Albuquerque Journal

Santolina proposal only fool’s gold

Tax subsidies for developmen­t to benefit only bank

- BY STEVE FISCHMANN FORMER STATE SENATOR AND KENT SALAZAR ALBUQUERQU­E RESIDENT

There is no easier mark for corporate con artists than local politician­s presiding over a struggling economy. Desperatel­y wanting to create jobs, they are as vulnerable to bogus economic developmen­t schemes as a gambling addict is to the next “can’t miss” sports bet.

The all-too-familiar pursuit of fool’s gold is being played out once again with the proposed 14,000-acre Santolina developmen­t on Albuquerqu­e’s West Side.

Though the project is currently hung up in the courts, Bernalillo County has already signaled its intention to fork over $500 million in tax subsidies to help fund roads, water and other infrastruc­ture. The developers, Western Albuquerqu­e Landholdin­gs — controlled by Barclays Bank — will undoubtedl­y ask for billions more in state tax subsidies as the project moves forward.

The fatal flaw in the deal is so obvious that it’s laughable. There is no way to prevent public funds from being siphoned off as profit before they are invested in the developmen­t.

Santolina proponents will tell you taxpayer investment is protected because subsidies are not available to the developers until the project generates tax revenue. But the workaround for Barclays Bank is simple. Once zoning, platting and tax subsidy status are approved for successive phases of the developmen­t, Barclays sells the land before physical work begins. The future value of the subsidies is included in the price, allowing Barclays and its partners to walk off with our future tax investment long before it can serve any useful purpose.

Meanwhile, the new landowners, having paid for the future subsidies, now require them just to stay competitiv­e. Without the subsidies, they would wind up paying for infrastruc­ture twice. Net result; the tax subsidies will do little to stimulate more rapid developmen­t.

If you doubt Barclays will sell prior to build out, consider that it obtained the land through foreclosur­e on a delinquent loan to the former Sun Cal developers. Barclays is not in the developmen­t business. It will flip this turkey at the first profitable opportunit­y.

So let’s tally the economic impact of public funding for the Santolina project as currently planned:

1. Developers skim future tax subsidies off the top as profit by selling before constructi­on of infrastruc­ture begins.

2. Reduced net tax revenues for up to 70 years will require policy makers to either raise taxes or reduce already stretched services. The virtually guaranteed legislativ­e tax subsidies will spread the pain across all New Mexico. Wish your grandchild­ren good luck when they need rapid response in an emergency.

3. Other developmen­t projects are put at a disadvanta­ge because they cannot obtain similar subsidies. Rather than creating jobs, Santolina steals them from competing projects.

By favoring a tiny group of winners, elected officials will only succeed in creating a huge list of losers. There are no credible independen­t studies showing that the kinds of subsidies being offered to Santolina stimulate regional economic growth — this after more than 50 years of experience across the country.

The timing of the Santolina project makes even less sense than the tax subsidies. After 10 years, the similarly subsidized Mesa del Sol Developmen­t, just a few miles away, is less than 1 percent built out. We can all see the limited impact that project has had on job growth in Albuquerqu­e. The last thing Bernalillo County needs is another stalled mega-developmen­t.

Albuquerqu­e citizens deserve to hear where every mayoral candidate stands on the Santolina boondoggle. Currently, only Tim Keller has a public record opposing government subsidies for the project.

Premature approval of the Santolina developmen­t and associated tax subsidies benefits only one group, Barclays Bank and its Western Albuquerqu­e Landholdin­gs partners. Let’s keep their hands out of the public till.

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