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County hears detailed briefing on Housing and Transit Reinvestment Zones and asks tough questions on costs and beneficiaries
Summary
Brian Baker of the Governor's Office of Economic Opportunity briefed the Summit County Council on HTRZs, describing the gap-analysis review, tax-increment mechanics and examples (Vineyard, Sandy City, South Jordan). Council asked whether incentives produce public benefit or simply boost developer profits; staff said applications require government sponsorship and a committed landowner.
Brian Baker, a presenter from the Governor's Office of Economic Opportunity, told the Summit County Council that Housing and Transit Reinvestment Zones (HTRZs) are designed to encourage transit-oriented development, increase housing and conserve resources by using incremental tax revenues and state support to close finance gaps. "It's a reasonably robust analysis," Baker said, describing the gap analysis GoEO commissions to test whether additional HTRZ funding is necessary for a project to proceed.
Baker explained that the HTRZ funding pool can include incremental property and sales taxes generated inside designated boundaries and that the state's review often engages outside financial advisers. "GoEO actually contracts out and looks and…
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