The Denver Post

$30 deal in Arvada part of years of sweetheart deals

- By Dave Chandler

Nine acres of publicly-owned, prime real estate in Denver’s hot market is to be “sold” for $30 and the sales and property tax revenue until 2034 rebated to the developer, as well. All for the constructi­on of a two story parking garage topped with four floors of apartments that will loom over the already congested Wadsworth Bypass and end the “grand view” from Grandview Avenue.

Yes, this scheme has caused quite a stir in Arvada.

But this sweetheart deal only highlights a much bigger problem. In the last couple of years or so, the unelected Arvada Urban Renewal board and the Arvada City Council have actually committed to giving away nearly $50 million in tax revenue and land to private, for-profit corporatio­ns and developers.

From the $30 giveaway of land valued at a minimum of $6 million, to $6 million in sales tax rebates to Walmart, to the $7.2 million rebated to the Solana apartment developers, Arvada government has been on a spree of self-aggrandize­ment through manipulati­ng and distorting the free market with taxpayer dollars.

All of these giveaways approved or sanctioned by the same city council that unanimousl­y voted to put a sales tax hike on the November 2016 ballot claiming more money was needed to repair and maintain our deteriorat­ing streets. Arvada taxes groceries, so the proposed increase would have been highly regressive tax and resulted in one of the highest sales tax rates in the entire state of Colorado.

Voters wisely turned down the tax hike, but the large amount of giveaways in part explains why city government doesn’t have the revenue required for basic services like keeping the streets in good order. They’ve given away current and future tax revenue worth millions and millions of dollars to special private businesses.

So, while you are paying Arvada sales tax on bananas, a box of cereal or a new school backpack to support police, water and sewer services and parks, the developers and businesses with sweetheart deals are rebated the taxes collected, getting a free-ride on city services.

The entire Denver metro region is now experienci­ng a remarkable burst of economic growth. We don’t need government hand-outs to developers to entice them to open businesses and build in our community. Arvada is a wonderful city and new developers and businesses ought to be paying us to locate here.

And they do. When the free market is allowed to work and urban renewal and city hall let them open here under the regular rules all developers and businesses have to follow, then they pay 100 percent of the taxes they’re liable for like all the rest of us.

Now, citizens and taxpayers have a plan to put some breaks on the government giveaways. The Protect Arvada Taxpayers charter amendment would require that any “incentive” to developers over $2.5 million and/or a sale of public land to a private business valued over $1 million be taken to the voters for approval. The “PAT” proposal is a citizen initiative, petitions are circulatin­g now to place the plan on the ballot.

The Protect Arvada Taxpayers amendment does not take away any economic developmen­t tools from the city or the Urban Renewal Authority, but it does mean that for circumstan­ces involving large sums of tax revenue or sales of public land to a private business, we, the people and taxpayers, get to be the ultimate decision-makers.

Growth and progress for our community are fully compatible with fiscal responsibi­lity.

Dave Chandler has been a civic activist in Arvada for the past 25 years advocating for reform and more openness at City Hall. For more informatio­n about the initiative go to www.protectarv­adataxpaye­rs.com.

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