Chicago Sun-Times

Preckwinkl­e pursues back taxes from parking lot operators

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e is taking another look at the county’s parking lot and garage tax, auditing private parking companies to potentiall­y collect millions in back taxes.

The county has already brought in about $700,000 related to disallowed residentia­l parking exemptions discovered through the auditing process, Nick Shields, a spokesman for Preckwinkl­e, said in a statement.

Those exemptions apply if an agreement to be able to park in a given lot is written into someone’s lease, or if they otherwise have that parking agreement in writing. In those cases, the parking lot operator does not pay the tax.

Shields couldn’t say how much the county would likely bring in through the auditing process. More than 20 parking lot operators are being looked at, and residentia­l parking is one of the issues being reviewed.

“Since taking office, President Preckwinkl­e has simply profession­alized the county’s operations, and this is another example,” Shields said in a statement.

Michael Mini, executive vice president of the Chicagolan­d Apartment Associatio­n, said the associatio­n is still trying to figure out the “practical impact” of the county’s audit. The law was never really enforced the way they’re doing it now, he says.

The associatio­n owns and manages over 200,000 units in the city and suburbs, most of them in Cook County, which are owned by 190 companies with a little over 1,000 actual apartment properties, Mini said.

Mini says through their audits, the county indicated that the terms of the parking agreement and lease agreement have to be consistent, which goes against some common practices, like allowing an apartment owner to have a direct agreement with a garage operator.

The county’s pursuit of back taxes caught some in the parking business off guard.

“They are in the process of auditing several companies, so it’s typical that you enter into some type of settlement agreement,” Mini said. “We don’t really have an indication of the impact this might have.”

Revisiting the tax and related exemptions means the county is enforcing the law and doesn’t mean a new tax on the county’s taxpayers, Shields said, but a spokeswoma­n for mayoral candidate Gery Chico called it “a new parking tax that gets passed on to consumers, just like her ill-conceived soda tax.”

“President Preckwinkl­e has been clear that she can’t be trusted when it comes to nickel-and-diming residents,” Kelley Quinn, Chico’s spokeswoma­n, said.

While it is too early to say what impact the audit may have on the associatio­n, there are fears that residents may see the impact directly.

“It’s frustratin­g that members are caught in this situation after remitting the tax for years,” Mini said. “Though they indicate it’s not a change, the practical impact is that it looks like a tax increase.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Cook County is conducting audits and may try to collect back taxes from parking lot operators.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Cook County is conducting audits and may try to collect back taxes from parking lot operators.
 ??  ?? Toni Preckwinkl­e
Toni Preckwinkl­e

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