An insider deal with city funds in Mount Carroll?

Project helps downtown, boosters say; others question loan

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Lou Schau pauses for a picture while working at his Brick Street Coffee in downtown Mount Carroll. Brick Street Coffee is the lone business in the Kraft Building, which was renovated with state and federal funds and $106,000 from the city's revolving loan fund. That loan has been the subject of some debate in Mount Carroll. (Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@saukvalley.com)
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A TIF district is an economic development tool used to raise money for infrastructure and redevelopment projects in blighted areas designed to attract new businesses. When a TIF district is created, a base value of the property within its borders is calculated, and for up to 23 years – sometimes extended to 35 – local taxing bodies such as schools collect taxes only at that base level.

In Mount Carroll, the city gets everything collected above the base. Under the agreement with CDC, the city is supposed to make payments over 15 years from the TIF fund to the revolving loan fund – at a 2 percent interest rate.

Cooper, the former alderwoman, said the loan agreement was a “raw deal.”

“It’s a way of spending the city’s largess,” she said.

Alderwoman Bork said, “Who wouldn’t want a loan they didn’t have to pay back?”

The TIF money has been going to a dissolved corporation, she said.

Cooper said TIF money is not supposed to be used for speculative projects.

“There was no going concern there,” she said. “They had to buy the building. It was burned out. I don’t know what you would call that other than speculative.”

She and Aldermen Sisler and Bork said they were worried because the CDC had dissolved.

Schau called that a “paperwork snafu.” The project was serious, he said, noting that it received a $180,000 state grant and $99,000 from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development.

‘It tears citizens apart’

The Kraft project is part of a downtown turnaround for the better, its boosters say.

“We’re seeing something in every building downtown,” City Clerk Cuckler said. “Our sales tax revenue is better than what I thought it would be after [the recession]. Come here on a Friday, Saturday or Sunday night and see if you can find a parking spot.”

Schau said the CDC is made up of volunteers who have the best interests of Mount Carroll at heart. And he said the members of the revolving loan committee who also belong to the CDC abstained from making recommendations on the group’s Kraft project.

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