenues) would have to be remitted to the taxing jurisdictions in proportion to the amount of tax increment revenues that were attributable to each jurisdiction in the year the property was acquired. If such property was located in a certified business park or certified technology park, proceeds of its sale could be retained by the authority.
Certified technology parks. The bill would add new provisions allowing, until December 31, 2003, the designation of "certified technology parks" with expanded tax increment financing authority (see below). Under the bill, a municipality that had created an authority could apply to the Michigan Economic Development Corporation for designation of all or a portion of the authority district as a certified technology park. The MEDC could designate up to ten certified technology parks; up to seven of the ten could be designated without a firm commitment from at least one business engaged in a high technology activity creating a significant number of jobs.
To be designated as a certified technology park, the MEDC would have to determine that an authority had at least one of the following:
Upon approval by the MEDC of an application by an authority for designation of a certified technology park, the authority and the appropriate municipality would enter into an agreement with the MEDC to establish the terms and conditions governing the certified technology park. However, subsequent failure of any party to comply with the agreement would not result in the termination of the designation.
An agreement would include:
If the MEDC determined that a sale price or rental value at below market rate or for no consideration would assist in increasing employment or private investment in a certified technology park, the authority or municipality would have the authority to make such a below market rate sale or conveyance.
The bill would require the MEDC to market certified technology parks and certified business parks. The MEDC and an authority could contract with each other or any third party for these marketing services.
Expansion of tax increment financing. The bill would allow a tax increment financing plan to include property, other than "eligible property", in a certified technology park. In other words, a local development finance authority could capture tax increment revenues attributable to all property within a certified technology park to pay for public facilities, and not just the tax increment revenues attributable to the "eligible property" within the park. Further, the bill would allow for the capture of school tax revenues to pay for public facilities for eligible property located within a certified technology park. And, where current law allows a taxing jurisdiction to exempt itself from having revenue captured under a tax increment financing plan, under the bill, only a local or intermediate school district could "opt out" from having tax revenues captured if the revenues are to be used for a certified technology park.
The bill would require that a tax increment financing plan adopted by an authority include the proposed boundaries of a certified technology park, an identification of the real property to be included within the tax increment financing plan, and whether personal property located in the proposed park would be exempt from determining tax increment revenues.
Authority operating funds. The bill would allow an authority to finance its activities with loans obtained from the Michigan Strategic Fund or the Michigan Economic Development Corporation.
Elimination of "anti-raiding" language. The bill would delete from the act language requiring the consent of the local unit of government that would lose employment due to a business relocation caused by including certain "eligible property" in a tax increment financing plan. (Similar language was eliminated from Public Act 198 of 1974, the plant rehabilitation and industrial development act, by Public Act 144 of 1999.)
MCL 125.2152 et al.
Analyst: D. Martens