Post Tribune (Sunday)

Financial advisers say no harm in selling, then leasing back police HQ

Council learns city could raise up to $40M if approved

- By Gregory Tejeda Post-Tribune

Financial advisers who are putting together an agreement allowing Gary city government to sell its Public Safety Building and then lease it back tried Wednesday to reassure Common Council members that the deal would not change anything about the way the city operates.

Brandon Coleman and Jimmy Shanahan, municipal advisers working to put together the deal that Common Council members will be asked later this year to approve, said the intent is to allow city government to raise up to $40 million, which would be used in upcoming years to pay municipal government bills.

Council members last month approved a broad outline for a sale and leaseback of the Public Safety Building, 555 Polk St.

Specific details of the transactio­n have yet to be put together, which is why Coleman and Shanahan were before the council’s Finance Committee to explain how things are progressin­g. Coleman said the city followed up last month’s council vote of approval by sending out requests for proposals to some 20 financial institutio­ns to gauge interest in the concept. Nine of those institutio­ns expressed interest, and talks are taking place between a three-member committee of city officials chosen by Mayor Karen Freeman-Wilson and those banks that could wind up buying the bonds that would produce money for Gary. “It won’t matter that we say we want to raise $40 million if no one out there wants to do this,” Coleman said. Selling bonds would create debt for Gary government in future years, and Coleman said the plan originally was to devote the city’s share of proceeds from the Majestic Star Casino to guarantee the debt. Coleman said city officials are confident that local income tax proceeds will provide enough, allowing them to use casino money for other future projects.

Shanahan said the terms of the deal being put together likely would state that upon the full repayment of the fundraisin­g bonds, ownership of the Public Safety Building would revert back to Gary municipal government.

Even during the years that debt existed, the title to the property would indicate the structure being owned by the Gary Building Corp., an entity to be created for whoever winds up buying the bonds.

The Gary Police Department will not be at risk at any point in the future of being evicted from its longtime headquarte­rs, officials said.

“If the building corpora- tion defaults on the bonds, the city will not lose use of the facility,” according to a memorandum Shanahan presented to council members. “The facility is not b e i n g mo r t g a g e d or pledged as security to the repayment of the bonds.” Shanahan’s memo also stated that “no property taxes will be raised to make lease payments and debt service on the bonds.”

Council member Rebecca Wyatt, D-1st, said she is skeptical that taking on additional debt to repay bonds will somehow help Gary municipal government get out of debt over the long term. “I don’t have a lot of confidence we can do this,” Wyatt said.

Council member LaVetta S p a r k s -Wa d e, D - 6 t h , agreed, saying she fears what could happen if the city can’t pay the lease.

Mayoral chief of staff Dayna Bennett said the sale and lease-back transactio­n is part of an overall play by which the city will be engaging in cost-cutting measures meant to reduce government expenses while also increasing the amount of money available to the city.

Some of those changes will become evident as soon as October, which Bennett said will be when the full Common Council will be asked to consider a series of fees the Fire Department would charge to increase the amount of income it can produce for the city.

Coleman said this is all part of a long-range plan to bolster Gary’s financial status. “The adage of ‘you can’t borrow your way out of a financial problem’ is true,” he said. “But if we don’t develop a plan that brings more revenue into Gary, then we might as well all go home and just give up.”

Gregory Tejeda is a freelance reporter for the Post-Tribune.

 ?? GREGORY TEJEDA/POST-TRIBUNE ?? Advisers Brandon Coleman, left, and Jimmy Shanahan present their plan for how the city could raise money by selling, then leasing back, the Gary Public Safety Building. Common Council Finance Committee Chairwoman Mary Brown is at right.
GREGORY TEJEDA/POST-TRIBUNE Advisers Brandon Coleman, left, and Jimmy Shanahan present their plan for how the city could raise money by selling, then leasing back, the Gary Public Safety Building. Common Council Finance Committee Chairwoman Mary Brown is at right.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States