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Land Recycling Task Force June 3, 2011
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City of Pittsburgh – Department of City Planning Agenda City of Pittsburgh – Department of Neighborhood InitiativesCity of Pittsburgh – Office of the Mayor Welcome, Introduction & Updates Kyra Straussman, Urban Redevelopment Authority Committee Initial Summary Recommendations Jason Wrona, Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney Kendall Pelling, East Liberty Development, Inc. Kirk Burkley, Bernstein Law Firm Bethany Davidson, Pittsburgh Community Reinvestment Group State Legislation Update and Mayor’s Support Kendall Pelling, East Liberty Development, Inc. Discussion of Recommendations Next Steps City of Pittsburgh – Office of the Mayor
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Land Bank Committee Preliminary Findings
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City of Pittsburgh – Bureau of Police Land Bank Structure Options City of Pittsburgh – Department of Neighborhood InitiativesCity of Pittsburgh – Office of the Mayor Consolidated City Department Within the URA – new department or entity Non-Profit New Authority under the Municipal Authorities act (problem: Law does not allow the activity) Land Bank Authority – under new state law
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City of Pittsburgh – Bureau of Police Land Bank Structure – Best 2 Options City of Pittsburgh – Department of Neighborhood InitiativesCity of Pittsburgh – Office of the Mayor Within the URA – new department or entity Existing expertise & structure Lender and funder of development Tax collection is not a permitted function Social/political baggage Strings attached: layers of regulations and funder restrictions Land Bank Authority – under new state law Designed to be the ideal structure for land banking Designed to engage in tax collection Few strings attached – few funder restrictions & requirements Entrepreneurial entity Costly and time consuming to create a new authority
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City of Pittsburgh – Bureau of Police Land Bank Authority – HB 712 City of Pittsburgh – Department of Neighborhood InitiativesCity of Pittsburgh – Office of the Mayor Pros Designed to be the ideal structure for land banking Designed to engage in tax collection Few strings attached – few funder restrictions & requirements Entrepreneurial entity Exempt from property taxes Transfer Tax Exempt (between City & URA) Cons Costly and time consuming to create a new authority Not yet adopted!
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Urban Redevelopment Authority Pros Already land banking Existing expertise & infrastructure Transfer Tax Exempt (between City & URA) Lender and funder of development Cons Lack of funding Subject to property taxes Tax collection is not a permitted function Social/political baggage Disposition Policy Practice
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Finance Committee Preliminary Recommendations
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Financing a Land Bank: Costs Start-Up Costs: $16m – to clear the backlog of liened properties Annual Operations $3.7m – to Acquire new delinquent parcels, maintain the portfolio and fund disposition Cost Components Acquisition Maintenance Disposition Operations
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Financing a Land Bank: Costs Start-Up Costs: $16m – to clear the backlog of liened properties Annual Operations $3.7m – to Acquire new delinquent parcels, maintain the portfolio and fund disposition Cost Components Acquisition Maintenance Disposition Operations
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Financing a Land Bank: Revenue Options Start-Up Capital Pursue large private foundation seed monies Sustained Revenue Annual Bond Issuance: Taxing bodies made whole; Bond paid off with, and additional revenue from, late tax payers’ penalty & interest Operate Land Bank for 1-2 years to demonstrate performance prior to bond issuance Public Sources: Dedicated Funding Delinquent Tax Collection additional interest and penalty revenue
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State Legislation and Mayor’s Support
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Mayor Ravenstahl’s Practices & Initiatives CARC Buy Back Mayor’s Green Up Pittsburgh Program Demolition Budget Increases Community Land Reform Initiative Online Permitting City’s First Comprehensive Plan Land Reserve efficiencies
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State Legislative Opportunities Land banks bill ‘House bill 712’ (revised) ready for re-introduction Sponsor-Rep. John Taylor House Urban Affairs Committee Real estate tax sales bill Comprehensive reform of PA’s 5 tax sale laws Draft bill is almost ready for circulation Sponsor-Rep. Chris Ross (Chair, House Urban Affairs Committee) State Authorization for City & Pittsburgh School District to Increase interest rate equal County interest rate Charge interest upon delinquency (not upon lien filing) Charge penalty
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Leadership Needed Support for State Legislation Lead a group of mayors in supporting the bill Meet with legislative leaders and the Allegheny County delegation to secure their support Reps: Turzai (Majority leader) and Dermody (Minority leader) Rep Paul Costa: Chair, Allegheny County Democratic Delegation Support from administration staff in further analysis and developing the business plan for land recycling Advocacy with local and national foundations
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Discussion of Findings
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Land Bank Committee Discussion
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New Municipal Authority Pros Single Purpose Entity – limits City’s liability Exempt from transfer tax Statutorily exempt from property taxes Financing guarantee by City is possible (under MAA) Broad ability to acquire/sell/lease real property Broad ability to finance Can be somewhat entrepreneurial Cons Practice of land banking is subject to challenge Requires action by sponsoring municipality Start-up time & costs
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Non-Profit Land Bank Corporation Pros Single Purpose Entity – limits City’s liability Availability of private financing Entrepreneurial Reduced red tape as a private entity Private actor in real estate market Cons Potential lack of transparency Subject to transfer tax & property tax Tension between public and private purposes Financing guarantee from City is very unusual Start-up time & costs No operating history / assets Link non-profit to tax collection funding? – Possible URA loan
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Land Bank Authority – HB 712 Pros Designed to be the ideal structure for land banking Single Purpose Entity – limits City’s liability Exempt from transfer tax (City to Authority) Statutorily exempt from property taxes Financing guarantee by City is possible Broad ability to acquire/sell/lease real property Broad ability to finance Intended to be able to apply T-sale procedures Blank slate / no funder restrictions & requirements Entrepreneurial entity Cons Costly and time consuming to create a new authority Ability to directly engage in T-sale may require additional legislation Not yet adopted!
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Urban Redevelopment Authority Pros Already land banking (albeit on a smaller scale) Existing expertise & infrastructure Exempt from transfer tax Lender and funder of development Authorized to engage in blight reduction Property tax exempt as URA Single purpose entity – limit’s City’s liability Cons Lack of available funding Web of restrictions Tax collection is not a statutorily permitted function Social/political baggage Disposition Policy Practice
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Finance Committee Discussion
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2005-2009 Tax Delinquent Parcel Analysis 17,780 parcels tax delinquent in 2009/14% of all taxable parcels (tax-exempts excluded) 4085 parcels 2008 tax delinquent only 8690 parcels more than 5 years delinquent 7932 (6% of all taxable parcels) considered abandoned (See Kennedy Report for redemption assumptions) Abandoned properties are highly concentrated in weak markets areas Four (4) tax sales annually, each sale initiated by roughly 800 pre-sale notices to property owners only; each sale exposing roughly 300 parcels for sale 62% of parcels redeemed between 2005 and 2009 45: annual average of parcels purchased at tax sale (2005-2009) 350: rough number of parcels put through tax sales for development purposes 461: annual average of tax sale parcels taken by City (2005-2009) 225: annual average of tax sale parcels taken and resold by City (2005-2009) 230-250: titles quieted annually
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Location of Tax Delinquent Parcels
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Revenue Options and Analysis Revenue Options and Analysis
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Next Steps Next Land Recycling Taskforce Meeting: Wednesday, September 7, 2011 (URA Wherrett Room 10-12) Goal: Draft Business Plan Review
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