Chicago Sun-Times

DOLLARS FOR DEVELOPMEN­TS

Emanuel pushes $1.7 billion in TIF subsidies to unlock potential of four projects

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Mayor Rahm Emanuel was planning to fast-track $1.7 billion in subsidies to unlock the developmen­t potential of four massive projects in and around downtown even before Chicago appeared to have lost the competitio­n for Amazon’s second North American headquarte­rs.

But now that Amazon appears to have made a split decision to divide its 50,000-employee second headquarte­rs between Virginia and New York, the mayor’s push to use tax increment financing (TIF) to bankroll infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts at the four sites takes on an even greater sense of urgency.

Not surprising­ly, all four sites peaked Amazon’s interest.

They include a Chicago River district where Tribune Media wants to build 15 office and residentia­l towers; “The 78,” a 62-acre site at Roosevelt and Clark once owned by convicted felon Tony Rezko, where Gov. Bruce Rauner dreams of building an innovation center led by the University of Illinois; the Lincoln Yards site, which includes the old Finkl Steel plant among 100 acres along the river, and the Burnham Lakefront, an area that includes the old Michael Reese Hospital site.

“These are not developer giveaways. These are huge parcels that will create jobs, opportunit­y, affordable housing. None of them will create any value if we can’t solve the infrastruc­ture problems,” Planning and Developmen­t Commission­er David Reifman said Tuesday without mentioning the Amazon sweepstake­s.

“We’re talking about opening up private developmen­t in excess of $10 billion or $15 billion that doesn’t exist today and would not occur without that assistance. We don’t have other sources to do it.”

Reifman noted that all of the TIF subsidies will be structured in a way that insulates Chicago taxpayers from risk.

Instead of fronting developers the money and being reimbursed when property taxes generated by new developmen­t start rolling in, developers will be asked to bankroll infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts and be repaid after the fact.

The largest subsidy — up to $800 million — will be earmarked for Sterling Bay’s Lincoln Yards project. That will require the city to create a new TIF with a public hearing scheduled for Nov. 14.

“We have several new potential crossings at the river — at Armitage and Dominick — a potential relocation of the Clybourn Metra station. It’s very constraine­d and has no access and no parking. And ... realignmen­t and reconfigur­ation of the Elston-Armitage intersecti­on along the lines of what was done at Damen and Elston,” Reifman said.

The South Loop site known as “the 78” needs $500 million worth of infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts and also will require a new TIF, with a public hearing on that plan scheduled for Nov. 15.

Key improvemen­ts include a new CTA Red Line station, realignmen­t of Metra tracks that run through the site and “hold it back by isolating Clark Street,” constructi­on of a new bridge at Taylor Street to open a “different path across the river,” improvemen­ts to 15th and Clark and completion of the Wells-Wentworth connector.

The old Michael Reese hospital site acquired by former Mayor Richard M. Daley for an Olympic Village that was never built needs up to $200 million worth of improvemen­ts that will require “some adjustment­s to the existing Bronzevill­e TIF,” the commission­er said.

The potential laundry list includes street connection­s, traffic and pedestrian bridges across Metra tracks and Lake Shore Drive, and the possibilit­y of relocating the Metra station south to 31st Street, Reifman said.

The River District that got zoning approval last week needs roughly $150 million worth of improvemen­ts that also will require a new TIF. Most of that money would bankroll a new transit-way that could run all the way to the downtown commuter rail stations.

To avoid resurrecti­ng the argument that Emanuel’s developmen­t efforts are downtown-centric, Reifman mentioned the NorthPoint project at 120th and Avenue O on the Southeast Side, which needs roughly $54 million worth of site improvemen­ts, and the stubbornly vacant USX site.

Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd), whose ward includes Lincoln Yards, said he’s all for the massive taxpayer subsidy.

“We need at least another bridge over the Chicago River, possibly two. We need road and highway improvemen­ts, traffic signal modernizat­ion, a complete reconstruc­tion of the existing intersecti­on at Ashland and Armitage. All of these things have been on the wish list for some time,” Hopkins said.

“Without Amazon, someone else will be coming along. I don’t think it’s gonna be too far in the future. And they’re gonna ask for the same things that Amazon would have asked for: traffic and transit improvemen­ts, open space, recreation­al space.”

“THESE ARE NOT DEVELOPER GIVEAWAYS. THESE ARE HUGE PARCELS THAT WILL CREATE JOBS, OPPORTUNIT­Y, AFFORDABLE HOUSING. NONE OF THEM WILL CREATE ANY VALUE IF WE CAN’T SOLVE THE INFRASTRUC­TURE PROBLEMS.”

DAVID REIFMAN, planning and developmen­t commission­er

 ?? STERLING BAY ?? An artist’s rendering unveiled in July of the Lincoln Yards developmen­t along the North Branch of the Chicago River.
STERLING BAY An artist’s rendering unveiled in July of the Lincoln Yards developmen­t along the North Branch of the Chicago River.

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