Dayton Daily News

Fairground­s

- Contact this reporter at 937225-2442 or Chris.Stewart@ coxinc.com.

approved the arrangemen­ts in 1993 to allow townships, other entities and munic- ipalities to share income taxes within an area without requiring annexation.

Montgomery County Commission­ers approved in December to pay the Montgomery County Transporta- tion Improvemen­t District $25,000 to establish the JEDD. Steve Stanley, exec- utive director of the transporta­tion district, is helping negotiate and execute the final agreement by the end of May.

“It’s really part of a long- term partnershi­p that the Agricultur­al Society, Montgomery County and Jefferson Twp. want to actively pursue to have the best combinatio­n of services and facil- ities there,” Stanley said.

Last November, those partners owning land in the area, which also includes the Alco- hol, Drug Addiction, and Mental Health Services of Montgomery County, signed a memorandum of understand­ing to cooperativ­ely form the economic developmen­t district.

“This will allow the town- ship some income to make necessary improvemen­ts, and those improvemen­ts would not only help us out but the area in general,” said Greg Wallace, the Montgom- ery County Agricultur­al Society’s executive director.

Each JEDD also requires a municipal partner. It’s not yet known which municipal- ity might become the fairground­s’ JEDD partner, but Dayton has current JEDD agreements with both Butler Twp. and Miami Twp., said Bejoy John, Dayton’s deputy finance director.

A JEDD can levy income taxes only as high as the municipal partner. If partnered with Dayton, that could be as high as 2.25 per- cent, John said.

It’s also too soon to know exactly where JEDD borders will be drawn or how additional revenue might be divided between the government­s, Woolf said.

“It’s so early in this process,” he said. “Let’s face it, a year ago today we were still looking at the buildings being built with no idea they would have them open by the time the fair occurred, and full circle one year later, we are working on the eco- nomic developmen­t tools for the surroundin­g area.”

The JEDD area as proposed encompasse­s roughly 241 acres including and sur- ro u nding the new fair- grounds at 645 Infirmary Road. The Calumet Center, 580 Calumet Lane, is also within the boundaries as well as the Montgomery County Sheriff ’s Office Jefferson Twp. Substation at 555 Infirmary Road and the Frank W. Nich- olas Residentia­l Treatment Center for Youth at 5581 Dayton-Liberty Rd. June, the Nicholas Center into larger quarters nearby at 593 Infirmary Road, still within the borders.

Stanley said he is work- ing on a tally of employees and the payroll data within the proposed JEDD to calculate how much revenue could be expected from the income tax.

“We don’t know how much yet because we’re not that far along,” he said.

Jefferson Twp. has about 70 employees — about 80 percent part-time firefight- ers — in the area, according to Woolf.

Three fairground­s employees and another dozen at the Ohio State University Extension based in the Calumet Center would be affected, but most are already well acquainted with a munic- ipal income tax, said Greg Wallace, executive director of the Montgomery County Agricultur­al Society.

“We were all paying income tax when we were downtown in Dayton. It’s not something we’re not used to,” he said. “We stopped paying income taxes because we’re in the township. So paying income taxes has been historic for the ag society and for OSU.”

Constructi­on on the new fairground­s began in August 2017 with the role of general contractor jointly assumed by the Montgomery County Transporta­tion Improvemen­t District and the Agricultur­al Society Board. The fair board moved out of downtown last March and began operations in the Calumet Center beginning in April at Arthur O. Fisher Park about six miles west of its home of 165 years.

The 2019 Montgomery County Fair will be held July 8-14. The first fair at the new location opened last year on the grounds and in two buildings built during the initial $15-million constructi­on phase.

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