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Racine Revenue Sharing Program. Presented to: The Local Government Institute of Wisconsin May 30, 2012. William Mielke, P.E., R.L.S. wmielke@ruekert-mielke.com w (262) 542-5733. Presentation Overview. The Racine Area The Problem Statement The Racine Experience
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Racine Revenue Sharing Program Presented to:The Local Government Institute of Wisconsin May 30, 2012 William Mielke, P.E., R.L.S. wmielke@ruekert-mielke.com w (262) 542-5733
Presentation Overview • The Racine Area • The Problem Statement • The Racine Experience • The Intergovernmental Process • The Agreements Reached
Racine Area Washington Ozaukee Waukesha Milwaukee Racine Kenosha Walworth
The Racine Experience • Racine extended utility service without annexation in 1960’s • Previous tax base growth depended on annexations • Industry and high-value homes migrated to surrounding towns. • Courthouse, hospital and other tax-exempts stayed in the City • Racine residents supported regional amenities such as the Zoo, Library and Art Museum • City customers carried the cost of water and wastewater capacity to support growth in the towns. • Fiscal capacity of City fell to the point where the tax rates needed to be twice as high in the city.
Costs for the City Created by Surrounding Communities • New development causes an increase in demand for regional facilities. • Library system, courthouse, jail, hospitals, schools, churches, museums, and major parks.
Costs for the City Created by Surrounding Communities • Transportation systems are increasingly burdened by traffic from the surrounding communities.
Costs for the City Created by Surrounding Communities • Municipal service costs for regional tax exempt facilities from police protection to snow plowing are being borne by City residents.
Impetus for Negotiations • Expiration of 20-year sewer service agreements; need to renew and to accommodate new development, particularly along IH 94 corridor • Need for an $80.0 million expansion to Racine’s Wastewater Treatment Facility • Racine’s ability to impose a sewer moratorium • Concern by broader community interests over potential economic stagnation (RAMAC) • The big State stick: Wisconsin’s “little 208” law requiring regulatory decisions about sewerage facilities to be consistent with area wide water quality management plans
Dovetailing Interests • City of Racine • Fair funding of regional infrastructure and services • A share of the revenues from development supported by its utility service • Outlying Municipalities • More self-determination • Extension of sewer service
Nine Areas of Study / Negotiation • Wastewater Treatment Facility • Racine Public Library • Racine Zoo • Racine Art Museum • Belle Urban Transit System • Racine County Sheriff’s Department • Eastern Racine County Highway Jurisdiction • Consolidated Dispatch Service • Revenue Sharing
The Process • Leadership by Racine County Executive • Formation of informal group of chief elected officials (HOG) • Monthly dinner and discussion meetings • Private sector venues and meeting sponsorship • Closed-door sessions • City of Racine sponsored the work effort • Ruekert/Mielke carried out the staff work
The Process • Racine County Planning Director and SEWRPC Executive Director reviewed consultant’s work, facilitated discussion, and helped the surrounding communities to understand that the City’s analyses and conclusions were sound • Once the heads of government reached conceptual agreement on the issues, the administrators, lawyers, and consultants forged a 100+ page agreement • Agreement executed by principal parties on April 25, 2002 • Process took nearly four years
Revenue Sharing Objectives • Sharing of commercial / industrial tax base • Reduction in competition for development • Equalization of fiscal capacity • Reduction of disparities in tax rates • Transfers of revenue from wealthy municipalities to poorer municipalities
WI Statutory Authority • §66.0301 – Intergovernmental Cooperation • §66.0305 – Political Subdivision Revenue Sharing
Existing Revenue Sharing Models: Didn’t Quite Fit • Only a handful of programs nationwide • Extensive review of academic research analyzing the major programs • Four programs most similar to our vision: • Minnesota Fiscal Disparities Act of 1971 • Hackensack-Meadowlands, NJ • Charlottesville and Albermarle Co., VA • McFarland and Madison, WI
Racine’s Unique Revenue Sharing Program • Modified the shortcomings of the Minnesota model • One of the largest in the U.S. • Negotiated, not legislated • Unique formula accounts for commercial and industrial property values and overall fiscal capacity • Payments always flow from high fiscal capacity to low fiscal capacity communities
How the Racine Plan Works • 30 years of payments • Formula includes two components: • The sharing of commercial and manufacturing tax base. • The sharing of the overall tax base on the basis of fiscal capacity.
Revenue Sharing Formula Shared Commercial / Mfg. Tax Base Shared Residential Tax Base Local Tax Rate Shared Revenues ()
Lessons Learned • Achieving significant intermunicipal cooperation is extremely difficult. • Must have a Win/Win solution where all parties gain something from the arrangement. • Communities must be open to exploring all of the potential advantages to cooperation. • Resolving past issues such as boundary disputes or addressing fiscal capacity disparities can foster cooperation on new issues. • Shared services must provide financial benefits to taxpayers. “I’m very sure that this agreement will be the most important document I’ve ever signed. I am extremely privileged and proud to do so.” ~Joe Clementi, Chairperson, Town of Mount Pleasant