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Missoula forum divides over TIF: critics call it 'corporate welfare,' MRA defends infrastructure benefits
Summary
Panelists at City Club Missoula debated tax increment financing (TIF) on costs, remittances and sunset rules. Jesse Ramos criticized TIF's duration and remittance unpredictability; Carl England and Mayor Andrea Davis said increment has paid for public infrastructure and new workforce-housing tools, and urged clearer evaluation metrics.
City Club Missoula held a November forum on tax increment financing (TIF), where policy advocates, the Missoula Redevelopment Agency chair and Mayor Andrea Davis debated whether the funding tool benefits residents or primarily subsidizes private development.
Moderator Patrick Barkey framed the issue by explaining TIF’s mechanics: cities record a baseline of property tax revenue, capture future ‘‘increment’’ in a designated urban renewal district and use that increment for projects in the district for a fixed term (generally 15 years, extended by any bonds issued, producing a potential maximum of about 40 years). Barkey and others said the question for Missoula is whether that trade-off is producing net public benefit.
At the center of the exchange was Jesse Ramos, state director of Americans for Prosperity Montana, who argued TIF now favors private interests and harms ordinary taxpayers. “TIF is the very definition of corporate welfare,” Ramos said, attributing to MRA remittances of…
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