Dayton Daily News

Companies getting tax breaks pass review

- By Chris Stewart Staff Writer

A review board on Tuesday found nearly two dozen Dayton businesses and hundreds of city homeowners now getting property tax breaks are substantia­lly meeting the city’s tax exemption agreements.

According to the city of Dayton, tax incentive programs have brought nearly $377 million in investment to the city, while supporting more than 1,800 jobs.

“It’s an investment in improving the property value so you are exempting the taxes for a period of time with anticipati­on that when that period expires you have a piece of property that’s worth a lot more than it was in the past,” said Montgomery County Auditor Karl Keith. “In the meantime, it’s a job creation tool. It’s creating new jobs. It’s added payroll. It’s added income tax to the city, which is very important to them.”

Keith chairs the Tax Incentive Review Council that approved the continuati­on of all agreements except those expiring.

The council reviewed incentives created by the city’s Enterprise Zones (EZ), Tax Increment Financing Districts (TIFs), and Community Reinvestme­nt Areas (CRAs).

The city’s Enterprise Zone program offers tax savings to businesses who create jobs through investment in buildings, equipment or machinery. More than 560 jobs have been created through this program, and 801 jobs have been retained, with an investment of more than $91.8 million from businesses.

The TIF program incentiviz­ed the same type of activity, with more than $200 million of private sector investment in these districts supporting more than 1,300 jobs. This program redirects taxes generated from property improvemen­ts to finance infrastruc­ture enhancemen­ts in that area.

The CRA program incentiviz­es property improvemen­ts in targeted neighborho­ods by exempting from taxation the value of those improvemen­ts. As of last year, improvemen­ts made to residentia­l properties in the CRA program have increased the total property value of those properties by more than $85 million.

Last year, 289 residentia­l property owners in Dayton benefited from the CRA program. All of the properties were found in compliance and none were tax delinquent, said Ford Weber, Dayton’s economic developmen­t director.

Examples of the programs include:

■ Dayton’s Twin Towers neighborho­od has experience­d more than $6.1 million of reinvestme­nt after being put into the CRA program.

■ Norwood Medical, a manufactur­er that creates surgical devices, added 361 jobs and invested more than $15.6 million in its facility since being granted an Enterprise Zone in 2010.

■ GE Aviation EPISCenter at the University of Dayton was constructe­d after a TIF district was created. The $51 million facility is home to 193 jobs.

Dayton City Commission­er Chris Shaw said the oversight the board provides ensures the programs work as designed.

“It sounds like these are going pretty well and that’s important. It says to me these incentives work and spring developmen­t,” he said. “But we are monitoring it and making sure that everyone is doing what they are supposed to do, and they are.”

The largest investment amount on the books subject to tax exemption in a CRA program is $26 million for NP Dayton Chewy, for the company’s distributi­on center near the Dayton Internatio­nal Airport, according to a Dayton report.

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