Sen. Susan Garrett

Filed: 2/7/2006

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 3086

2     AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 3086 by replacing
3 everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4     "Section 5. The Statute on Statutes is amended by adding
5 Section 10 as follows:
 
6     (5 ILCS 70/10 new)
7     Sec. 10. Exercise of the power of eminent domain for
8 private development purposes; blighted property.
9     (a) Neither the State nor a unit of local government may
10 take or damage property for private development through the
11 exercise of the power of eminent domain unless (i) the property
12 is in an area that is a "blighted area", as defined in Section
13 11-74.4-3 of the Illinois Municipal Code or, alternatively, in
14 the applicable statute authorizing the entity to exercise the
15 power of eminent domain; and (ii)(A) the State or unit of local
16 government has entered into an express written agreement in
17 which a private person or entity agrees to undertake a
18 development project within the blighted area that specifically
19 details the reasons for which the property or rights in that
20 property are necessary for the success of the development
21 project, or (B) the exercise of eminent domain power and the
22 proposed use of the property by the State or unit of local
23 government are consistent with a regional plan that has been
24 adopted within the past 5 years in accordance with Section

 

 

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1 5-14001 of the Counties Code or Section 11-12-6 of the Illinois
2 Municipal Code or with a local land resource management plan
3 adopted under Section 4 of the Local Land Resource Management
4 Planning Act.
5     (b) The State or a unit of local government exercises the
6 power of eminent domain for private development if:
7         (1) the taking confers a private benefit on a
8     particular private party through the use of the property;
9     or
10         (2) the taking is for a public use that is merely a
11     pretext in order to confer a private benefit on a
12     particular private party.
13     A State or unit of local government does not exercise the
14 power of eminent domain for private development if the economic
15 development is a secondary purpose resulting from municipal
16 community development or municipal urban renewal activities to
17 eliminate an existing affirmative harm on society from slums to
18 protect public health and safety.
19     (c) "Private development" does not include any of the
20 following:
21         (1) Transportation projects, including, but not
22     limited to, railroads, airports, or public roads or
23     highways.
24         (2) Water supply, wastewater, flood control, and
25     drainage projects.
26         (3) Public buildings, hospitals, and parks.
27         (4) The provision of utility service.
28         (5) Development for any purpose for which the exercise
29     of the power of eminent domain is authorized under the
30     Public Utilities Act.
31         (6) Libraries, museums, and related facilities and any
32     infrastructure related to those facilities.
33     (d) This Section does not affect the authority of a
34 governmental entity to condemn a leasehold estate on property

 

 

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1 owned by the governmental entity.
2     (e) The determination by the State or a unit of local
3 government that is proposing the exercise of the power of
4 eminent domain that the taking does not involve an act or
5 circumstance prohibited under this Section does not create a
6 presumption with respect to whether the taking involves that
7 act or circumstance.
8     (f) This Section is a limitation on the exercise of the
9 power of eminent domain, but is not an independent grant of
10 authority to exercise the power of eminent domain.
11     (g) The authorization of the use of eminent domain
12 proceedings to take or damage property is an exclusive power
13 and function of the State. Neither the State nor a unit of
14 local government, including a home rule unit, may exercise the
15 power of eminent domain for private development purposes
16 otherwise than as provided in this Section. This Section is a
17 denial and limitation of home rule powers and functions under
18 subsection (h) of Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois
19 Constitution.
20     (h) Neither the State nor a unit of local government may
21 take or damage property used for production agriculture for
22 private development through the exercise of the power of
23 eminent domain. For purposes of this subsection (h),
24 "production agriculture" means that term as it is defined in
25 Section 3-35 of the Use Tax Act.
 
26     Section 10. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
27 changing Section 11-74.4-3 as follows:
 
28     (65 ILCS 5/11-74.4-3)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-74.4-3)
29     (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 94-702 and
30 94-711)
31     Sec. 11-74.4-3. Definitions. The following terms, wherever
32 used or referred to in this Division 74.4 shall have the

 

 

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1 following respective meanings, unless in any case a different
2 meaning clearly appears from the context.
3     (a) For any redevelopment project area that has been
4 designated pursuant to this Section by an ordinance adopted
5 prior to November 1, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
6 91-478), "blighted area" shall have the meaning set forth in
7 this Section prior to that date.
8     On and after November 1, 1999, "blighted area" means any
9 improved or vacant area within the boundaries of a
10 redevelopment project area located within the territorial
11 limits of the municipality where:
12         (1) If improved, industrial, commercial, and
13     residential buildings or improvements are detrimental to
14     the public safety, health, or welfare because of a
15     combination of 5 or more of the following factors, each of
16     which is (i) present, with that presence documented, to a
17     meaningful extent so that a municipality may reasonably
18     find that the factor is clearly present within the intent
19     of the Act and (ii) reasonably distributed throughout the
20     improved part of the redevelopment project area:
21             (A) Dilapidation. An advanced state of disrepair
22         or neglect of necessary repairs to the primary
23         structural components of buildings or improvements in
24         such a combination that a documented building
25         condition analysis determines that major repair is
26         required or the defects are so serious and so extensive
27         that the buildings must be removed.
28             (B) Obsolescence. The condition or process of
29         falling into disuse. Structures have become ill-suited
30         for the original use.
31             (C) Deterioration. With respect to buildings,
32         defects including, but not limited to, major defects in
33         the secondary building components such as doors,
34         windows, porches, gutters and downspouts, and fascia.

 

 

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1         With respect to surface improvements, that the
2         condition of roadways, alleys, curbs, gutters,
3         sidewalks, off-street parking, and surface storage
4         areas evidence deterioration, including, but not
5         limited to, surface cracking, crumbling, potholes,
6         depressions, loose paving material, and weeds
7         protruding through paved surfaces.
8             (D) Presence of structures below minimum code
9         standards. All structures that do not meet the
10         standards of zoning, subdivision, building, fire, and
11         other governmental codes applicable to property, but
12         not including housing and property maintenance codes.
13             (E) Illegal use of individual structures. The use
14         of structures in violation of applicable federal,
15         State, or local laws, exclusive of those applicable to
16         the presence of structures below minimum code
17         standards.
18             (F) Excessive vacancies. The presence of buildings
19         that are unoccupied or under-utilized and that
20         represent an adverse influence on the area because of
21         the frequency, extent, or duration of the vacancies.
22             (G) Lack of ventilation, light, or sanitary
23         facilities. The absence of adequate ventilation for
24         light or air circulation in spaces or rooms without
25         windows, or that require the removal of dust, odor,
26         gas, smoke, or other noxious airborne materials.
27         Inadequate natural light and ventilation means the
28         absence of skylights or windows for interior spaces or
29         rooms and improper window sizes and amounts by room
30         area to window area ratios. Inadequate sanitary
31         facilities refers to the absence or inadequacy of
32         garbage storage and enclosure, bathroom facilities,
33         hot water and kitchens, and structural inadequacies
34         preventing ingress and egress to and from all rooms and

 

 

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1         units within a building.
2             (H) Inadequate utilities. Underground and overhead
3         utilities such as storm sewers and storm drainage,
4         sanitary sewers, water lines, and gas, telephone, and
5         electrical services that are shown to be inadequate.
6         Inadequate utilities are those that are: (i) of
7         insufficient capacity to serve the uses in the
8         redevelopment project area, (ii) deteriorated,
9         antiquated, obsolete, or in disrepair, or (iii)
10         lacking within the redevelopment project area.
11             (I) Excessive land coverage and overcrowding of
12         structures and community facilities. The
13         over-intensive use of property and the crowding of
14         buildings and accessory facilities onto a site.
15         Examples of problem conditions warranting the
16         designation of an area as one exhibiting excessive land
17         coverage are: (i) the presence of buildings either
18         improperly situated on parcels or located on parcels of
19         inadequate size and shape in relation to present-day
20         standards of development for health and safety and (ii)
21         the presence of multiple buildings on a single parcel.
22         For there to be a finding of excessive land coverage,
23         these parcels must exhibit one or more of the following
24         conditions: insufficient provision for light and air
25         within or around buildings, increased threat of spread
26         of fire due to the close proximity of buildings, lack
27         of adequate or proper access to a public right-of-way,
28         lack of reasonably required off-street parking, or
29         inadequate provision for loading and service.
30             (J) Deleterious land use or layout. The existence
31         of incompatible land-use relationships, buildings
32         occupied by inappropriate mixed-uses, or uses
33         considered to be noxious, offensive, or unsuitable for
34         the surrounding area.

 

 

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1             (K) Environmental clean-up. The proposed
2         redevelopment project area has incurred Illinois
3         Environmental Protection Agency or United States
4         Environmental Protection Agency remediation costs for,
5         or a study conducted by an independent consultant
6         recognized as having expertise in environmental
7         remediation has determined a need for, the clean-up of
8         hazardous waste, hazardous substances, or underground
9         storage tanks required by State or federal law,
10         provided that the remediation costs constitute a
11         material impediment to the development or
12         redevelopment of the redevelopment project area.
13             (L) Lack of community planning. The proposed
14         redevelopment project area was developed prior to or
15         without the benefit or guidance of a community plan.
16         This means that the development occurred prior to the
17         adoption by the municipality of a comprehensive or
18         other community plan or that the plan was not followed
19         at the time of the area's development. This factor must
20         be documented by evidence of adverse or incompatible
21         land-use relationships, inadequate street layout,
22         improper subdivision, parcels of inadequate shape and
23         size to meet contemporary development standards, or
24         other evidence demonstrating an absence of effective
25         community planning.
26             (M) The total equalized assessed value of the
27         proposed redevelopment project area has declined for 3
28         of the last 5 calendar years prior to the year in which
29         the redevelopment project area is designated or is
30         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
31         balance of the municipality for 3 of the last 5
32         calendar years for which information is available or is
33         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
34         Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published

 

 

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1         by the United States Department of Labor or successor
2         agency for 3 of the last 5 calendar years prior to the
3         year in which the redevelopment project area is
4         designated.
5         (2) If vacant, the sound growth of the redevelopment
6     project area is impaired by a combination of 2 or more of
7     the following factors, each of which is (i) present, with
8     that presence documented, to a meaningful extent so that a
9     municipality may reasonably find that the factor is clearly
10     present within the intent of the Act and (ii) reasonably
11     distributed throughout the vacant part of the
12     redevelopment project area to which it pertains:
13             (A) Obsolete platting of vacant land that results
14         in parcels of limited or narrow size or configurations
15         of parcels of irregular size or shape that would be
16         difficult to develop on a planned basis and in a manner
17         compatible with contemporary standards and
18         requirements, or platting that failed to create
19         rights-of-ways for streets or alleys or that created
20         inadequate right-of-way widths for streets, alleys, or
21         other public rights-of-way or that omitted easements
22         for public utilities.
23             (B) Diversity of ownership of parcels of vacant
24         land sufficient in number to retard or impede the
25         ability to assemble the land for development.
26             (C) Tax and special assessment delinquencies exist
27         or the property has been the subject of tax sales under
28         the Property Tax Code within the last 5 years.
29             (D) Deterioration of structures or site
30         improvements in neighboring areas adjacent to the
31         vacant land.
32             (E) The area has incurred Illinois Environmental
33         Protection Agency or United States Environmental
34         Protection Agency remediation costs for, or a study

 

 

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1         conducted by an independent consultant recognized as
2         having expertise in environmental remediation has
3         determined a need for, the clean-up of hazardous waste,
4         hazardous substances, or underground storage tanks
5         required by State or federal law, provided that the
6         remediation costs constitute a material impediment to
7         the development or redevelopment of the redevelopment
8         project area.
9             (F) The total equalized assessed value of the
10         proposed redevelopment project area has declined for 3
11         of the last 5 calendar years prior to the year in which
12         the redevelopment project area is designated or is
13         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
14         balance of the municipality for 3 of the last 5
15         calendar years for which information is available or is
16         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
17         Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published
18         by the United States Department of Labor or successor
19         agency for 3 of the last 5 calendar years prior to the
20         year in which the redevelopment project area is
21         designated.
22         (3) If vacant, the sound growth of the redevelopment
23     project area is impaired by one of the following factors
24     that (i) is present, with that presence documented, to a
25     meaningful extent so that a municipality may reasonably
26     find that the factor is clearly present within the intent
27     of the Act and (ii) is reasonably distributed throughout
28     the vacant part of the redevelopment project area to which
29     it pertains:
30             (A) The area consists of one or more unused
31         quarries, mines, or strip mine ponds.
32             (B) The area consists of unused rail yards, rail
33         tracks, or railroad rights-of-way.
34             (C) The area, prior to its designation, is subject

 

 

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1         to (i) chronic flooding that adversely impacts on real
2         property in the area as certified by a registered
3         professional engineer or appropriate regulatory agency
4         or (ii) surface water that discharges from all or a
5         part of the area and contributes to flooding within the
6         same watershed, but only if the redevelopment project
7         provides for facilities or improvements to contribute
8         to the alleviation of all or part of the flooding.
9             (D) The area consists of an unused or illegal
10         disposal site containing earth, stone, building
11         debris, or similar materials that were removed from
12         construction, demolition, excavation, or dredge sites.
13             (E) Prior to November 1, 1999, the area is not less
14         than 50 nor more than 100 acres and 75% of which is
15         vacant (notwithstanding that the area has been used for
16         commercial agricultural purposes within 5 years prior
17         to the designation of the redevelopment project area),
18         and the area meets at least one of the factors itemized
19         in paragraph (1) of this subsection, the area has been
20         designated as a town or village center by ordinance or
21         comprehensive plan adopted prior to January 1, 1982,
22         and the area has not been developed for that designated
23         purpose.
24             (F) The area qualified as a blighted improved area
25         immediately prior to becoming vacant, unless there has
26         been substantial private investment in the immediately
27         surrounding area.
28     (b) For any redevelopment project area that has been
29 designated pursuant to this Section by an ordinance adopted
30 prior to November 1, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
31 91-478), "conservation area" shall have the meaning set forth
32 in this Section prior to that date.
33     On and after November 1, 1999, "conservation area" means
34 any improved area within the boundaries of a redevelopment

 

 

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1 project area located within the territorial limits of the
2 municipality in which 50% or more of the structures in the area
3 have an age of 35 years or more. Such an area is not yet a
4 blighted area but because of a combination of 3 or more of the
5 following factors is detrimental to the public safety, health,
6 morals or welfare and such an area may become a blighted area:
7         (1) Dilapidation. An advanced state of disrepair or
8     neglect of necessary repairs to the primary structural
9     components of buildings or improvements in such a
10     combination that a documented building condition analysis
11     determines that major repair is required or the defects are
12     so serious and so extensive that the buildings must be
13     removed.
14         (2) Obsolescence. The condition or process of falling
15     into disuse. Structures have become ill-suited for the
16     original use.
17         (3) Deterioration. With respect to buildings, defects
18     including, but not limited to, major defects in the
19     secondary building components such as doors, windows,
20     porches, gutters and downspouts, and fascia. With respect
21     to surface improvements, that the condition of roadways,
22     alleys, curbs, gutters, sidewalks, off-street parking, and
23     surface storage areas evidence deterioration, including,
24     but not limited to, surface cracking, crumbling, potholes,
25     depressions, loose paving material, and weeds protruding
26     through paved surfaces.
27         (4) Presence of structures below minimum code
28     standards. All structures that do not meet the standards of
29     zoning, subdivision, building, fire, and other
30     governmental codes applicable to property, but not
31     including housing and property maintenance codes.
32         (5) Illegal use of individual structures. The use of
33     structures in violation of applicable federal, State, or
34     local laws, exclusive of those applicable to the presence

 

 

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1     of structures below minimum code standards.
2         (6) Excessive vacancies. The presence of buildings
3     that are unoccupied or under-utilized and that represent an
4     adverse influence on the area because of the frequency,
5     extent, or duration of the vacancies.
6         (7) Lack of ventilation, light, or sanitary
7     facilities. The absence of adequate ventilation for light
8     or air circulation in spaces or rooms without windows, or
9     that require the removal of dust, odor, gas, smoke, or
10     other noxious airborne materials. Inadequate natural light
11     and ventilation means the absence or inadequacy of
12     skylights or windows for interior spaces or rooms and
13     improper window sizes and amounts by room area to window
14     area ratios. Inadequate sanitary facilities refers to the
15     absence or inadequacy of garbage storage and enclosure,
16     bathroom facilities, hot water and kitchens, and
17     structural inadequacies preventing ingress and egress to
18     and from all rooms and units within a building.
19         (8) Inadequate utilities. Underground and overhead
20     utilities such as storm sewers and storm drainage, sanitary
21     sewers, water lines, and gas, telephone, and electrical
22     services that are shown to be inadequate. Inadequate
23     utilities are those that are: (i) of insufficient capacity
24     to serve the uses in the redevelopment project area, (ii)
25     deteriorated, antiquated, obsolete, or in disrepair, or
26     (iii) lacking within the redevelopment project area.
27         (9) Excessive land coverage and overcrowding of
28     structures and community facilities. The over-intensive
29     use of property and the crowding of buildings and accessory
30     facilities onto a site. Examples of problem conditions
31     warranting the designation of an area as one exhibiting
32     excessive land coverage are: the presence of buildings
33     either improperly situated on parcels or located on parcels
34     of inadequate size and shape in relation to present-day

 

 

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1     standards of development for health and safety and the
2     presence of multiple buildings on a single parcel. For
3     there to be a finding of excessive land coverage, these
4     parcels must exhibit one or more of the following
5     conditions: insufficient provision for light and air
6     within or around buildings, increased threat of spread of
7     fire due to the close proximity of buildings, lack of
8     adequate or proper access to a public right-of-way, lack of
9     reasonably required off-street parking, or inadequate
10     provision for loading and service.
11         (10) Deleterious land use or layout. The existence of
12     incompatible land-use relationships, buildings occupied by
13     inappropriate mixed-uses, or uses considered to be
14     noxious, offensive, or unsuitable for the surrounding
15     area.
16         (11) Lack of community planning. The proposed
17     redevelopment project area was developed prior to or
18     without the benefit or guidance of a community plan. This
19     means that the development occurred prior to the adoption
20     by the municipality of a comprehensive or other community
21     plan or that the plan was not followed at the time of the
22     area's development. This factor must be documented by
23     evidence of adverse or incompatible land-use
24     relationships, inadequate street layout, improper
25     subdivision, parcels of inadequate shape and size to meet
26     contemporary development standards, or other evidence
27     demonstrating an absence of effective community planning.
28         (12) The area has incurred Illinois Environmental
29     Protection Agency or United States Environmental
30     Protection Agency remediation costs for, or a study
31     conducted by an independent consultant recognized as
32     having expertise in environmental remediation has
33     determined a need for, the clean-up of hazardous waste,
34     hazardous substances, or underground storage tanks

 

 

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1     required by State or federal law, provided that the
2     remediation costs constitute a material impediment to the
3     development or redevelopment of the redevelopment project
4     area.
5         (13) The total equalized assessed value of the proposed
6     redevelopment project area has declined for 3 of the last 5
7     calendar years for which information is available or is
8     increasing at an annual rate that is less than the balance
9     of the municipality for 3 of the last 5 calendar years for
10     which information is available or is increasing at an
11     annual rate that is less than the Consumer Price Index for
12     All Urban Consumers published by the United States
13     Department of Labor or successor agency for 3 of the last 5
14     calendar years for which information is available.
15     (c) "Industrial park" means an area in a blighted or
16 conservation area suitable for use by any manufacturing,
17 industrial, research or transportation enterprise, of
18 facilities to include but not be limited to factories, mills,
19 processing plants, assembly plants, packing plants,
20 fabricating plants, industrial distribution centers,
21 warehouses, repair overhaul or service facilities, freight
22 terminals, research facilities, test facilities or railroad
23 facilities.
24     (d) "Industrial park conservation area" means an area
25 within the boundaries of a redevelopment project area located
26 within the territorial limits of a municipality that is a labor
27 surplus municipality or within 1 1/2 miles of the territorial
28 limits of a municipality that is a labor surplus municipality
29 if the area is annexed to the municipality; which area is zoned
30 as industrial no later than at the time the municipality by
31 ordinance designates the redevelopment project area, and which
32 area includes both vacant land suitable for use as an
33 industrial park and a blighted area or conservation area
34 contiguous to such vacant land.

 

 

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1     (e) "Labor surplus municipality" means a municipality in
2 which, at any time during the 6 months before the municipality
3 by ordinance designates an industrial park conservation area,
4 the unemployment rate was over 6% and was also 100% or more of
5 the national average unemployment rate for that same time as
6 published in the United States Department of Labor Bureau of
7 Labor Statistics publication entitled "The Employment
8 Situation" or its successor publication. For the purpose of
9 this subsection, if unemployment rate statistics for the
10 municipality are not available, the unemployment rate in the
11 municipality shall be deemed to be the same as the unemployment
12 rate in the principal county in which the municipality is
13 located.
14     (f) "Municipality" shall mean a city, village,
15 incorporated town, or a township that is located in the
16 unincorporated portion of a county with 3 million or more
17 inhabitants, if the county adopted an ordinance that approved
18 the township's redevelopment plan.
19     (g) "Initial Sales Tax Amounts" means the amount of taxes
20 paid under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax Act,
21 Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, the
22 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, and the Municipal
23 Service Occupation Tax Act by retailers and servicemen on
24 transactions at places located in a State Sales Tax Boundary
25 during the calendar year 1985.
26     (g-1) "Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts" means the amount
27 of taxes paid under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax
28 Act, Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, the
29 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, and the Municipal
30 Service Occupation Tax Act by retailers and servicemen on
31 transactions at places located within the State Sales Tax
32 Boundary revised pursuant to Section 11-74.4-8a(9) of this Act.
33     (h) "Municipal Sales Tax Increment" means an amount equal
34 to the increase in the aggregate amount of taxes paid to a

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 16 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1 municipality from the Local Government Tax Fund arising from
2 sales by retailers and servicemen within the redevelopment
3 project area or State Sales Tax Boundary, as the case may be,
4 for as long as the redevelopment project area or State Sales
5 Tax Boundary, as the case may be, exist over and above the
6 aggregate amount of taxes as certified by the Illinois
7 Department of Revenue and paid under the Municipal Retailers'
8 Occupation Tax Act and the Municipal Service Occupation Tax Act
9 by retailers and servicemen, on transactions at places of
10 business located in the redevelopment project area or State
11 Sales Tax Boundary, as the case may be, during the base year
12 which shall be the calendar year immediately prior to the year
13 in which the municipality adopted tax increment allocation
14 financing. For purposes of computing the aggregate amount of
15 such taxes for base years occurring prior to 1985, the
16 Department of Revenue shall determine the Initial Sales Tax
17 Amounts for such taxes and deduct therefrom an amount equal to
18 4% of the aggregate amount of taxes per year for each year the
19 base year is prior to 1985, but not to exceed a total deduction
20 of 12%. The amount so determined shall be known as the
21 "Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts". For purposes of
22 determining the Municipal Sales Tax Increment, the Department
23 of Revenue shall for each period subtract from the amount paid
24 to the municipality from the Local Government Tax Fund arising
25 from sales by retailers and servicemen on transactions located
26 in the redevelopment project area or the State Sales Tax
27 Boundary, as the case may be, the certified Initial Sales Tax
28 Amounts, the Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
29 Initial Sales Tax Amounts for the Municipal Retailers'
30 Occupation Tax Act and the Municipal Service Occupation Tax
31 Act. For the State Fiscal Year 1989, this calculation shall be
32 made by utilizing the calendar year 1987 to determine the tax
33 amounts received. For the State Fiscal Year 1990, this
34 calculation shall be made by utilizing the period from January

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 17 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1 1, 1988, until September 30, 1988, to determine the tax amounts
2 received from retailers and servicemen pursuant to the
3 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax and the Municipal Service
4 Occupation Tax Act, which shall have deducted therefrom
5 nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, the
6 Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales
7 Tax Amounts as appropriate. For the State Fiscal Year 1991,
8 this calculation shall be made by utilizing the period from
9 October 1, 1988, to June 30, 1989, to determine the tax amounts
10 received from retailers and servicemen pursuant to the
11 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax and the Municipal Service
12 Occupation Tax Act which shall have deducted therefrom
13 nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts,
14 Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales
15 Tax Amounts as appropriate. For every State Fiscal Year
16 thereafter, the applicable period shall be the 12 months
17 beginning July 1 and ending June 30 to determine the tax
18 amounts received which shall have deducted therefrom the
19 certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, the Adjusted Initial Sales
20 Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts, as the
21 case may be.
22     (i) "Net State Sales Tax Increment" means the sum of the
23 following: (a) 80% of the first $100,000 of State Sales Tax
24 Increment annually generated within a State Sales Tax Boundary;
25 (b) 60% of the amount in excess of $100,000 but not exceeding
26 $500,000 of State Sales Tax Increment annually generated within
27 a State Sales Tax Boundary; and (c) 40% of all amounts in
28 excess of $500,000 of State Sales Tax Increment annually
29 generated within a State Sales Tax Boundary. If, however, a
30 municipality established a tax increment financing district in
31 a county with a population in excess of 3,000,000 before
32 January 1, 1986, and the municipality entered into a contract
33 or issued bonds after January 1, 1986, but before December 31,
34 1986, to finance redevelopment project costs within a State

 

 

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1 Sales Tax Boundary, then the Net State Sales Tax Increment
2 means, for the fiscal years beginning July 1, 1990, and July 1,
3 1991, 100% of the State Sales Tax Increment annually generated
4 within a State Sales Tax Boundary; and notwithstanding any
5 other provision of this Act, for those fiscal years the
6 Department of Revenue shall distribute to those municipalities
7 100% of their Net State Sales Tax Increment before any
8 distribution to any other municipality and regardless of
9 whether or not those other municipalities will receive 100% of
10 their Net State Sales Tax Increment. For Fiscal Year 1999, and
11 every year thereafter until the year 2007, for any municipality
12 that has not entered into a contract or has not issued bonds
13 prior to June 1, 1988 to finance redevelopment project costs
14 within a State Sales Tax Boundary, the Net State Sales Tax
15 Increment shall be calculated as follows: By multiplying the
16 Net State Sales Tax Increment by 90% in the State Fiscal Year
17 1999; 80% in the State Fiscal Year 2000; 70% in the State
18 Fiscal Year 2001; 60% in the State Fiscal Year 2002; 50% in the
19 State Fiscal Year 2003; 40% in the State Fiscal Year 2004; 30%
20 in the State Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the State Fiscal Year
21 2006; and 10% in the State Fiscal Year 2007. No payment shall
22 be made for State Fiscal Year 2008 and thereafter.
23     Municipalities that issued bonds in connection with a
24 redevelopment project in a redevelopment project area within
25 the State Sales Tax Boundary prior to July 29, 1991, or that
26 entered into contracts in connection with a redevelopment
27 project in a redevelopment project area before June 1, 1988,
28 shall continue to receive their proportional share of the
29 Illinois Tax Increment Fund distribution until the date on
30 which the redevelopment project is completed or terminated. If,
31 however, a municipality that issued bonds in connection with a
32 redevelopment project in a redevelopment project area within
33 the State Sales Tax Boundary prior to July 29, 1991 retires the
34 bonds prior to June 30, 2007 or a municipality that entered

 

 

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1 into contracts in connection with a redevelopment project in a
2 redevelopment project area before June 1, 1988 completes the
3 contracts prior to June 30, 2007, then so long as the
4 redevelopment project is not completed or is not terminated,
5 the Net State Sales Tax Increment shall be calculated,
6 beginning on the date on which the bonds are retired or the
7 contracts are completed, as follows: By multiplying the Net
8 State Sales Tax Increment by 60% in the State Fiscal Year 2002;
9 50% in the State Fiscal Year 2003; 40% in the State Fiscal Year
10 2004; 30% in the State Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the State
11 Fiscal Year 2006; and 10% in the State Fiscal Year 2007. No
12 payment shall be made for State Fiscal Year 2008 and
13 thereafter. Refunding of any bonds issued prior to July 29,
14 1991, shall not alter the Net State Sales Tax Increment.
15     (j) "State Utility Tax Increment Amount" means an amount
16 equal to the aggregate increase in State electric and gas tax
17 charges imposed on owners and tenants, other than residential
18 customers, of properties located within the redevelopment
19 project area under Section 9-222 of the Public Utilities Act,
20 over and above the aggregate of such charges as certified by
21 the Department of Revenue and paid by owners and tenants, other
22 than residential customers, of properties within the
23 redevelopment project area during the base year, which shall be
24 the calendar year immediately prior to the year of the adoption
25 of the ordinance authorizing tax increment allocation
26 financing.
27     (k) "Net State Utility Tax Increment" means the sum of the
28 following: (a) 80% of the first $100,000 of State Utility Tax
29 Increment annually generated by a redevelopment project area;
30 (b) 60% of the amount in excess of $100,000 but not exceeding
31 $500,000 of the State Utility Tax Increment annually generated
32 by a redevelopment project area; and (c) 40% of all amounts in
33 excess of $500,000 of State Utility Tax Increment annually
34 generated by a redevelopment project area. For the State Fiscal

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 20 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1 Year 1999, and every year thereafter until the year 2007, for
2 any municipality that has not entered into a contract or has
3 not issued bonds prior to June 1, 1988 to finance redevelopment
4 project costs within a redevelopment project area, the Net
5 State Utility Tax Increment shall be calculated as follows: By
6 multiplying the Net State Utility Tax Increment by 90% in the
7 State Fiscal Year 1999; 80% in the State Fiscal Year 2000; 70%
8 in the State Fiscal Year 2001; 60% in the State Fiscal Year
9 2002; 50% in the State Fiscal Year 2003; 40% in the State
10 Fiscal Year 2004; 30% in the State Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the
11 State Fiscal Year 2006; and 10% in the State Fiscal Year 2007.
12 No payment shall be made for the State Fiscal Year 2008 and
13 thereafter.
14     Municipalities that issue bonds in connection with the
15 redevelopment project during the period from June 1, 1988 until
16 3 years after the effective date of this Amendatory Act of 1988
17 shall receive the Net State Utility Tax Increment, subject to
18 appropriation, for 15 State Fiscal Years after the issuance of
19 such bonds. For the 16th through the 20th State Fiscal Years
20 after issuance of the bonds, the Net State Utility Tax
21 Increment shall be calculated as follows: By multiplying the
22 Net State Utility Tax Increment by 90% in year 16; 80% in year
23 17; 70% in year 18; 60% in year 19; and 50% in year 20.
24 Refunding of any bonds issued prior to June 1, 1988, shall not
25 alter the revised Net State Utility Tax Increment payments set
26 forth above.
27     (l) "Obligations" mean bonds, loans, debentures, notes,
28 special certificates or other evidence of indebtedness issued
29 by the municipality to carry out a redevelopment project or to
30 refund outstanding obligations.
31     (m) "Payment in lieu of taxes" means those estimated tax
32 revenues from real property in a redevelopment project area
33 derived from real property that has been acquired by a
34 municipality which according to the redevelopment project or

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 21 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1 plan is to be used for a private use which taxing districts
2 would have received had a municipality not acquired the real
3 property and adopted tax increment allocation financing and
4 which would result from levies made after the time of the
5 adoption of tax increment allocation financing to the time the
6 current equalized value of real property in the redevelopment
7 project area exceeds the total initial equalized value of real
8 property in said area.
9     (n) "Redevelopment plan" means the comprehensive program
10 of the municipality for development or redevelopment intended
11 by the payment of redevelopment project costs to reduce or
12 eliminate those conditions the existence of which qualified the
13 redevelopment project area as a "blighted area" or
14 "conservation area" or combination thereof or "industrial park
15 conservation area," and thereby to enhance the tax bases of the
16 taxing districts which extend into the redevelopment project
17 area. On and after November 1, 1999 (the effective date of
18 Public Act 91-478), no redevelopment plan may be approved or
19 amended that includes the development of vacant land (i) with a
20 golf course and related clubhouse and other facilities or (ii)
21 designated by federal, State, county, or municipal government
22 as public land for outdoor recreational activities or for
23 nature preserves and used for that purpose within 5 years prior
24 to the adoption of the redevelopment plan. For the purpose of
25 this subsection, "recreational activities" is limited to mean
26 camping and hunting. Each redevelopment plan shall set forth in
27 writing the program to be undertaken to accomplish the
28 objectives and shall include but not be limited to:
29         (A) an itemized list of estimated redevelopment
30     project costs;
31         (B) evidence indicating that the redevelopment project
32     area on the whole has not been subject to growth and
33     development through investment by private enterprise;
34         (C) an assessment of any financial impact of the

 

 

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1     redevelopment project area on or any increased demand for
2     services from any taxing district affected by the plan and
3     any program to address such financial impact or increased
4     demand;
5         (D) the sources of funds to pay costs;
6         (E) the nature and term of the obligations to be
7     issued;
8         (F) the most recent equalized assessed valuation of the
9     redevelopment project area;
10         (G) an estimate as to the equalized assessed valuation
11     after redevelopment and the general land uses to apply in
12     the redevelopment project area;
13         (H) a commitment to fair employment practices and an
14     affirmative action plan;
15         (I) if it concerns an industrial park conservation
16     area, the plan shall also include a general description of
17     any proposed developer, user and tenant of any property, a
18     description of the type, structure and general character of
19     the facilities to be developed, a description of the type,
20     class and number of new employees to be employed in the
21     operation of the facilities to be developed; and
22         (J) if property is to be annexed to the municipality,
23     the plan shall include the terms of the annexation
24     agreement.
25     The provisions of items (B) and (C) of this subsection (n)
26 shall not apply to a municipality that before March 14, 1994
27 (the effective date of Public Act 88-537) had fixed, either by
28 its corporate authorities or by a commission designated under
29 subsection (k) of Section 11-74.4-4, a time and place for a
30 public hearing as required by subsection (a) of Section
31 11-74.4-5. No redevelopment plan shall be adopted unless a
32 municipality complies with all of the following requirements:
33         (1) The municipality finds that the redevelopment
34     project area on the whole has not been subject to growth

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 23 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1     and development through investment by private enterprise
2     and would not reasonably be anticipated to be developed
3     without the adoption of the redevelopment plan.
4         (2) The municipality finds that the redevelopment plan
5     and project conform to the comprehensive plan for the
6     development of the municipality as a whole, or, for
7     municipalities with a population of 100,000 or more,
8     regardless of when the redevelopment plan and project was
9     adopted, the redevelopment plan and project either: (i)
10     conforms to the strategic economic development or
11     redevelopment plan issued by the designated planning
12     authority of the municipality, or (ii) includes land uses
13     that have been approved by the planning commission of the
14     municipality.
15         (3) The redevelopment plan establishes the estimated
16     dates of completion of the redevelopment project and
17     retirement of obligations issued to finance redevelopment
18     project costs. Those dates: shall not be later than
19     December 31 of the year in which the payment to the
20     municipal treasurer as provided in subsection (b) of
21     Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is to be made with respect to
22     ad valorem taxes levied in the twenty-third calendar year
23     after the year in which the ordinance approving the
24     redevelopment project area is adopted if the ordinance was
25     adopted on or after January 15, 1981; shall not be later
26     than December 31 of the year in which the payment to the
27     municipal treasurer as provided in subsection (b) of
28     Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is to be made with respect to
29     ad valorem taxes levied in the thirty-third calendar year
30     after the year in which the ordinance approving the
31     redevelopment project area if the ordinance was adopted on
32     May 20, 1985 by the Village of Wheeling; and shall not be
33     later than December 31 of the year in which the payment to
34     the municipal treasurer as provided in subsection (b) of

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 24 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1     Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is to be made with respect to
2     ad valorem taxes levied in the thirty-fifth calendar year
3     after the year in which the ordinance approving the
4     redevelopment project area is adopted:
5             (A) if the ordinance was adopted before January 15,
6         1981, or
7             (B) if the ordinance was adopted in December 1983,
8         April 1984, July 1985, or December 1989, or
9             (C) if the ordinance was adopted in December 1987
10         and the redevelopment project is located within one
11         mile of Midway Airport, or
12             (D) if the ordinance was adopted before January 1,
13         1987 by a municipality in Mason County, or
14             (E) if the municipality is subject to the Local
15         Government Financial Planning and Supervision Act or
16         the Financially Distressed City Law, or
17             (F) if the ordinance was adopted in December 1984
18         by the Village of Rosemont, or
19             (G) if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,
20         1986 by a municipality located in Clinton County for
21         which at least $250,000 of tax increment bonds were
22         authorized on June 17, 1997, or if the ordinance was
23         adopted on December 31, 1986 by a municipality with a
24         population in 1990 of less than 3,600 that is located
25         in a county with a population in 1990 of less than
26         34,000 and for which at least $250,000 of tax increment
27         bonds were authorized on June 17, 1997, or
28             (H) if the ordinance was adopted on October 5, 1982
29         by the City of Kankakee, or if the ordinance was
30         adopted on December 29, 1986 by East St. Louis, or
31             (I) if the ordinance was adopted on November 12,
32         1991 by the Village of Sauget, or
33             (J) if the ordinance was adopted on February 11,
34         1985 by the City of Rock Island, or

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 25 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1             (K) if the ordinance was adopted before December
2         18, 1986 by the City of Moline, or
3             (L) if the ordinance was adopted in September 1988
4         by Sauk Village, or
5             (M) if the ordinance was adopted in October 1993 by
6         Sauk Village, or
7             (N) if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,
8         1986 by the City of Galva, or
9             (O) if the ordinance was adopted in March 1991 by
10         the City of Centreville, or
11             (P) if the ordinance was adopted on January 23,
12         1991 by the City of East St. Louis, or
13             (Q) if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,
14         1986 by the City of Aledo, or
15             (R) if the ordinance was adopted on February 5,
16         1990 by the City of Clinton, or
17             (S) if the ordinance was adopted on September 6,
18         1994 by the City of Freeport, or
19             (T) if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,
20         1986 by the City of Tuscola, or
21             (U) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,
22         1986 by the City of Sparta, or
23             (V) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,
24         1986 by the City of Beardstown, or
25             (W) if the ordinance was adopted on April 27, 1981,
26         October 21, 1985, or December 30, 1986 by the City of
27         Belleville, or
28             (X) if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,
29         1986 by the City of Collinsville, or
30             (Y) if the ordinance was adopted on September 14,
31         1994 by the City of Alton, or
32             (Z) if the ordinance was adopted on November 11,
33         1996 by the City of Lexington, or
34             (AA) if the ordinance was adopted on November 5,

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 26 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1         1984 by the City of LeRoy, or
2             (BB) if the ordinance was adopted on April 3, 1991
3         or June 3, 1992 by the City of Markham, or
4             (CC) if the ordinance was adopted on November 11,
5         1986 by the City of Pekin, or
6             (DD) if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,
7         1981 by the City of Champaign, or
8             (EE) if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,
9         1986 by the City of Urbana, or
10             (FF) if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,
11         1986 by the Village of Heyworth, or
12             (GG) if the ordinance was adopted on February 24,
13         1992 by the Village of Heyworth, or
14             (HH) if the ordinance was adopted on March 16, 1995
15         by the Village of Heyworth, or
16             (II) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,
17         1986 by the Town of Cicero, or
18             (JJ) if the ordinance was adopted on December 30,
19         1986 by the City of Effingham, or
20             (KK) if the ordinance was adopted on May 9, 1991 by
21         the Village of Tilton, or
22             (LL) if the ordinance was adopted on October 20,
23         1986 by the City of Elmhurst, or
24             (MM) if the ordinance was adopted on January 19,
25         1988 by the City of Waukegan, or
26             (NN) if the ordinance was adopted on September 21,
27         1998 by the City of Waukegan, or
28             (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,
29         1986 by the City of Sullivan, or
30             (PP) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,
31         1991 by the City of Sullivan, or .
32             (QQ) (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on December
33         31, 1986 by the City of Oglesby, or .
34             (RR) (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on July 28,

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 27 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1         1987 by the City of Marion, or
2             (SS) (PP) if the ordinance was adopted on April 23,
3         1990 by the City of Marion.
4         However, for redevelopment project areas for which
5     bonds were issued before July 29, 1991, or for which
6     contracts were entered into before June 1, 1988, in
7     connection with a redevelopment project in the area within
8     the State Sales Tax Boundary, the estimated dates of
9     completion of the redevelopment project and retirement of
10     obligations to finance redevelopment project costs may be
11     extended by municipal ordinance to December 31, 2013. The
12     termination procedures of subsection (b) of Section
13     11-74.4-8 are not required for these redevelopment project
14     areas in 2009 but are required in 2013. The extension
15     allowed by this amendatory Act of 1993 shall not apply to
16     real property tax increment allocation financing under
17     Section 11-74.4-8.
18         A municipality may by municipal ordinance amend an
19     existing redevelopment plan to conform to this paragraph
20     (3) as amended by Public Act 91-478, which municipal
21     ordinance may be adopted without further hearing or notice
22     and without complying with the procedures provided in this
23     Act pertaining to an amendment to or the initial approval
24     of a redevelopment plan and project and designation of a
25     redevelopment project area.
26         Those dates, for purposes of real property tax
27     increment allocation financing pursuant to Section
28     11-74.4-8 only, shall be not more than 35 years for
29     redevelopment project areas that were adopted on or after
30     December 16, 1986 and for which at least $8 million worth
31     of municipal bonds were authorized on or after December 19,
32     1989 but before January 1, 1990; provided that the
33     municipality elects to extend the life of the redevelopment
34     project area to 35 years by the adoption of an ordinance

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 28 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1     after at least 14 but not more than 30 days' written notice
2     to the taxing bodies, that would otherwise constitute the
3     joint review board for the redevelopment project area,
4     before the adoption of the ordinance.
5         Those dates, for purposes of real property tax
6     increment allocation financing pursuant to Section
7     11-74.4-8 only, shall be not more than 35 years for
8     redevelopment project areas that were established on or
9     after December 1, 1981 but before January 1, 1982 and for
10     which at least $1,500,000 worth of tax increment revenue
11     bonds were authorized on or after September 30, 1990 but
12     before July 1, 1991; provided that the municipality elects
13     to extend the life of the redevelopment project area to 35
14     years by the adoption of an ordinance after at least 14 but
15     not more than 30 days' written notice to the taxing bodies,
16     that would otherwise constitute the joint review board for
17     the redevelopment project area, before the adoption of the
18     ordinance.
19         (3.5) The municipality finds, in the case of an
20     industrial park conservation area, also that the
21     municipality is a labor surplus municipality and that the
22     implementation of the redevelopment plan will reduce
23     unemployment, create new jobs and by the provision of new
24     facilities enhance the tax base of the taxing districts
25     that extend into the redevelopment project area.
26         (4) If any incremental revenues are being utilized
27     under Section 8(a)(1) or 8(a)(2) of this Act in
28     redevelopment project areas approved by ordinance after
29     January 1, 1986, the municipality finds: (a) that the
30     redevelopment project area would not reasonably be
31     developed without the use of such incremental revenues, and
32     (b) that such incremental revenues will be exclusively
33     utilized for the development of the redevelopment project
34     area.

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 29 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1         (5) If the redevelopment plan will not result in
2     displacement of residents from 10 or more inhabited
3     residential units, and the municipality certifies in the
4     plan that such displacement will not result from the plan,
5     a housing impact study need not be performed. If, however,
6     the redevelopment plan would result in the displacement of
7     residents from 10 or more inhabited residential units, or
8     if the redevelopment project area contains 75 or more
9     inhabited residential units and no certification is made,
10     then the municipality shall prepare, as part of the
11     separate feasibility report required by subsection (a) of
12     Section 11-74.4-5, a housing impact study.
13         Part I of the housing impact study shall include (i)
14     data as to whether the residential units are single family
15     or multi-family units, (ii) the number and type of rooms
16     within the units, if that information is available, (iii)
17     whether the units are inhabited or uninhabited, as
18     determined not less than 45 days before the date that the
19     ordinance or resolution required by subsection (a) of
20     Section 11-74.4-5 is passed, and (iv) data as to the racial
21     and ethnic composition of the residents in the inhabited
22     residential units. The data requirement as to the racial
23     and ethnic composition of the residents in the inhabited
24     residential units shall be deemed to be fully satisfied by
25     data from the most recent federal census.
26         Part II of the housing impact study shall identify the
27     inhabited residential units in the proposed redevelopment
28     project area that are to be or may be removed. If inhabited
29     residential units are to be removed, then the housing
30     impact study shall identify (i) the number and location of
31     those units that will or may be removed, (ii) the
32     municipality's plans for relocation assistance for those
33     residents in the proposed redevelopment project area whose
34     residences are to be removed, (iii) the availability of

 

 

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1     replacement housing for those residents whose residences
2     are to be removed, and shall identify the type, location,
3     and cost of the housing, and (iv) the type and extent of
4     relocation assistance to be provided.
5         (6) On and after November 1, 1999, the housing impact
6     study required by paragraph (5) shall be incorporated in
7     the redevelopment plan for the redevelopment project area.
8         (7) On and after November 1, 1999, no redevelopment
9     plan shall be adopted, nor an existing plan amended, nor
10     shall residential housing that is occupied by households of
11     low-income and very low-income persons in currently
12     existing redevelopment project areas be removed after
13     November 1, 1999 unless the redevelopment plan provides,
14     with respect to inhabited housing units that are to be
15     removed for households of low-income and very low-income
16     persons, affordable housing and relocation assistance not
17     less than that which would be provided under the federal
18     Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
19     Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 and the regulations under
20     that Act, including the eligibility criteria. Affordable
21     housing may be either existing or newly constructed
22     housing. For purposes of this paragraph (7), "low-income
23     households", "very low-income households", and "affordable
24     housing" have the meanings set forth in the Illinois
25     Affordable Housing Act. The municipality shall make a good
26     faith effort to ensure that this affordable housing is
27     located in or near the redevelopment project area within
28     the municipality.
29         (8) On and after November 1, 1999, if, after the
30     adoption of the redevelopment plan for the redevelopment
31     project area, any municipality desires to amend its
32     redevelopment plan to remove more inhabited residential
33     units than specified in its original redevelopment plan,
34     that change shall be made in accordance with the procedures

 

 

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1     in subsection (c) of Section 11-74.4-5.
2         (9) For redevelopment project areas designated prior
3     to November 1, 1999, the redevelopment plan may be amended
4     without further joint review board meeting or hearing,
5     provided that the municipality shall give notice of any
6     such changes by mail to each affected taxing district and
7     registrant on the interested party registry, to authorize
8     the municipality to expend tax increment revenues for
9     redevelopment project costs defined by paragraphs (5) and
10     (7.5), subparagraphs (E) and (F) of paragraph (11), and
11     paragraph (11.5) of subsection (q) of Section 11-74.4-3, so
12     long as the changes do not increase the total estimated
13     redevelopment project costs set out in the redevelopment
14     plan by more than 5% after adjustment for inflation from
15     the date the plan was adopted.
16     (o) "Redevelopment project" means any public and private
17 development project in furtherance of the objectives of a
18 redevelopment plan. On and after November 1, 1999 (the
19 effective date of Public Act 91-478), no redevelopment plan may
20 be approved or amended that includes the development of vacant
21 land (i) with a golf course and related clubhouse and other
22 facilities or (ii) designated by federal, State, county, or
23 municipal government as public land for outdoor recreational
24 activities or for nature preserves and used for that purpose
25 within 5 years prior to the adoption of the redevelopment plan.
26 For the purpose of this subsection, "recreational activities"
27 is limited to mean camping and hunting.
28     (p) "Redevelopment project area" means an area designated
29 by the municipality, which is not less in the aggregate than 1
30 1/2 acres and in respect to which the municipality has made a
31 finding that there exist conditions which cause the area to be
32 classified as an industrial park conservation area or a
33 blighted area or a conservation area, or a combination of both
34 blighted areas and conservation areas.

 

 

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1     (q) "Redevelopment project costs" mean and include the sum
2 total of all reasonable or necessary costs incurred or
3 estimated to be incurred, and any such costs incidental to a
4 redevelopment plan and a redevelopment project. Such costs
5 include, without limitation, the following:
6         (1) Costs of studies, surveys, development of plans,
7     and specifications, implementation and administration of
8     the redevelopment plan including but not limited to staff
9     and professional service costs for architectural,
10     engineering, legal, financial, planning or other services,
11     provided however that no charges for professional services
12     may be based on a percentage of the tax increment
13     collected; except that on and after November 1, 1999 (the
14     effective date of Public Act 91-478), no contracts for
15     professional services, excluding architectural and
16     engineering services, may be entered into if the terms of
17     the contract extend beyond a period of 3 years. In
18     addition, "redevelopment project costs" shall not include
19     lobbying expenses. After consultation with the
20     municipality, each tax increment consultant or advisor to a
21     municipality that plans to designate or has designated a
22     redevelopment project area shall inform the municipality
23     in writing of any contracts that the consultant or advisor
24     has entered into with entities or individuals that have
25     received, or are receiving, payments financed by tax
26     increment revenues produced by the redevelopment project
27     area with respect to which the consultant or advisor has
28     performed, or will be performing, service for the
29     municipality. This requirement shall be satisfied by the
30     consultant or advisor before the commencement of services
31     for the municipality and thereafter whenever any other
32     contracts with those individuals or entities are executed
33     by the consultant or advisor;
34         (1.5) After July 1, 1999, annual administrative costs

 

 

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1     shall not include general overhead or administrative costs
2     of the municipality that would still have been incurred by
3     the municipality if the municipality had not designated a
4     redevelopment project area or approved a redevelopment
5     plan;
6         (1.6) The cost of marketing sites within the
7     redevelopment project area to prospective businesses,
8     developers, and investors;
9         (2) Property assembly costs, including but not limited
10     to acquisition of land and other property, real or
11     personal, or rights or interests therein, demolition of
12     buildings, site preparation, site improvements that serve
13     as an engineered barrier addressing ground level or below
14     ground environmental contamination, including, but not
15     limited to parking lots and other concrete or asphalt
16     barriers, and the clearing and grading of land;
17         (3) Costs of rehabilitation, reconstruction or repair
18     or remodeling of existing public or private buildings,
19     fixtures, and leasehold improvements; and the cost of
20     replacing an existing public building if pursuant to the
21     implementation of a redevelopment project the existing
22     public building is to be demolished to use the site for
23     private investment or devoted to a different use requiring
24     private investment;
25         (4) Costs of the construction of public works or
26     improvements, except that on and after November 1, 1999,
27     redevelopment project costs shall not include the cost of
28     constructing a new municipal public building principally
29     used to provide offices, storage space, or conference
30     facilities or vehicle storage, maintenance, or repair for
31     administrative, public safety, or public works personnel
32     and that is not intended to replace an existing public
33     building as provided under paragraph (3) of subsection (q)
34     of Section 11-74.4-3 unless either (i) the construction of

 

 

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1     the new municipal building implements a redevelopment
2     project that was included in a redevelopment plan that was
3     adopted by the municipality prior to November 1, 1999 or
4     (ii) the municipality makes a reasonable determination in
5     the redevelopment plan, supported by information that
6     provides the basis for that determination, that the new
7     municipal building is required to meet an increase in the
8     need for public safety purposes anticipated to result from
9     the implementation of the redevelopment plan;
10         (5) Costs of job training and retraining projects,
11     including the cost of "welfare to work" programs
12     implemented by businesses located within the redevelopment
13     project area;
14         (6) Financing costs, including but not limited to all
15     necessary and incidental expenses related to the issuance
16     of obligations and which may include payment of interest on
17     any obligations issued hereunder including interest
18     accruing during the estimated period of construction of any
19     redevelopment project for which such obligations are
20     issued and for not exceeding 36 months thereafter and
21     including reasonable reserves related thereto;
22         (7) To the extent the municipality by written agreement
23     accepts and approves the same, all or a portion of a taxing
24     district's capital costs resulting from the redevelopment
25     project necessarily incurred or to be incurred within a
26     taxing district in furtherance of the objectives of the
27     redevelopment plan and project.
28         (7.5) For redevelopment project areas designated (or
29     redevelopment project areas amended to add or increase the
30     number of tax-increment-financing assisted housing units)
31     on or after November 1, 1999, an elementary, secondary, or
32     unit school district's increased costs attributable to
33     assisted housing units located within the redevelopment
34     project area for which the developer or redeveloper

 

 

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1     receives financial assistance through an agreement with
2     the municipality or because the municipality incurs the
3     cost of necessary infrastructure improvements within the
4     boundaries of the assisted housing sites necessary for the
5     completion of that housing as authorized by this Act, and
6     which costs shall be paid by the municipality from the
7     Special Tax Allocation Fund when the tax increment revenue
8     is received as a result of the assisted housing units and
9     shall be calculated annually as follows:
10             (A) for foundation districts, excluding any school
11         district in a municipality with a population in excess
12         of 1,000,000, by multiplying the district's increase
13         in attendance resulting from the net increase in new
14         students enrolled in that school district who reside in
15         housing units within the redevelopment project area
16         that have received financial assistance through an
17         agreement with the municipality or because the
18         municipality incurs the cost of necessary
19         infrastructure improvements within the boundaries of
20         the housing sites necessary for the completion of that
21         housing as authorized by this Act since the designation
22         of the redevelopment project area by the most recently
23         available per capita tuition cost as defined in Section
24         10-20.12a of the School Code less any increase in
25         general State aid as defined in Section 18-8.05 of the
26         School Code attributable to these added new students
27         subject to the following annual limitations:
28                 (i) for unit school districts with a district
29             average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge of less
30             than $5,900, no more than 25% of the total amount
31             of property tax increment revenue produced by
32             those housing units that have received tax
33             increment finance assistance under this Act;
34                 (ii) for elementary school districts with a

 

 

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1             district average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge
2             of less than $5,900, no more than 17% of the total
3             amount of property tax increment revenue produced
4             by those housing units that have received tax
5             increment finance assistance under this Act; and
6                 (iii) for secondary school districts with a
7             district average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge
8             of less than $5,900, no more than 8% of the total
9             amount of property tax increment revenue produced
10             by those housing units that have received tax
11             increment finance assistance under this Act.
12             (B) For alternate method districts, flat grant
13         districts, and foundation districts with a district
14         average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge equal to or
15         more than $5,900, excluding any school district with a
16         population in excess of 1,000,000, by multiplying the
17         district's increase in attendance resulting from the
18         net increase in new students enrolled in that school
19         district who reside in housing units within the
20         redevelopment project area that have received
21         financial assistance through an agreement with the
22         municipality or because the municipality incurs the
23         cost of necessary infrastructure improvements within
24         the boundaries of the housing sites necessary for the
25         completion of that housing as authorized by this Act
26         since the designation of the redevelopment project
27         area by the most recently available per capita tuition
28         cost as defined in Section 10-20.12a of the School Code
29         less any increase in general state aid as defined in
30         Section 18-8.05 of the School Code attributable to
31         these added new students subject to the following
32         annual limitations:
33                 (i) for unit school districts, no more than 40%
34             of the total amount of property tax increment

 

 

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1             revenue produced by those housing units that have
2             received tax increment finance assistance under
3             this Act;
4                 (ii) for elementary school districts, no more
5             than 27% of the total amount of property tax
6             increment revenue produced by those housing units
7             that have received tax increment finance
8             assistance under this Act; and
9                 (iii) for secondary school districts, no more
10             than 13% of the total amount of property tax
11             increment revenue produced by those housing units
12             that have received tax increment finance
13             assistance under this Act.
14             (C) For any school district in a municipality with
15         a population in excess of 1,000,000, the following
16         restrictions shall apply to the reimbursement of
17         increased costs under this paragraph (7.5):
18                 (i) no increased costs shall be reimbursed
19             unless the school district certifies that each of
20             the schools affected by the assisted housing
21             project is at or over its student capacity;
22                 (ii) the amount reimbursable shall be reduced
23             by the value of any land donated to the school
24             district by the municipality or developer, and by
25             the value of any physical improvements made to the
26             schools by the municipality or developer; and
27                 (iii) the amount reimbursed may not affect
28             amounts otherwise obligated by the terms of any
29             bonds, notes, or other funding instruments, or the
30             terms of any redevelopment agreement.
31         Any school district seeking payment under this
32         paragraph (7.5) shall, after July 1 and before
33         September 30 of each year, provide the municipality
34         with reasonable evidence to support its claim for

 

 

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1         reimbursement before the municipality shall be
2         required to approve or make the payment to the school
3         district. If the school district fails to provide the
4         information during this period in any year, it shall
5         forfeit any claim to reimbursement for that year.
6         School districts may adopt a resolution waiving the
7         right to all or a portion of the reimbursement
8         otherwise required by this paragraph (7.5). By
9         acceptance of this reimbursement the school district
10         waives the right to directly or indirectly set aside,
11         modify, or contest in any manner the establishment of
12         the redevelopment project area or projects;
13         (7.7) For redevelopment project areas designated (or
14     redevelopment project areas amended to add or increase the
15     number of tax-increment-financing assisted housing units)
16     on or after January 1, 2005 (the effective date of Public
17     Act 93-961), a public library district's increased costs
18     attributable to assisted housing units located within the
19     redevelopment project area for which the developer or
20     redeveloper receives financial assistance through an
21     agreement with the municipality or because the
22     municipality incurs the cost of necessary infrastructure
23     improvements within the boundaries of the assisted housing
24     sites necessary for the completion of that housing as
25     authorized by this Act shall be paid to the library
26     district by the municipality from the Special Tax
27     Allocation Fund when the tax increment revenue is received
28     as a result of the assisted housing units. This paragraph
29     (7.7) applies only if (i) the library district is located
30     in a county that is subject to the Property Tax Extension
31     Limitation Law or (ii) the library district is not located
32     in a county that is subject to the Property Tax Extension
33     Limitation Law but the district is prohibited by any other
34     law from increasing its tax levy rate without a prior voter

 

 

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1     referendum.
2         The amount paid to a library district under this
3     paragraph (7.7) shall be calculated by multiplying (i) the
4     net increase in the number of persons eligible to obtain a
5     library card in that district who reside in housing units
6     within the redevelopment project area that have received
7     financial assistance through an agreement with the
8     municipality or because the municipality incurs the cost of
9     necessary infrastructure improvements within the
10     boundaries of the housing sites necessary for the
11     completion of that housing as authorized by this Act since
12     the designation of the redevelopment project area by (ii)
13     the per-patron cost of providing library services so long
14     as it does not exceed $120. The per-patron cost shall be
15     the Total Operating Expenditures Per Capita as stated in
16     the most recent Illinois Public Library Statistics
17     produced by the Library Research Center at the University
18     of Illinois. The municipality may deduct from the amount
19     that it must pay to a library district under this paragraph
20     any amount that it has voluntarily paid to the library
21     district from the tax increment revenue. The amount paid to
22     a library district under this paragraph (7.7) shall be no
23     more than 2% of the amount produced by the assisted housing
24     units and deposited into the Special Tax Allocation Fund.
25         A library district is not eligible for any payment
26     under this paragraph (7.7) unless the library district has
27     experienced an increase in the number of patrons from the
28     municipality that created the tax-increment-financing
29     district since the designation of the redevelopment
30     project area.
31         Any library district seeking payment under this
32     paragraph (7.7) shall, after July 1 and before September 30
33     of each year, provide the municipality with convincing
34     evidence to support its claim for reimbursement before the

 

 

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1     municipality shall be required to approve or make the
2     payment to the library district. If the library district
3     fails to provide the information during this period in any
4     year, it shall forfeit any claim to reimbursement for that
5     year. Library districts may adopt a resolution waiving the
6     right to all or a portion of the reimbursement otherwise
7     required by this paragraph (7.7). By acceptance of such
8     reimbursement, the library district shall forfeit any
9     right to directly or indirectly set aside, modify, or
10     contest in any manner whatsoever the establishment of the
11     redevelopment project area or projects;
12         (8) Relocation costs to the extent that a municipality
13     determines that relocation costs shall be paid or is
14     required to make payment of relocation costs by federal or
15     State law or in order to satisfy subparagraph (7) of
16     subsection (n);
17         (8.5) In instances in which a property owner is
18     displaced for purposes of private development as defined in
19     Section 10 of the Statute on Statutes:
20             (A) the actual reasonable relocation expenses of
21         the owner and the owner's family and the owner's
22         business, farm operation, or personal property;
23             (B) the amount of any direct losses of tangible
24         personal property incurred by the owner as a result of
25         relocating or discontinuing the owner's business or
26         farm operation, but not to exceed an amount equal to
27         the reasonable expenses that would have been required
28         to relocate the property;
29             (C) the actual reasonable expenses incurred by the
30         owner in searching for a replacement business or farm
31         operation; and
32             (D) the actual reasonable expenses of the owner
33         that were necessary for the owner to reestablish the
34         owner's displaced farm operation, nonprofit

 

 

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1         organization, or small business as defined in Section
2         1-75 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, but
3         not to exceed $10,000;
4     all as defined by the federal Uniform Relocation Assistance
5     and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, as
6     amended, and any implementing regulations promulgated;
7         (9) Payment in lieu of taxes;
8         (10) Costs of job training, retraining, advanced
9     vocational education or career education, including but
10     not limited to courses in occupational, semi-technical or
11     technical fields leading directly to employment, incurred
12     by one or more taxing districts, provided that such costs
13     (i) are related to the establishment and maintenance of
14     additional job training, advanced vocational education or
15     career education programs for persons employed or to be
16     employed by employers located in a redevelopment project
17     area; and (ii) when incurred by a taxing district or taxing
18     districts other than the municipality, are set forth in a
19     written agreement by or among the municipality and the
20     taxing district or taxing districts, which agreement
21     describes the program to be undertaken, including but not
22     limited to the number of employees to be trained, a
23     description of the training and services to be provided,
24     the number and type of positions available or to be
25     available, itemized costs of the program and sources of
26     funds to pay for the same, and the term of the agreement.
27     Such costs include, specifically, the payment by community
28     college districts of costs pursuant to Sections 3-37, 3-38,
29     3-40 and 3-40.1 of the Public Community College Act and by
30     school districts of costs pursuant to Sections 10-22.20a
31     and 10-23.3a of The School Code;
32         (11) Interest cost incurred by a redeveloper related to
33     the construction, renovation or rehabilitation of a
34     redevelopment project provided that:

 

 

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1             (A) such costs are to be paid directly from the
2         special tax allocation fund established pursuant to
3         this Act;
4             (B) such payments in any one year may not exceed
5         30% of the annual interest costs incurred by the
6         redeveloper with regard to the redevelopment project
7         during that year;
8             (C) if there are not sufficient funds available in
9         the special tax allocation fund to make the payment
10         pursuant to this paragraph (11) then the amounts so due
11         shall accrue and be payable when sufficient funds are
12         available in the special tax allocation fund;
13             (D) the total of such interest payments paid
14         pursuant to this Act may not exceed 30% of the total
15         (i) cost paid or incurred by the redeveloper for the
16         redevelopment project plus (ii) redevelopment project
17         costs excluding any property assembly costs and any
18         relocation costs incurred by a municipality pursuant
19         to this Act; and
20             (E) the cost limits set forth in subparagraphs (B)
21         and (D) of paragraph (11) shall be modified for the
22         financing of rehabilitated or new housing units for
23         low-income households and very low-income households,
24         as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois Affordable
25         Housing Act. The percentage of 75% shall be substituted
26         for 30% in subparagraphs (B) and (D) of paragraph (11).
27             (F) Instead of the eligible costs provided by
28         subparagraphs (B) and (D) of paragraph (11), as
29         modified by this subparagraph, and notwithstanding any
30         other provisions of this Act to the contrary, the
31         municipality may pay from tax increment revenues up to
32         50% of the cost of construction of new housing units to
33         be occupied by low-income households and very
34         low-income households as defined in Section 3 of the

 

 

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1         Illinois Affordable Housing Act. The cost of
2         construction of those units may be derived from the
3         proceeds of bonds issued by the municipality under this
4         Act or other constitutional or statutory authority or
5         from other sources of municipal revenue that may be
6         reimbursed from tax increment revenues or the proceeds
7         of bonds issued to finance the construction of that
8         housing.
9             The eligible costs provided under this
10         subparagraph (F) of paragraph (11) shall be an eligible
11         cost for the construction, renovation, and
12         rehabilitation of all low and very low-income housing
13         units, as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois
14         Affordable Housing Act, within the redevelopment
15         project area. If the low and very low-income units are
16         part of a residential redevelopment project that
17         includes units not affordable to low and very
18         low-income households, only the low and very
19         low-income units shall be eligible for benefits under
20         subparagraph (F) of paragraph (11). The standards for
21         maintaining the occupancy by low-income households and
22         very low-income households, as defined in Section 3 of
23         the Illinois Affordable Housing Act, of those units
24         constructed with eligible costs made available under
25         the provisions of this subparagraph (F) of paragraph
26         (11) shall be established by guidelines adopted by the
27         municipality. The responsibility for annually
28         documenting the initial occupancy of the units by
29         low-income households and very low-income households,
30         as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois Affordable
31         Housing Act, shall be that of the then current owner of
32         the property. For ownership units, the guidelines will
33         provide, at a minimum, for a reasonable recapture of
34         funds, or other appropriate methods designed to

 

 

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1         preserve the original affordability of the ownership
2         units. For rental units, the guidelines will provide,
3         at a minimum, for the affordability of rent to low and
4         very low-income households. As units become available,
5         they shall be rented to income-eligible tenants. The
6         municipality may modify these guidelines from time to
7         time; the guidelines, however, shall be in effect for
8         as long as tax increment revenue is being used to pay
9         for costs associated with the units or for the
10         retirement of bonds issued to finance the units or for
11         the life of the redevelopment project area, whichever
12         is later.
13         (11.5) If the redevelopment project area is located
14     within a municipality with a population of more than
15     100,000, the cost of day care services for children of
16     employees from low-income families working for businesses
17     located within the redevelopment project area and all or a
18     portion of the cost of operation of day care centers
19     established by redevelopment project area businesses to
20     serve employees from low-income families working in
21     businesses located in the redevelopment project area. For
22     the purposes of this paragraph, "low-income families"
23     means families whose annual income does not exceed 80% of
24     the municipal, county, or regional median income, adjusted
25     for family size, as the annual income and municipal,
26     county, or regional median income are determined from time
27     to time by the United States Department of Housing and
28     Urban Development.
29         (12) Unless explicitly stated herein the cost of
30     construction of new privately-owned buildings shall not be
31     an eligible redevelopment project cost.
32         (13) After November 1, 1999 (the effective date of
33     Public Act 91-478), none of the redevelopment project costs
34     enumerated in this subsection shall be eligible

 

 

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1     redevelopment project costs if those costs would provide
2     direct financial support to a retail entity initiating
3     operations in the redevelopment project area while
4     terminating operations at another Illinois location within
5     10 miles of the redevelopment project area but outside the
6     boundaries of the redevelopment project area municipality.
7     For purposes of this paragraph, termination means a closing
8     of a retail operation that is directly related to the
9     opening of the same operation or like retail entity owned
10     or operated by more than 50% of the original ownership in a
11     redevelopment project area, but it does not mean closing an
12     operation for reasons beyond the control of the retail
13     entity, as documented by the retail entity, subject to a
14     reasonable finding by the municipality that the current
15     location contained inadequate space, had become
16     economically obsolete, or was no longer a viable location
17     for the retailer or serviceman.
18     If a special service area has been established pursuant to
19 the Special Service Area Tax Act or Special Service Area Tax
20 Law, then any tax increment revenues derived from the tax
21 imposed pursuant to the Special Service Area Tax Act or Special
22 Service Area Tax Law may be used within the redevelopment
23 project area for the purposes permitted by that Act or Law as
24 well as the purposes permitted by this Act.
25     (r) "State Sales Tax Boundary" means the redevelopment
26 project area or the amended redevelopment project area
27 boundaries which are determined pursuant to subsection (9) of
28 Section 11-74.4-8a of this Act. The Department of Revenue shall
29 certify pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 11-74.4-8a the
30 appropriate boundaries eligible for the determination of State
31 Sales Tax Increment.
32     (s) "State Sales Tax Increment" means an amount equal to
33 the increase in the aggregate amount of taxes paid by retailers
34 and servicemen, other than retailers and servicemen subject to

 

 

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1 the Public Utilities Act, on transactions at places of business
2 located within a State Sales Tax Boundary pursuant to the
3 Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, the Service Use
4 Tax Act, and the Service Occupation Tax Act, except such
5 portion of such increase that is paid into the State and Local
6 Sales Tax Reform Fund, the Local Government Distributive Fund,
7 the Local Government Tax Fund and the County and Mass Transit
8 District Fund, for as long as State participation exists, over
9 and above the Initial Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales
10 Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts for such
11 taxes as certified by the Department of Revenue and paid under
12 those Acts by retailers and servicemen on transactions at
13 places of business located within the State Sales Tax Boundary
14 during the base year which shall be the calendar year
15 immediately prior to the year in which the municipality adopted
16 tax increment allocation financing, less 3.0% of such amounts
17 generated under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax Act
18 and Service Use Tax Act and the Service Occupation Tax Act,
19 which sum shall be appropriated to the Department of Revenue to
20 cover its costs of administering and enforcing this Section.
21 For purposes of computing the aggregate amount of such taxes
22 for base years occurring prior to 1985, the Department of
23 Revenue shall compute the Initial Sales Tax Amount for such
24 taxes and deduct therefrom an amount equal to 4% of the
25 aggregate amount of taxes per year for each year the base year
26 is prior to 1985, but not to exceed a total deduction of 12%.
27 The amount so determined shall be known as the "Adjusted
28 Initial Sales Tax Amount". For purposes of determining the
29 State Sales Tax Increment the Department of Revenue shall for
30 each period subtract from the tax amounts received from
31 retailers and servicemen on transactions located in the State
32 Sales Tax Boundary, the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts,
33 Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or Revised Initial Sales Tax
34 Amounts for the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act,

 

 

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1 the Service Use Tax Act and the Service Occupation Tax Act. For
2 the State Fiscal Year 1989 this calculation shall be made by
3 utilizing the calendar year 1987 to determine the tax amounts
4 received. For the State Fiscal Year 1990, this calculation
5 shall be made by utilizing the period from January 1, 1988,
6 until September 30, 1988, to determine the tax amounts received
7 from retailers and servicemen, which shall have deducted
8 therefrom nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax
9 Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
10 Initial Sales Tax Amounts as appropriate. For the State Fiscal
11 Year 1991, this calculation shall be made by utilizing the
12 period from October 1, 1988, until June 30, 1989, to determine
13 the tax amounts received from retailers and servicemen, which
14 shall have deducted therefrom nine-twelfths of the certified
15 Initial State Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax
16 Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts as
17 appropriate. For every State Fiscal Year thereafter, the
18 applicable period shall be the 12 months beginning July 1 and
19 ending on June 30, to determine the tax amounts received which
20 shall have deducted therefrom the certified Initial Sales Tax
21 Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
22 Initial Sales Tax Amounts. Municipalities intending to receive
23 a distribution of State Sales Tax Increment must report a list
24 of retailers to the Department of Revenue by October 31, 1988
25 and by July 31, of each year thereafter.
26     (t) "Taxing districts" means counties, townships, cities
27 and incorporated towns and villages, school, road, park,
28 sanitary, mosquito abatement, forest preserve, public health,
29 fire protection, river conservancy, tuberculosis sanitarium
30 and any other municipal corporations or districts with the
31 power to levy taxes.
32     (u) "Taxing districts' capital costs" means those costs of
33 taxing districts for capital improvements that are found by the
34 municipal corporate authorities to be necessary and directly

 

 

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1 result from the redevelopment project.
2     (v) As used in subsection (a) of Section 11-74.4-3 of this
3 Act, "vacant land" means any parcel or combination of parcels
4 of real property without industrial, commercial, and
5 residential buildings which has not been used for commercial
6 agricultural purposes within 5 years prior to the designation
7 of the redevelopment project area, unless the parcel is
8 included in an industrial park conservation area or the parcel
9 has been subdivided; provided that if the parcel was part of a
10 larger tract that has been divided into 3 or more smaller
11 tracts that were accepted for recording during the period from
12 1950 to 1990, then the parcel shall be deemed to have been
13 subdivided, and all proceedings and actions of the municipality
14 taken in that connection with respect to any previously
15 approved or designated redevelopment project area or amended
16 redevelopment project area are hereby validated and hereby
17 declared to be legally sufficient for all purposes of this Act.
18 For purposes of this Section and only for land subject to the
19 subdivision requirements of the Plat Act, land is subdivided
20 when the original plat of the proposed Redevelopment Project
21 Area or relevant portion thereof has been properly certified,
22 acknowledged, approved, and recorded or filed in accordance
23 with the Plat Act and a preliminary plat, if any, for any
24 subsequent phases of the proposed Redevelopment Project Area or
25 relevant portion thereof has been properly approved and filed
26 in accordance with the applicable ordinance of the
27 municipality.
28     (w) "Annual Total Increment" means the sum of each
29 municipality's annual Net Sales Tax Increment and each
30 municipality's annual Net Utility Tax Increment. The ratio of
31 the Annual Total Increment of each municipality to the Annual
32 Total Increment for all municipalities, as most recently
33 calculated by the Department, shall determine the proportional
34 shares of the Illinois Tax Increment Fund to be distributed to

 

 

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1 each municipality.
2 (Source: P.A. 93-298, eff. 7-23-03; 93-708, eff. 1-1-05;
3 93-747, eff. 7-15-04; 93-924, eff. 8-12-04; 93-961, eff.
4 1-1-05; 93-983, eff. 8-23-04; 93-984, eff. 8-23-04; 93-985,
5 eff. 8-23-04; 93-986, eff. 8-23-04; 93-987, eff. 8-23-04;
6 93-995, eff. 8-23-04; 93-1024, eff. 8-25-04; 93-1076, eff.
7 1-18-05; 94-260, eff. 7-19-05; 94-268, eff. 7-19-05; 94-297,
8 eff. 7-21-05; 94-302, eff. 7-21-05; 94-704, eff. 12-5-05;
9 revised 12-9-05.)
 
10     (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 94-702 and 94-711)
11     Sec. 11-74.4-3. Definitions. The following terms, wherever
12 used or referred to in this Division 74.4 shall have the
13 following respective meanings, unless in any case a different
14 meaning clearly appears from the context.
15     (a) For any redevelopment project area that has been
16 designated pursuant to this Section by an ordinance adopted
17 prior to November 1, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
18 91-478), "blighted area" shall have the meaning set forth in
19 this Section prior to that date.
20     On and after November 1, 1999, "blighted area" means any
21 improved or vacant area within the boundaries of a
22 redevelopment project area located within the territorial
23 limits of the municipality where:
24         (1) If improved, industrial, commercial, and
25     residential buildings or improvements are detrimental to
26     the public safety, health, or welfare because of a
27     combination of 5 or more of the following factors, each of
28     which is (i) present, with that presence documented, to a
29     meaningful extent so that a municipality may reasonably
30     find that the factor is clearly present within the intent
31     of the Act and (ii) reasonably distributed throughout the
32     improved part of the redevelopment project area:
33             (A) Dilapidation. An advanced state of disrepair

 

 

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1         or neglect of necessary repairs to the primary
2         structural components of buildings or improvements in
3         such a combination that a documented building
4         condition analysis determines that major repair is
5         required or the defects are so serious and so extensive
6         that the buildings must be removed.
7             (B) Obsolescence. The condition or process of
8         falling into disuse. Structures have become ill-suited
9         for the original use.
10             (C) Deterioration. With respect to buildings,
11         defects including, but not limited to, major defects in
12         the secondary building components such as doors,
13         windows, porches, gutters and downspouts, and fascia.
14         With respect to surface improvements, that the
15         condition of roadways, alleys, curbs, gutters,
16         sidewalks, off-street parking, and surface storage
17         areas evidence deterioration, including, but not
18         limited to, surface cracking, crumbling, potholes,
19         depressions, loose paving material, and weeds
20         protruding through paved surfaces.
21             (D) Presence of structures below minimum code
22         standards. All structures that do not meet the
23         standards of zoning, subdivision, building, fire, and
24         other governmental codes applicable to property, but
25         not including housing and property maintenance codes.
26             (E) Illegal use of individual structures. The use
27         of structures in violation of applicable federal,
28         State, or local laws, exclusive of those applicable to
29         the presence of structures below minimum code
30         standards.
31             (F) Excessive vacancies. The presence of buildings
32         that are unoccupied or under-utilized and that
33         represent an adverse influence on the area because of
34         the frequency, extent, or duration of the vacancies.

 

 

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1             (G) Lack of ventilation, light, or sanitary
2         facilities. The absence of adequate ventilation for
3         light or air circulation in spaces or rooms without
4         windows, or that require the removal of dust, odor,
5         gas, smoke, or other noxious airborne materials.
6         Inadequate natural light and ventilation means the
7         absence of skylights or windows for interior spaces or
8         rooms and improper window sizes and amounts by room
9         area to window area ratios. Inadequate sanitary
10         facilities refers to the absence or inadequacy of
11         garbage storage and enclosure, bathroom facilities,
12         hot water and kitchens, and structural inadequacies
13         preventing ingress and egress to and from all rooms and
14         units within a building.
15             (H) Inadequate utilities. Underground and overhead
16         utilities such as storm sewers and storm drainage,
17         sanitary sewers, water lines, and gas, telephone, and
18         electrical services that are shown to be inadequate.
19         Inadequate utilities are those that are: (i) of
20         insufficient capacity to serve the uses in the
21         redevelopment project area, (ii) deteriorated,
22         antiquated, obsolete, or in disrepair, or (iii)
23         lacking within the redevelopment project area.
24             (I) Excessive land coverage and overcrowding of
25         structures and community facilities. The
26         over-intensive use of property and the crowding of
27         buildings and accessory facilities onto a site.
28         Examples of problem conditions warranting the
29         designation of an area as one exhibiting excessive land
30         coverage are: (i) the presence of buildings either
31         improperly situated on parcels or located on parcels of
32         inadequate size and shape in relation to present-day
33         standards of development for health and safety and (ii)
34         the presence of multiple buildings on a single parcel.

 

 

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1         For there to be a finding of excessive land coverage,
2         these parcels must exhibit one or more of the following
3         conditions: insufficient provision for light and air
4         within or around buildings, increased threat of spread
5         of fire due to the close proximity of buildings, lack
6         of adequate or proper access to a public right-of-way,
7         lack of reasonably required off-street parking, or
8         inadequate provision for loading and service.
9             (J) Deleterious land use or layout. The existence
10         of incompatible land-use relationships, buildings
11         occupied by inappropriate mixed-uses, or uses
12         considered to be noxious, offensive, or unsuitable for
13         the surrounding area.
14             (K) Environmental clean-up. The proposed
15         redevelopment project area has incurred Illinois
16         Environmental Protection Agency or United States
17         Environmental Protection Agency remediation costs for,
18         or a study conducted by an independent consultant
19         recognized as having expertise in environmental
20         remediation has determined a need for, the clean-up of
21         hazardous waste, hazardous substances, or underground
22         storage tanks required by State or federal law,
23         provided that the remediation costs constitute a
24         material impediment to the development or
25         redevelopment of the redevelopment project area.
26             (L) Lack of community planning. The proposed
27         redevelopment project area was developed prior to or
28         without the benefit or guidance of a community plan.
29         This means that the development occurred prior to the
30         adoption by the municipality of a comprehensive or
31         other community plan or that the plan was not followed
32         at the time of the area's development. This factor must
33         be documented by evidence of adverse or incompatible
34         land-use relationships, inadequate street layout,

 

 

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1         improper subdivision, parcels of inadequate shape and
2         size to meet contemporary development standards, or
3         other evidence demonstrating an absence of effective
4         community planning.
5             (M) The total equalized assessed value of the
6         proposed redevelopment project area has declined for 3
7         of the last 5 calendar years prior to the year in which
8         the redevelopment project area is designated or is
9         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
10         balance of the municipality for 3 of the last 5
11         calendar years for which information is available or is
12         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
13         Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published
14         by the United States Department of Labor or successor
15         agency for 3 of the last 5 calendar years prior to the
16         year in which the redevelopment project area is
17         designated.
18         (2) If vacant, the sound growth of the redevelopment
19     project area is impaired by a combination of 2 or more of
20     the following factors, each of which is (i) present, with
21     that presence documented, to a meaningful extent so that a
22     municipality may reasonably find that the factor is clearly
23     present within the intent of the Act and (ii) reasonably
24     distributed throughout the vacant part of the
25     redevelopment project area to which it pertains:
26             (A) Obsolete platting of vacant land that results
27         in parcels of limited or narrow size or configurations
28         of parcels of irregular size or shape that would be
29         difficult to develop on a planned basis and in a manner
30         compatible with contemporary standards and
31         requirements, or platting that failed to create
32         rights-of-ways for streets or alleys or that created
33         inadequate right-of-way widths for streets, alleys, or
34         other public rights-of-way or that omitted easements

 

 

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1         for public utilities.
2             (B) Diversity of ownership of parcels of vacant
3         land sufficient in number to retard or impede the
4         ability to assemble the land for development.
5             (C) Tax and special assessment delinquencies exist
6         or the property has been the subject of tax sales under
7         the Property Tax Code within the last 5 years.
8             (D) Deterioration of structures or site
9         improvements in neighboring areas adjacent to the
10         vacant land.
11             (E) The area has incurred Illinois Environmental
12         Protection Agency or United States Environmental
13         Protection Agency remediation costs for, or a study
14         conducted by an independent consultant recognized as
15         having expertise in environmental remediation has
16         determined a need for, the clean-up of hazardous waste,
17         hazardous substances, or underground storage tanks
18         required by State or federal law, provided that the
19         remediation costs constitute a material impediment to
20         the development or redevelopment of the redevelopment
21         project area.
22             (F) The total equalized assessed value of the
23         proposed redevelopment project area has declined for 3
24         of the last 5 calendar years prior to the year in which
25         the redevelopment project area is designated or is
26         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
27         balance of the municipality for 3 of the last 5
28         calendar years for which information is available or is
29         increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
30         Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published
31         by the United States Department of Labor or successor
32         agency for 3 of the last 5 calendar years prior to the
33         year in which the redevelopment project area is
34         designated.

 

 

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1         (3) If vacant, the sound growth of the redevelopment
2     project area is impaired by one of the following factors
3     that (i) is present, with that presence documented, to a
4     meaningful extent so that a municipality may reasonably
5     find that the factor is clearly present within the intent
6     of the Act and (ii) is reasonably distributed throughout
7     the vacant part of the redevelopment project area to which
8     it pertains:
9             (A) The area consists of one or more unused
10         quarries, mines, or strip mine ponds.
11             (B) The area consists of unused rail yards, rail
12         tracks, or railroad rights-of-way.
13             (C) The area, prior to its designation, is subject
14         to (i) chronic flooding that adversely impacts on real
15         property in the area as certified by a registered
16         professional engineer or appropriate regulatory agency
17         or (ii) surface water that discharges from all or a
18         part of the area and contributes to flooding within the
19         same watershed, but only if the redevelopment project
20         provides for facilities or improvements to contribute
21         to the alleviation of all or part of the flooding.
22             (D) The area consists of an unused or illegal
23         disposal site containing earth, stone, building
24         debris, or similar materials that were removed from
25         construction, demolition, excavation, or dredge sites.
26             (E) Prior to November 1, 1999, the area is not less
27         than 50 nor more than 100 acres and 75% of which is
28         vacant (notwithstanding that the area has been used for
29         commercial agricultural purposes within 5 years prior
30         to the designation of the redevelopment project area),
31         and the area meets at least one of the factors itemized
32         in paragraph (1) of this subsection, the area has been
33         designated as a town or village center by ordinance or
34         comprehensive plan adopted prior to January 1, 1982,

 

 

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1         and the area has not been developed for that designated
2         purpose.
3             (F) The area qualified as a blighted improved area
4         immediately prior to becoming vacant, unless there has
5         been substantial private investment in the immediately
6         surrounding area.
7     (b) For any redevelopment project area that has been
8 designated pursuant to this Section by an ordinance adopted
9 prior to November 1, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
10 91-478), "conservation area" shall have the meaning set forth
11 in this Section prior to that date.
12     On and after November 1, 1999, "conservation area" means
13 any improved area within the boundaries of a redevelopment
14 project area located within the territorial limits of the
15 municipality in which 50% or more of the structures in the area
16 have an age of 35 years or more. Such an area is not yet a
17 blighted area but because of a combination of 3 or more of the
18 following factors is detrimental to the public safety, health,
19 morals or welfare and such an area may become a blighted area:
20         (1) Dilapidation. An advanced state of disrepair or
21     neglect of necessary repairs to the primary structural
22     components of buildings or improvements in such a
23     combination that a documented building condition analysis
24     determines that major repair is required or the defects are
25     so serious and so extensive that the buildings must be
26     removed.
27         (2) Obsolescence. The condition or process of falling
28     into disuse. Structures have become ill-suited for the
29     original use.
30         (3) Deterioration. With respect to buildings, defects
31     including, but not limited to, major defects in the
32     secondary building components such as doors, windows,
33     porches, gutters and downspouts, and fascia. With respect
34     to surface improvements, that the condition of roadways,

 

 

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1     alleys, curbs, gutters, sidewalks, off-street parking, and
2     surface storage areas evidence deterioration, including,
3     but not limited to, surface cracking, crumbling, potholes,
4     depressions, loose paving material, and weeds protruding
5     through paved surfaces.
6         (4) Presence of structures below minimum code
7     standards. All structures that do not meet the standards of
8     zoning, subdivision, building, fire, and other
9     governmental codes applicable to property, but not
10     including housing and property maintenance codes.
11         (5) Illegal use of individual structures. The use of
12     structures in violation of applicable federal, State, or
13     local laws, exclusive of those applicable to the presence
14     of structures below minimum code standards.
15         (6) Excessive vacancies. The presence of buildings
16     that are unoccupied or under-utilized and that represent an
17     adverse influence on the area because of the frequency,
18     extent, or duration of the vacancies.
19         (7) Lack of ventilation, light, or sanitary
20     facilities. The absence of adequate ventilation for light
21     or air circulation in spaces or rooms without windows, or
22     that require the removal of dust, odor, gas, smoke, or
23     other noxious airborne materials. Inadequate natural light
24     and ventilation means the absence or inadequacy of
25     skylights or windows for interior spaces or rooms and
26     improper window sizes and amounts by room area to window
27     area ratios. Inadequate sanitary facilities refers to the
28     absence or inadequacy of garbage storage and enclosure,
29     bathroom facilities, hot water and kitchens, and
30     structural inadequacies preventing ingress and egress to
31     and from all rooms and units within a building.
32         (8) Inadequate utilities. Underground and overhead
33     utilities such as storm sewers and storm drainage, sanitary
34     sewers, water lines, and gas, telephone, and electrical

 

 

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1     services that are shown to be inadequate. Inadequate
2     utilities are those that are: (i) of insufficient capacity
3     to serve the uses in the redevelopment project area, (ii)
4     deteriorated, antiquated, obsolete, or in disrepair, or
5     (iii) lacking within the redevelopment project area.
6         (9) Excessive land coverage and overcrowding of
7     structures and community facilities. The over-intensive
8     use of property and the crowding of buildings and accessory
9     facilities onto a site. Examples of problem conditions
10     warranting the designation of an area as one exhibiting
11     excessive land coverage are: the presence of buildings
12     either improperly situated on parcels or located on parcels
13     of inadequate size and shape in relation to present-day
14     standards of development for health and safety and the
15     presence of multiple buildings on a single parcel. For
16     there to be a finding of excessive land coverage, these
17     parcels must exhibit one or more of the following
18     conditions: insufficient provision for light and air
19     within or around buildings, increased threat of spread of
20     fire due to the close proximity of buildings, lack of
21     adequate or proper access to a public right-of-way, lack of
22     reasonably required off-street parking, or inadequate
23     provision for loading and service.
24         (10) Deleterious land use or layout. The existence of
25     incompatible land-use relationships, buildings occupied by
26     inappropriate mixed-uses, or uses considered to be
27     noxious, offensive, or unsuitable for the surrounding
28     area.
29         (11) Lack of community planning. The proposed
30     redevelopment project area was developed prior to or
31     without the benefit or guidance of a community plan. This
32     means that the development occurred prior to the adoption
33     by the municipality of a comprehensive or other community
34     plan or that the plan was not followed at the time of the

 

 

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1     area's development. This factor must be documented by
2     evidence of adverse or incompatible land-use
3     relationships, inadequate street layout, improper
4     subdivision, parcels of inadequate shape and size to meet
5     contemporary development standards, or other evidence
6     demonstrating an absence of effective community planning.
7         (12) The area has incurred Illinois Environmental
8     Protection Agency or United States Environmental
9     Protection Agency remediation costs for, or a study
10     conducted by an independent consultant recognized as
11     having expertise in environmental remediation has
12     determined a need for, the clean-up of hazardous waste,
13     hazardous substances, or underground storage tanks
14     required by State or federal law, provided that the
15     remediation costs constitute a material impediment to the
16     development or redevelopment of the redevelopment project
17     area.
18         (13) The total equalized assessed value of the proposed
19     redevelopment project area has declined for 3 of the last 5
20     calendar years for which information is available or is
21     increasing at an annual rate that is less than the balance
22     of the municipality for 3 of the last 5 calendar years for
23     which information is available or is increasing at an
24     annual rate that is less than the Consumer Price Index for
25     All Urban Consumers published by the United States
26     Department of Labor or successor agency for 3 of the last 5
27     calendar years for which information is available.
28     (c) "Industrial park" means an area in a blighted or
29 conservation area suitable for use by any manufacturing,
30 industrial, research or transportation enterprise, of
31 facilities to include but not be limited to factories, mills,
32 processing plants, assembly plants, packing plants,
33 fabricating plants, industrial distribution centers,
34 warehouses, repair overhaul or service facilities, freight

 

 

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1 terminals, research facilities, test facilities or railroad
2 facilities.
3     (d) "Industrial park conservation area" means an area
4 within the boundaries of a redevelopment project area located
5 within the territorial limits of a municipality that is a labor
6 surplus municipality or within 1 1/2 miles of the territorial
7 limits of a municipality that is a labor surplus municipality
8 if the area is annexed to the municipality; which area is zoned
9 as industrial no later than at the time the municipality by
10 ordinance designates the redevelopment project area, and which
11 area includes both vacant land suitable for use as an
12 industrial park and a blighted area or conservation area
13 contiguous to such vacant land.
14     (e) "Labor surplus municipality" means a municipality in
15 which, at any time during the 6 months before the municipality
16 by ordinance designates an industrial park conservation area,
17 the unemployment rate was over 6% and was also 100% or more of
18 the national average unemployment rate for that same time as
19 published in the United States Department of Labor Bureau of
20 Labor Statistics publication entitled "The Employment
21 Situation" or its successor publication. For the purpose of
22 this subsection, if unemployment rate statistics for the
23 municipality are not available, the unemployment rate in the
24 municipality shall be deemed to be the same as the unemployment
25 rate in the principal county in which the municipality is
26 located.
27     (f) "Municipality" shall mean a city, village,
28 incorporated town, or a township that is located in the
29 unincorporated portion of a county with 3 million or more
30 inhabitants, if the county adopted an ordinance that approved
31 the township's redevelopment plan.
32     (g) "Initial Sales Tax Amounts" means the amount of taxes
33 paid under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax Act,
34 Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, the

 

 

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1 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, and the Municipal
2 Service Occupation Tax Act by retailers and servicemen on
3 transactions at places located in a State Sales Tax Boundary
4 during the calendar year 1985.
5     (g-1) "Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts" means the amount
6 of taxes paid under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax
7 Act, Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, the
8 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, and the Municipal
9 Service Occupation Tax Act by retailers and servicemen on
10 transactions at places located within the State Sales Tax
11 Boundary revised pursuant to Section 11-74.4-8a(9) of this Act.
12     (h) "Municipal Sales Tax Increment" means an amount equal
13 to the increase in the aggregate amount of taxes paid to a
14 municipality from the Local Government Tax Fund arising from
15 sales by retailers and servicemen within the redevelopment
16 project area or State Sales Tax Boundary, as the case may be,
17 for as long as the redevelopment project area or State Sales
18 Tax Boundary, as the case may be, exist over and above the
19 aggregate amount of taxes as certified by the Illinois
20 Department of Revenue and paid under the Municipal Retailers'
21 Occupation Tax Act and the Municipal Service Occupation Tax Act
22 by retailers and servicemen, on transactions at places of
23 business located in the redevelopment project area or State
24 Sales Tax Boundary, as the case may be, during the base year
25 which shall be the calendar year immediately prior to the year
26 in which the municipality adopted tax increment allocation
27 financing. For purposes of computing the aggregate amount of
28 such taxes for base years occurring prior to 1985, the
29 Department of Revenue shall determine the Initial Sales Tax
30 Amounts for such taxes and deduct therefrom an amount equal to
31 4% of the aggregate amount of taxes per year for each year the
32 base year is prior to 1985, but not to exceed a total deduction
33 of 12%. The amount so determined shall be known as the
34 "Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts". For purposes of

 

 

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1 determining the Municipal Sales Tax Increment, the Department
2 of Revenue shall for each period subtract from the amount paid
3 to the municipality from the Local Government Tax Fund arising
4 from sales by retailers and servicemen on transactions located
5 in the redevelopment project area or the State Sales Tax
6 Boundary, as the case may be, the certified Initial Sales Tax
7 Amounts, the Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
8 Initial Sales Tax Amounts for the Municipal Retailers'
9 Occupation Tax Act and the Municipal Service Occupation Tax
10 Act. For the State Fiscal Year 1989, this calculation shall be
11 made by utilizing the calendar year 1987 to determine the tax
12 amounts received. For the State Fiscal Year 1990, this
13 calculation shall be made by utilizing the period from January
14 1, 1988, until September 30, 1988, to determine the tax amounts
15 received from retailers and servicemen pursuant to the
16 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax and the Municipal Service
17 Occupation Tax Act, which shall have deducted therefrom
18 nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, the
19 Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales
20 Tax Amounts as appropriate. For the State Fiscal Year 1991,
21 this calculation shall be made by utilizing the period from
22 October 1, 1988, to June 30, 1989, to determine the tax amounts
23 received from retailers and servicemen pursuant to the
24 Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax and the Municipal Service
25 Occupation Tax Act which shall have deducted therefrom
26 nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts,
27 Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales
28 Tax Amounts as appropriate. For every State Fiscal Year
29 thereafter, the applicable period shall be the 12 months
30 beginning July 1 and ending June 30 to determine the tax
31 amounts received which shall have deducted therefrom the
32 certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, the Adjusted Initial Sales
33 Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts, as the
34 case may be.

 

 

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1     (i) "Net State Sales Tax Increment" means the sum of the
2 following: (a) 80% of the first $100,000 of State Sales Tax
3 Increment annually generated within a State Sales Tax Boundary;
4 (b) 60% of the amount in excess of $100,000 but not exceeding
5 $500,000 of State Sales Tax Increment annually generated within
6 a State Sales Tax Boundary; and (c) 40% of all amounts in
7 excess of $500,000 of State Sales Tax Increment annually
8 generated within a State Sales Tax Boundary. If, however, a
9 municipality established a tax increment financing district in
10 a county with a population in excess of 3,000,000 before
11 January 1, 1986, and the municipality entered into a contract
12 or issued bonds after January 1, 1986, but before December 31,
13 1986, to finance redevelopment project costs within a State
14 Sales Tax Boundary, then the Net State Sales Tax Increment
15 means, for the fiscal years beginning July 1, 1990, and July 1,
16 1991, 100% of the State Sales Tax Increment annually generated
17 within a State Sales Tax Boundary; and notwithstanding any
18 other provision of this Act, for those fiscal years the
19 Department of Revenue shall distribute to those municipalities
20 100% of their Net State Sales Tax Increment before any
21 distribution to any other municipality and regardless of
22 whether or not those other municipalities will receive 100% of
23 their Net State Sales Tax Increment. For Fiscal Year 1999, and
24 every year thereafter until the year 2007, for any municipality
25 that has not entered into a contract or has not issued bonds
26 prior to June 1, 1988 to finance redevelopment project costs
27 within a State Sales Tax Boundary, the Net State Sales Tax
28 Increment shall be calculated as follows: By multiplying the
29 Net State Sales Tax Increment by 90% in the State Fiscal Year
30 1999; 80% in the State Fiscal Year 2000; 70% in the State
31 Fiscal Year 2001; 60% in the State Fiscal Year 2002; 50% in the
32 State Fiscal Year 2003; 40% in the State Fiscal Year 2004; 30%
33 in the State Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the State Fiscal Year
34 2006; and 10% in the State Fiscal Year 2007. No payment shall

 

 

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1 be made for State Fiscal Year 2008 and thereafter.
2     Municipalities that issued bonds in connection with a
3 redevelopment project in a redevelopment project area within
4 the State Sales Tax Boundary prior to July 29, 1991, or that
5 entered into contracts in connection with a redevelopment
6 project in a redevelopment project area before June 1, 1988,
7 shall continue to receive their proportional share of the
8 Illinois Tax Increment Fund distribution until the date on
9 which the redevelopment project is completed or terminated. If,
10 however, a municipality that issued bonds in connection with a
11 redevelopment project in a redevelopment project area within
12 the State Sales Tax Boundary prior to July 29, 1991 retires the
13 bonds prior to June 30, 2007 or a municipality that entered
14 into contracts in connection with a redevelopment project in a
15 redevelopment project area before June 1, 1988 completes the
16 contracts prior to June 30, 2007, then so long as the
17 redevelopment project is not completed or is not terminated,
18 the Net State Sales Tax Increment shall be calculated,
19 beginning on the date on which the bonds are retired or the
20 contracts are completed, as follows: By multiplying the Net
21 State Sales Tax Increment by 60% in the State Fiscal Year 2002;
22 50% in the State Fiscal Year 2003; 40% in the State Fiscal Year
23 2004; 30% in the State Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the State
24 Fiscal Year 2006; and 10% in the State Fiscal Year 2007. No
25 payment shall be made for State Fiscal Year 2008 and
26 thereafter. Refunding of any bonds issued prior to July 29,
27 1991, shall not alter the Net State Sales Tax Increment.
28     (j) "State Utility Tax Increment Amount" means an amount
29 equal to the aggregate increase in State electric and gas tax
30 charges imposed on owners and tenants, other than residential
31 customers, of properties located within the redevelopment
32 project area under Section 9-222 of the Public Utilities Act,
33 over and above the aggregate of such charges as certified by
34 the Department of Revenue and paid by owners and tenants, other

 

 

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1 than residential customers, of properties within the
2 redevelopment project area during the base year, which shall be
3 the calendar year immediately prior to the year of the adoption
4 of the ordinance authorizing tax increment allocation
5 financing.
6     (k) "Net State Utility Tax Increment" means the sum of the
7 following: (a) 80% of the first $100,000 of State Utility Tax
8 Increment annually generated by a redevelopment project area;
9 (b) 60% of the amount in excess of $100,000 but not exceeding
10 $500,000 of the State Utility Tax Increment annually generated
11 by a redevelopment project area; and (c) 40% of all amounts in
12 excess of $500,000 of State Utility Tax Increment annually
13 generated by a redevelopment project area. For the State Fiscal
14 Year 1999, and every year thereafter until the year 2007, for
15 any municipality that has not entered into a contract or has
16 not issued bonds prior to June 1, 1988 to finance redevelopment
17 project costs within a redevelopment project area, the Net
18 State Utility Tax Increment shall be calculated as follows: By
19 multiplying the Net State Utility Tax Increment by 90% in the
20 State Fiscal Year 1999; 80% in the State Fiscal Year 2000; 70%
21 in the State Fiscal Year 2001; 60% in the State Fiscal Year
22 2002; 50% in the State Fiscal Year 2003; 40% in the State
23 Fiscal Year 2004; 30% in the State Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the
24 State Fiscal Year 2006; and 10% in the State Fiscal Year 2007.
25 No payment shall be made for the State Fiscal Year 2008 and
26 thereafter.
27     Municipalities that issue bonds in connection with the
28 redevelopment project during the period from June 1, 1988 until
29 3 years after the effective date of this Amendatory Act of 1988
30 shall receive the Net State Utility Tax Increment, subject to
31 appropriation, for 15 State Fiscal Years after the issuance of
32 such bonds. For the 16th through the 20th State Fiscal Years
33 after issuance of the bonds, the Net State Utility Tax
34 Increment shall be calculated as follows: By multiplying the

 

 

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1 Net State Utility Tax Increment by 90% in year 16; 80% in year
2 17; 70% in year 18; 60% in year 19; and 50% in year 20.
3 Refunding of any bonds issued prior to June 1, 1988, shall not
4 alter the revised Net State Utility Tax Increment payments set
5 forth above.
6     (l) "Obligations" mean bonds, loans, debentures, notes,
7 special certificates or other evidence of indebtedness issued
8 by the municipality to carry out a redevelopment project or to
9 refund outstanding obligations.
10     (m) "Payment in lieu of taxes" means those estimated tax
11 revenues from real property in a redevelopment project area
12 derived from real property that has been acquired by a
13 municipality which according to the redevelopment project or
14 plan is to be used for a private use which taxing districts
15 would have received had a municipality not acquired the real
16 property and adopted tax increment allocation financing and
17 which would result from levies made after the time of the
18 adoption of tax increment allocation financing to the time the
19 current equalized value of real property in the redevelopment
20 project area exceeds the total initial equalized value of real
21 property in said area.
22     (n) "Redevelopment plan" means the comprehensive program
23 of the municipality for development or redevelopment intended
24 by the payment of redevelopment project costs to reduce or
25 eliminate those conditions the existence of which qualified the
26 redevelopment project area as a "blighted area" or
27 "conservation area" or combination thereof or "industrial park
28 conservation area," and thereby to enhance the tax bases of the
29 taxing districts which extend into the redevelopment project
30 area. On and after November 1, 1999 (the effective date of
31 Public Act 91-478), no redevelopment plan may be approved or
32 amended that includes the development of vacant land (i) with a
33 golf course and related clubhouse and other facilities or (ii)
34 designated by federal, State, county, or municipal government

 

 

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1 as public land for outdoor recreational activities or for
2 nature preserves and used for that purpose within 5 years prior
3 to the adoption of the redevelopment plan. For the purpose of
4 this subsection, "recreational activities" is limited to mean
5 camping and hunting. Each redevelopment plan shall set forth in
6 writing the program to be undertaken to accomplish the
7 objectives and shall include but not be limited to:
8         (A) an itemized list of estimated redevelopment
9     project costs;
10         (B) evidence indicating that the redevelopment project
11     area on the whole has not been subject to growth and
12     development through investment by private enterprise;
13         (C) an assessment of any financial impact of the
14     redevelopment project area on or any increased demand for
15     services from any taxing district affected by the plan and
16     any program to address such financial impact or increased
17     demand;
18         (D) the sources of funds to pay costs;
19         (E) the nature and term of the obligations to be
20     issued;
21         (F) the most recent equalized assessed valuation of the
22     redevelopment project area;
23         (G) an estimate as to the equalized assessed valuation
24     after redevelopment and the general land uses to apply in
25     the redevelopment project area;
26         (H) a commitment to fair employment practices and an
27     affirmative action plan;
28         (I) if it concerns an industrial park conservation
29     area, the plan shall also include a general description of
30     any proposed developer, user and tenant of any property, a
31     description of the type, structure and general character of
32     the facilities to be developed, a description of the type,
33     class and number of new employees to be employed in the
34     operation of the facilities to be developed; and

 

 

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1         (J) if property is to be annexed to the municipality,
2     the plan shall include the terms of the annexation
3     agreement.
4     The provisions of items (B) and (C) of this subsection (n)
5 shall not apply to a municipality that before March 14, 1994
6 (the effective date of Public Act 88-537) had fixed, either by
7 its corporate authorities or by a commission designated under
8 subsection (k) of Section 11-74.4-4, a time and place for a
9 public hearing as required by subsection (a) of Section
10 11-74.4-5. No redevelopment plan shall be adopted unless a
11 municipality complies with all of the following requirements:
12         (1) The municipality finds that the redevelopment
13     project area on the whole has not been subject to growth
14     and development through investment by private enterprise
15     and would not reasonably be anticipated to be developed
16     without the adoption of the redevelopment plan.
17         (2) The municipality finds that the redevelopment plan
18     and project conform to the comprehensive plan for the
19     development of the municipality as a whole, or, for
20     municipalities with a population of 100,000 or more,
21     regardless of when the redevelopment plan and project was
22     adopted, the redevelopment plan and project either: (i)
23     conforms to the strategic economic development or
24     redevelopment plan issued by the designated planning
25     authority of the municipality, or (ii) includes land uses
26     that have been approved by the planning commission of the
27     municipality.
28         (3) The redevelopment plan establishes the estimated
29     dates of completion of the redevelopment project and
30     retirement of obligations issued to finance redevelopment
31     project costs. Those dates: shall not be later than
32     December 31 of the year in which the payment to the
33     municipal treasurer as provided in subsection (b) of
34     Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is to be made with respect to

 

 

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1     ad valorem taxes levied in the twenty-third calendar year
2     after the year in which the ordinance approving the
3     redevelopment project area is adopted if the ordinance was
4     adopted on or after January 15, 1981; shall not be later
5     than December 31 of the year in which the payment to the
6     municipal treasurer as provided in subsection (b) of
7     Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is to be made with respect to
8     ad valorem taxes levied in the thirty-third calendar year
9     after the year in which the ordinance approving the
10     redevelopment project area if the ordinance was adopted on
11     May 20, 1985 by the Village of Wheeling; and shall not be
12     later than December 31 of the year in which the payment to
13     the municipal treasurer as provided in subsection (b) of
14     Section 11-74.4-8 of this Act is to be made with respect to
15     ad valorem taxes levied in the thirty-fifth calendar year
16     after the year in which the ordinance approving the
17     redevelopment project area is adopted:
18             (A) if the ordinance was adopted before January 15,
19         1981, or
20             (B) if the ordinance was adopted in December 1983,
21         April 1984, July 1985, or December 1989, or
22             (C) if the ordinance was adopted in December 1987
23         and the redevelopment project is located within one
24         mile of Midway Airport, or
25             (D) if the ordinance was adopted before January 1,
26         1987 by a municipality in Mason County, or
27             (E) if the municipality is subject to the Local
28         Government Financial Planning and Supervision Act or
29         the Financially Distressed City Law, or
30             (F) if the ordinance was adopted in December 1984
31         by the Village of Rosemont, or
32             (G) if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,
33         1986 by a municipality located in Clinton County for
34         which at least $250,000 of tax increment bonds were

 

 

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1         authorized on June 17, 1997, or if the ordinance was
2         adopted on December 31, 1986 by a municipality with a
3         population in 1990 of less than 3,600 that is located
4         in a county with a population in 1990 of less than
5         34,000 and for which at least $250,000 of tax increment
6         bonds were authorized on June 17, 1997, or
7             (H) if the ordinance was adopted on October 5, 1982
8         by the City of Kankakee, or if the ordinance was
9         adopted on December 29, 1986 by East St. Louis, or
10             (I) if the ordinance was adopted on November 12,
11         1991 by the Village of Sauget, or
12             (J) if the ordinance was adopted on February 11,
13         1985 by the City of Rock Island, or
14             (K) if the ordinance was adopted before December
15         18, 1986 by the City of Moline, or
16             (L) if the ordinance was adopted in September 1988
17         by Sauk Village, or
18             (M) if the ordinance was adopted in October 1993 by
19         Sauk Village, or
20             (N) if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,
21         1986 by the City of Galva, or
22             (O) if the ordinance was adopted in March 1991 by
23         the City of Centreville, or
24             (P) if the ordinance was adopted on January 23,
25         1991 by the City of East St. Louis, or
26             (Q) if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,
27         1986 by the City of Aledo, or
28             (R) if the ordinance was adopted on February 5,
29         1990 by the City of Clinton, or
30             (S) if the ordinance was adopted on September 6,
31         1994 by the City of Freeport, or
32             (T) if the ordinance was adopted on December 22,
33         1986 by the City of Tuscola, or
34             (U) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,

 

 

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1         1986 by the City of Sparta, or
2             (V) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,
3         1986 by the City of Beardstown, or
4             (W) if the ordinance was adopted on April 27, 1981,
5         October 21, 1985, or December 30, 1986 by the City of
6         Belleville, or
7             (X) if the ordinance was adopted on December 29,
8         1986 by the City of Collinsville, or
9             (Y) if the ordinance was adopted on September 14,
10         1994 by the City of Alton, or
11             (Z) if the ordinance was adopted on November 11,
12         1996 by the City of Lexington, or
13             (AA) if the ordinance was adopted on November 5,
14         1984 by the City of LeRoy, or
15             (BB) if the ordinance was adopted on April 3, 1991
16         or June 3, 1992 by the City of Markham, or
17             (CC) if the ordinance was adopted on November 11,
18         1986 by the City of Pekin, or
19             (DD) if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,
20         1981 by the City of Champaign, or
21             (EE) if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,
22         1986 by the City of Urbana, or
23             (FF) if the ordinance was adopted on December 15,
24         1986 by the Village of Heyworth, or
25             (GG) if the ordinance was adopted on February 24,
26         1992 by the Village of Heyworth, or
27             (HH) if the ordinance was adopted on March 16, 1995
28         by the Village of Heyworth, or
29             (II) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,
30         1986 by the Town of Cicero, or
31             (JJ) if the ordinance was adopted on December 30,
32         1986 by the City of Effingham, or
33             (KK) if the ordinance was adopted on May 9, 1991 by
34         the Village of Tilton, or

 

 

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1             (LL) if the ordinance was adopted on October 20,
2         1986 by the City of Elmhurst, or
3             (MM) if the ordinance was adopted on January 19,
4         1988 by the City of Waukegan, or
5             (NN) if the ordinance was adopted on September 21,
6         1998 by the City of Waukegan, or
7             (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on December 31,
8         1986 by the City of Sullivan, or
9             (PP) if the ordinance was adopted on December 23,
10         1991 by the City of Sullivan, or .
11             (QQ) (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on December
12         31, 1986 by the City of Oglesby, or .
13             (RR) (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on July 28,
14         1987 by the City of Marion, or
15             (SS) (PP) if the ordinance was adopted on April 23,
16         1990 by the City of Marion, or .
17             (TT) (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on August
18         20, 1985 by the Village of Mount Prospect, or .
19             (UU) (OO) if the ordinance was adopted on February
20         2, 1998 by the Village of Woodhull.
21         However, for redevelopment project areas for which
22     bonds were issued before July 29, 1991, or for which
23     contracts were entered into before June 1, 1988, in
24     connection with a redevelopment project in the area within
25     the State Sales Tax Boundary, the estimated dates of
26     completion of the redevelopment project and retirement of
27     obligations to finance redevelopment project costs may be
28     extended by municipal ordinance to December 31, 2013. The
29     termination procedures of subsection (b) of Section
30     11-74.4-8 are not required for these redevelopment project
31     areas in 2009 but are required in 2013. The extension
32     allowed by this amendatory Act of 1993 shall not apply to
33     real property tax increment allocation financing under
34     Section 11-74.4-8.

 

 

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1         A municipality may by municipal ordinance amend an
2     existing redevelopment plan to conform to this paragraph
3     (3) as amended by Public Act 91-478, which municipal
4     ordinance may be adopted without further hearing or notice
5     and without complying with the procedures provided in this
6     Act pertaining to an amendment to or the initial approval
7     of a redevelopment plan and project and designation of a
8     redevelopment project area.
9         Those dates, for purposes of real property tax
10     increment allocation financing pursuant to Section
11     11-74.4-8 only, shall be not more than 35 years for
12     redevelopment project areas that were adopted on or after
13     December 16, 1986 and for which at least $8 million worth
14     of municipal bonds were authorized on or after December 19,
15     1989 but before January 1, 1990; provided that the
16     municipality elects to extend the life of the redevelopment
17     project area to 35 years by the adoption of an ordinance
18     after at least 14 but not more than 30 days' written notice
19     to the taxing bodies, that would otherwise constitute the
20     joint review board for the redevelopment project area,
21     before the adoption of the ordinance.
22         Those dates, for purposes of real property tax
23     increment allocation financing pursuant to Section
24     11-74.4-8 only, shall be not more than 35 years for
25     redevelopment project areas that were established on or
26     after December 1, 1981 but before January 1, 1982 and for
27     which at least $1,500,000 worth of tax increment revenue
28     bonds were authorized on or after September 30, 1990 but
29     before July 1, 1991; provided that the municipality elects
30     to extend the life of the redevelopment project area to 35
31     years by the adoption of an ordinance after at least 14 but
32     not more than 30 days' written notice to the taxing bodies,
33     that would otherwise constitute the joint review board for
34     the redevelopment project area, before the adoption of the

 

 

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1     ordinance.
2         (3.5) The municipality finds, in the case of an
3     industrial park conservation area, also that the
4     municipality is a labor surplus municipality and that the
5     implementation of the redevelopment plan will reduce
6     unemployment, create new jobs and by the provision of new
7     facilities enhance the tax base of the taxing districts
8     that extend into the redevelopment project area.
9         (4) If any incremental revenues are being utilized
10     under Section 8(a)(1) or 8(a)(2) of this Act in
11     redevelopment project areas approved by ordinance after
12     January 1, 1986, the municipality finds: (a) that the
13     redevelopment project area would not reasonably be
14     developed without the use of such incremental revenues, and
15     (b) that such incremental revenues will be exclusively
16     utilized for the development of the redevelopment project
17     area.
18         (5) If the redevelopment plan will not result in
19     displacement of residents from 10 or more inhabited
20     residential units, and the municipality certifies in the
21     plan that such displacement will not result from the plan,
22     a housing impact study need not be performed. If, however,
23     the redevelopment plan would result in the displacement of
24     residents from 10 or more inhabited residential units, or
25     if the redevelopment project area contains 75 or more
26     inhabited residential units and no certification is made,
27     then the municipality shall prepare, as part of the
28     separate feasibility report required by subsection (a) of
29     Section 11-74.4-5, a housing impact study.
30         Part I of the housing impact study shall include (i)
31     data as to whether the residential units are single family
32     or multi-family units, (ii) the number and type of rooms
33     within the units, if that information is available, (iii)
34     whether the units are inhabited or uninhabited, as

 

 

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1     determined not less than 45 days before the date that the
2     ordinance or resolution required by subsection (a) of
3     Section 11-74.4-5 is passed, and (iv) data as to the racial
4     and ethnic composition of the residents in the inhabited
5     residential units. The data requirement as to the racial
6     and ethnic composition of the residents in the inhabited
7     residential units shall be deemed to be fully satisfied by
8     data from the most recent federal census.
9         Part II of the housing impact study shall identify the
10     inhabited residential units in the proposed redevelopment
11     project area that are to be or may be removed. If inhabited
12     residential units are to be removed, then the housing
13     impact study shall identify (i) the number and location of
14     those units that will or may be removed, (ii) the
15     municipality's plans for relocation assistance for those
16     residents in the proposed redevelopment project area whose
17     residences are to be removed, (iii) the availability of
18     replacement housing for those residents whose residences
19     are to be removed, and shall identify the type, location,
20     and cost of the housing, and (iv) the type and extent of
21     relocation assistance to be provided.
22         (6) On and after November 1, 1999, the housing impact
23     study required by paragraph (5) shall be incorporated in
24     the redevelopment plan for the redevelopment project area.
25         (7) On and after November 1, 1999, no redevelopment
26     plan shall be adopted, nor an existing plan amended, nor
27     shall residential housing that is occupied by households of
28     low-income and very low-income persons in currently
29     existing redevelopment project areas be removed after
30     November 1, 1999 unless the redevelopment plan provides,
31     with respect to inhabited housing units that are to be
32     removed for households of low-income and very low-income
33     persons, affordable housing and relocation assistance not
34     less than that which would be provided under the federal

 

 

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1     Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
2     Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 and the regulations under
3     that Act, including the eligibility criteria. Affordable
4     housing may be either existing or newly constructed
5     housing. For purposes of this paragraph (7), "low-income
6     households", "very low-income households", and "affordable
7     housing" have the meanings set forth in the Illinois
8     Affordable Housing Act. The municipality shall make a good
9     faith effort to ensure that this affordable housing is
10     located in or near the redevelopment project area within
11     the municipality.
12         (8) On and after November 1, 1999, if, after the
13     adoption of the redevelopment plan for the redevelopment
14     project area, any municipality desires to amend its
15     redevelopment plan to remove more inhabited residential
16     units than specified in its original redevelopment plan,
17     that change shall be made in accordance with the procedures
18     in subsection (c) of Section 11-74.4-5.
19         (9) For redevelopment project areas designated prior
20     to November 1, 1999, the redevelopment plan may be amended
21     without further joint review board meeting or hearing,
22     provided that the municipality shall give notice of any
23     such changes by mail to each affected taxing district and
24     registrant on the interested party registry, to authorize
25     the municipality to expend tax increment revenues for
26     redevelopment project costs defined by paragraphs (5) and
27     (7.5), subparagraphs (E) and (F) of paragraph (11), and
28     paragraph (11.5) of subsection (q) of Section 11-74.4-3, so
29     long as the changes do not increase the total estimated
30     redevelopment project costs set out in the redevelopment
31     plan by more than 5% after adjustment for inflation from
32     the date the plan was adopted.
33     (o) "Redevelopment project" means any public and private
34 development project in furtherance of the objectives of a

 

 

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1 redevelopment plan. On and after November 1, 1999 (the
2 effective date of Public Act 91-478), no redevelopment plan may
3 be approved or amended that includes the development of vacant
4 land (i) with a golf course and related clubhouse and other
5 facilities or (ii) designated by federal, State, county, or
6 municipal government as public land for outdoor recreational
7 activities or for nature preserves and used for that purpose
8 within 5 years prior to the adoption of the redevelopment plan.
9 For the purpose of this subsection, "recreational activities"
10 is limited to mean camping and hunting.
11     (p) "Redevelopment project area" means an area designated
12 by the municipality, which is not less in the aggregate than 1
13 1/2 acres and in respect to which the municipality has made a
14 finding that there exist conditions which cause the area to be
15 classified as an industrial park conservation area or a
16 blighted area or a conservation area, or a combination of both
17 blighted areas and conservation areas.
18     (q) "Redevelopment project costs" mean and include the sum
19 total of all reasonable or necessary costs incurred or
20 estimated to be incurred, and any such costs incidental to a
21 redevelopment plan and a redevelopment project. Such costs
22 include, without limitation, the following:
23         (1) Costs of studies, surveys, development of plans,
24     and specifications, implementation and administration of
25     the redevelopment plan including but not limited to staff
26     and professional service costs for architectural,
27     engineering, legal, financial, planning or other services,
28     provided however that no charges for professional services
29     may be based on a percentage of the tax increment
30     collected; except that on and after November 1, 1999 (the
31     effective date of Public Act 91-478), no contracts for
32     professional services, excluding architectural and
33     engineering services, may be entered into if the terms of
34     the contract extend beyond a period of 3 years. In

 

 

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1     addition, "redevelopment project costs" shall not include
2     lobbying expenses. After consultation with the
3     municipality, each tax increment consultant or advisor to a
4     municipality that plans to designate or has designated a
5     redevelopment project area shall inform the municipality
6     in writing of any contracts that the consultant or advisor
7     has entered into with entities or individuals that have
8     received, or are receiving, payments financed by tax
9     increment revenues produced by the redevelopment project
10     area with respect to which the consultant or advisor has
11     performed, or will be performing, service for the
12     municipality. This requirement shall be satisfied by the
13     consultant or advisor before the commencement of services
14     for the municipality and thereafter whenever any other
15     contracts with those individuals or entities are executed
16     by the consultant or advisor;
17         (1.5) After July 1, 1999, annual administrative costs
18     shall not include general overhead or administrative costs
19     of the municipality that would still have been incurred by
20     the municipality if the municipality had not designated a
21     redevelopment project area or approved a redevelopment
22     plan;
23         (1.6) The cost of marketing sites within the
24     redevelopment project area to prospective businesses,
25     developers, and investors;
26         (2) Property assembly costs, including but not limited
27     to acquisition of land and other property, real or
28     personal, or rights or interests therein, demolition of
29     buildings, site preparation, site improvements that serve
30     as an engineered barrier addressing ground level or below
31     ground environmental contamination, including, but not
32     limited to parking lots and other concrete or asphalt
33     barriers, and the clearing and grading of land;
34         (3) Costs of rehabilitation, reconstruction or repair

 

 

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1     or remodeling of existing public or private buildings,
2     fixtures, and leasehold improvements; and the cost of
3     replacing an existing public building if pursuant to the
4     implementation of a redevelopment project the existing
5     public building is to be demolished to use the site for
6     private investment or devoted to a different use requiring
7     private investment;
8         (4) Costs of the construction of public works or
9     improvements, except that on and after November 1, 1999,
10     redevelopment project costs shall not include the cost of
11     constructing a new municipal public building principally
12     used to provide offices, storage space, or conference
13     facilities or vehicle storage, maintenance, or repair for
14     administrative, public safety, or public works personnel
15     and that is not intended to replace an existing public
16     building as provided under paragraph (3) of subsection (q)
17     of Section 11-74.4-3 unless either (i) the construction of
18     the new municipal building implements a redevelopment
19     project that was included in a redevelopment plan that was
20     adopted by the municipality prior to November 1, 1999 or
21     (ii) the municipality makes a reasonable determination in
22     the redevelopment plan, supported by information that
23     provides the basis for that determination, that the new
24     municipal building is required to meet an increase in the
25     need for public safety purposes anticipated to result from
26     the implementation of the redevelopment plan;
27         (5) Costs of job training and retraining projects,
28     including the cost of "welfare to work" programs
29     implemented by businesses located within the redevelopment
30     project area;
31         (6) Financing costs, including but not limited to all
32     necessary and incidental expenses related to the issuance
33     of obligations and which may include payment of interest on
34     any obligations issued hereunder including interest

 

 

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1     accruing during the estimated period of construction of any
2     redevelopment project for which such obligations are
3     issued and for not exceeding 36 months thereafter and
4     including reasonable reserves related thereto;
5         (7) To the extent the municipality by written agreement
6     accepts and approves the same, all or a portion of a taxing
7     district's capital costs resulting from the redevelopment
8     project necessarily incurred or to be incurred within a
9     taxing district in furtherance of the objectives of the
10     redevelopment plan and project.
11         (7.5) For redevelopment project areas designated (or
12     redevelopment project areas amended to add or increase the
13     number of tax-increment-financing assisted housing units)
14     on or after November 1, 1999, an elementary, secondary, or
15     unit school district's increased costs attributable to
16     assisted housing units located within the redevelopment
17     project area for which the developer or redeveloper
18     receives financial assistance through an agreement with
19     the municipality or because the municipality incurs the
20     cost of necessary infrastructure improvements within the
21     boundaries of the assisted housing sites necessary for the
22     completion of that housing as authorized by this Act, and
23     which costs shall be paid by the municipality from the
24     Special Tax Allocation Fund when the tax increment revenue
25     is received as a result of the assisted housing units and
26     shall be calculated annually as follows:
27             (A) for foundation districts, excluding any school
28         district in a municipality with a population in excess
29         of 1,000,000, by multiplying the district's increase
30         in attendance resulting from the net increase in new
31         students enrolled in that school district who reside in
32         housing units within the redevelopment project area
33         that have received financial assistance through an
34         agreement with the municipality or because the

 

 

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1         municipality incurs the cost of necessary
2         infrastructure improvements within the boundaries of
3         the housing sites necessary for the completion of that
4         housing as authorized by this Act since the designation
5         of the redevelopment project area by the most recently
6         available per capita tuition cost as defined in Section
7         10-20.12a of the School Code less any increase in
8         general State aid as defined in Section 18-8.05 of the
9         School Code attributable to these added new students
10         subject to the following annual limitations:
11                 (i) for unit school districts with a district
12             average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge of less
13             than $5,900, no more than 25% of the total amount
14             of property tax increment revenue produced by
15             those housing units that have received tax
16             increment finance assistance under this Act;
17                 (ii) for elementary school districts with a
18             district average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge
19             of less than $5,900, no more than 17% of the total
20             amount of property tax increment revenue produced
21             by those housing units that have received tax
22             increment finance assistance under this Act; and
23                 (iii) for secondary school districts with a
24             district average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge
25             of less than $5,900, no more than 8% of the total
26             amount of property tax increment revenue produced
27             by those housing units that have received tax
28             increment finance assistance under this Act.
29             (B) For alternate method districts, flat grant
30         districts, and foundation districts with a district
31         average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge equal to or
32         more than $5,900, excluding any school district with a
33         population in excess of 1,000,000, by multiplying the
34         district's increase in attendance resulting from the

 

 

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1         net increase in new students enrolled in that school
2         district who reside in housing units within the
3         redevelopment project area that have received
4         financial assistance through an agreement with the
5         municipality or because the municipality incurs the
6         cost of necessary infrastructure improvements within
7         the boundaries of the housing sites necessary for the
8         completion of that housing as authorized by this Act
9         since the designation of the redevelopment project
10         area by the most recently available per capita tuition
11         cost as defined in Section 10-20.12a of the School Code
12         less any increase in general state aid as defined in
13         Section 18-8.05 of the School Code attributable to
14         these added new students subject to the following
15         annual limitations:
16                 (i) for unit school districts, no more than 40%
17             of the total amount of property tax increment
18             revenue produced by those housing units that have
19             received tax increment finance assistance under
20             this Act;
21                 (ii) for elementary school districts, no more
22             than 27% of the total amount of property tax
23             increment revenue produced by those housing units
24             that have received tax increment finance
25             assistance under this Act; and
26                 (iii) for secondary school districts, no more
27             than 13% of the total amount of property tax
28             increment revenue produced by those housing units
29             that have received tax increment finance
30             assistance under this Act.
31             (C) For any school district in a municipality with
32         a population in excess of 1,000,000, the following
33         restrictions shall apply to the reimbursement of
34         increased costs under this paragraph (7.5):

 

 

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1                 (i) no increased costs shall be reimbursed
2             unless the school district certifies that each of
3             the schools affected by the assisted housing
4             project is at or over its student capacity;
5                 (ii) the amount reimbursable shall be reduced
6             by the value of any land donated to the school
7             district by the municipality or developer, and by
8             the value of any physical improvements made to the
9             schools by the municipality or developer; and
10                 (iii) the amount reimbursed may not affect
11             amounts otherwise obligated by the terms of any
12             bonds, notes, or other funding instruments, or the
13             terms of any redevelopment agreement.
14         Any school district seeking payment under this
15         paragraph (7.5) shall, after July 1 and before
16         September 30 of each year, provide the municipality
17         with reasonable evidence to support its claim for
18         reimbursement before the municipality shall be
19         required to approve or make the payment to the school
20         district. If the school district fails to provide the
21         information during this period in any year, it shall
22         forfeit any claim to reimbursement for that year.
23         School districts may adopt a resolution waiving the
24         right to all or a portion of the reimbursement
25         otherwise required by this paragraph (7.5). By
26         acceptance of this reimbursement the school district
27         waives the right to directly or indirectly set aside,
28         modify, or contest in any manner the establishment of
29         the redevelopment project area or projects;
30         (7.7) For redevelopment project areas designated (or
31     redevelopment project areas amended to add or increase the
32     number of tax-increment-financing assisted housing units)
33     on or after January 1, 2005 (the effective date of Public
34     Act 93-961), a public library district's increased costs

 

 

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1     attributable to assisted housing units located within the
2     redevelopment project area for which the developer or
3     redeveloper receives financial assistance through an
4     agreement with the municipality or because the
5     municipality incurs the cost of necessary infrastructure
6     improvements within the boundaries of the assisted housing
7     sites necessary for the completion of that housing as
8     authorized by this Act shall be paid to the library
9     district by the municipality from the Special Tax
10     Allocation Fund when the tax increment revenue is received
11     as a result of the assisted housing units. This paragraph
12     (7.7) applies only if (i) the library district is located
13     in a county that is subject to the Property Tax Extension
14     Limitation Law or (ii) the library district is not located
15     in a county that is subject to the Property Tax Extension
16     Limitation Law but the district is prohibited by any other
17     law from increasing its tax levy rate without a prior voter
18     referendum.
19         The amount paid to a library district under this
20     paragraph (7.7) shall be calculated by multiplying (i) the
21     net increase in the number of persons eligible to obtain a
22     library card in that district who reside in housing units
23     within the redevelopment project area that have received
24     financial assistance through an agreement with the
25     municipality or because the municipality incurs the cost of
26     necessary infrastructure improvements within the
27     boundaries of the housing sites necessary for the
28     completion of that housing as authorized by this Act since
29     the designation of the redevelopment project area by (ii)
30     the per-patron cost of providing library services so long
31     as it does not exceed $120. The per-patron cost shall be
32     the Total Operating Expenditures Per Capita as stated in
33     the most recent Illinois Public Library Statistics
34     produced by the Library Research Center at the University

 

 

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1     of Illinois. The municipality may deduct from the amount
2     that it must pay to a library district under this paragraph
3     any amount that it has voluntarily paid to the library
4     district from the tax increment revenue. The amount paid to
5     a library district under this paragraph (7.7) shall be no
6     more than 2% of the amount produced by the assisted housing
7     units and deposited into the Special Tax Allocation Fund.
8         A library district is not eligible for any payment
9     under this paragraph (7.7) unless the library district has
10     experienced an increase in the number of patrons from the
11     municipality that created the tax-increment-financing
12     district since the designation of the redevelopment
13     project area.
14         Any library district seeking payment under this
15     paragraph (7.7) shall, after July 1 and before September 30
16     of each year, provide the municipality with convincing
17     evidence to support its claim for reimbursement before the
18     municipality shall be required to approve or make the
19     payment to the library district. If the library district
20     fails to provide the information during this period in any
21     year, it shall forfeit any claim to reimbursement for that
22     year. Library districts may adopt a resolution waiving the
23     right to all or a portion of the reimbursement otherwise
24     required by this paragraph (7.7). By acceptance of such
25     reimbursement, the library district shall forfeit any
26     right to directly or indirectly set aside, modify, or
27     contest in any manner whatsoever the establishment of the
28     redevelopment project area or projects;
29         (8) Relocation costs to the extent that a municipality
30     determines that relocation costs shall be paid or is
31     required to make payment of relocation costs by federal or
32     State law or in order to satisfy subparagraph (7) of
33     subsection (n);
34         (8.5) In instances in which a property owner is

 

 

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1     displaced for purposes of private development as defined in
2     Section 10 of the Statute on Statutes:
3             (A) the actual reasonable relocation expenses of
4         the owner and the owner's family and the owner's
5         business, farm operation, or personal property;
6             (B) the amount of any direct losses of tangible
7         personal property incurred by the owner as a result of
8         relocating or discontinuing the owner's business or
9         farm operation, but not to exceed an amount equal to
10         the reasonable expenses that would have been required
11         to relocate the property;
12             (C) the actual reasonable expenses incurred by the
13         owner in searching for a replacement business or farm
14         operation; and
15             (D) the actual reasonable expenses of the owner
16         that were necessary for the owner to reestablish the
17         owner's displaced farm operation, nonprofit
18         organization, or small business as defined in Section
19         1-75 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, but
20         not to exceed $10,000;
21     all as defined by the federal Uniform Relocation Assistance
22     and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, as
23     amended, and any implementing regulations promulgated;
24         (9) Payment in lieu of taxes;
25         (10) Costs of job training, retraining, advanced
26     vocational education or career education, including but
27     not limited to courses in occupational, semi-technical or
28     technical fields leading directly to employment, incurred
29     by one or more taxing districts, provided that such costs
30     (i) are related to the establishment and maintenance of
31     additional job training, advanced vocational education or
32     career education programs for persons employed or to be
33     employed by employers located in a redevelopment project
34     area; and (ii) when incurred by a taxing district or taxing

 

 

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1     districts other than the municipality, are set forth in a
2     written agreement by or among the municipality and the
3     taxing district or taxing districts, which agreement
4     describes the program to be undertaken, including but not
5     limited to the number of employees to be trained, a
6     description of the training and services to be provided,
7     the number and type of positions available or to be
8     available, itemized costs of the program and sources of
9     funds to pay for the same, and the term of the agreement.
10     Such costs include, specifically, the payment by community
11     college districts of costs pursuant to Sections 3-37, 3-38,
12     3-40 and 3-40.1 of the Public Community College Act and by
13     school districts of costs pursuant to Sections 10-22.20a
14     and 10-23.3a of The School Code;
15         (11) Interest cost incurred by a redeveloper related to
16     the construction, renovation or rehabilitation of a
17     redevelopment project provided that:
18             (A) such costs are to be paid directly from the
19         special tax allocation fund established pursuant to
20         this Act;
21             (B) such payments in any one year may not exceed
22         30% of the annual interest costs incurred by the
23         redeveloper with regard to the redevelopment project
24         during that year;
25             (C) if there are not sufficient funds available in
26         the special tax allocation fund to make the payment
27         pursuant to this paragraph (11) then the amounts so due
28         shall accrue and be payable when sufficient funds are
29         available in the special tax allocation fund;
30             (D) the total of such interest payments paid
31         pursuant to this Act may not exceed 30% of the total
32         (i) cost paid or incurred by the redeveloper for the
33         redevelopment project plus (ii) redevelopment project
34         costs excluding any property assembly costs and any

 

 

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1         relocation costs incurred by a municipality pursuant
2         to this Act; and
3             (E) the cost limits set forth in subparagraphs (B)
4         and (D) of paragraph (11) shall be modified for the
5         financing of rehabilitated or new housing units for
6         low-income households and very low-income households,
7         as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois Affordable
8         Housing Act. The percentage of 75% shall be substituted
9         for 30% in subparagraphs (B) and (D) of paragraph (11).
10             (F) Instead of the eligible costs provided by
11         subparagraphs (B) and (D) of paragraph (11), as
12         modified by this subparagraph, and notwithstanding any
13         other provisions of this Act to the contrary, the
14         municipality may pay from tax increment revenues up to
15         50% of the cost of construction of new housing units to
16         be occupied by low-income households and very
17         low-income households as defined in Section 3 of the
18         Illinois Affordable Housing Act. The cost of
19         construction of those units may be derived from the
20         proceeds of bonds issued by the municipality under this
21         Act or other constitutional or statutory authority or
22         from other sources of municipal revenue that may be
23         reimbursed from tax increment revenues or the proceeds
24         of bonds issued to finance the construction of that
25         housing.
26             The eligible costs provided under this
27         subparagraph (F) of paragraph (11) shall be an eligible
28         cost for the construction, renovation, and
29         rehabilitation of all low and very low-income housing
30         units, as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois
31         Affordable Housing Act, within the redevelopment
32         project area. If the low and very low-income units are
33         part of a residential redevelopment project that
34         includes units not affordable to low and very

 

 

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1         low-income households, only the low and very
2         low-income units shall be eligible for benefits under
3         subparagraph (F) of paragraph (11). The standards for
4         maintaining the occupancy by low-income households and
5         very low-income households, as defined in Section 3 of
6         the Illinois Affordable Housing Act, of those units
7         constructed with eligible costs made available under
8         the provisions of this subparagraph (F) of paragraph
9         (11) shall be established by guidelines adopted by the
10         municipality. The responsibility for annually
11         documenting the initial occupancy of the units by
12         low-income households and very low-income households,
13         as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois Affordable
14         Housing Act, shall be that of the then current owner of
15         the property. For ownership units, the guidelines will
16         provide, at a minimum, for a reasonable recapture of
17         funds, or other appropriate methods designed to
18         preserve the original affordability of the ownership
19         units. For rental units, the guidelines will provide,
20         at a minimum, for the affordability of rent to low and
21         very low-income households. As units become available,
22         they shall be rented to income-eligible tenants. The
23         municipality may modify these guidelines from time to
24         time; the guidelines, however, shall be in effect for
25         as long as tax increment revenue is being used to pay
26         for costs associated with the units or for the
27         retirement of bonds issued to finance the units or for
28         the life of the redevelopment project area, whichever
29         is later.
30         (11.5) If the redevelopment project area is located
31     within a municipality with a population of more than
32     100,000, the cost of day care services for children of
33     employees from low-income families working for businesses
34     located within the redevelopment project area and all or a

 

 

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1     portion of the cost of operation of day care centers
2     established by redevelopment project area businesses to
3     serve employees from low-income families working in
4     businesses located in the redevelopment project area. For
5     the purposes of this paragraph, "low-income families"
6     means families whose annual income does not exceed 80% of
7     the municipal, county, or regional median income, adjusted
8     for family size, as the annual income and municipal,
9     county, or regional median income are determined from time
10     to time by the United States Department of Housing and
11     Urban Development.
12         (12) Unless explicitly stated herein the cost of
13     construction of new privately-owned buildings shall not be
14     an eligible redevelopment project cost.
15         (13) After November 1, 1999 (the effective date of
16     Public Act 91-478), none of the redevelopment project costs
17     enumerated in this subsection shall be eligible
18     redevelopment project costs if those costs would provide
19     direct financial support to a retail entity initiating
20     operations in the redevelopment project area while
21     terminating operations at another Illinois location within
22     10 miles of the redevelopment project area but outside the
23     boundaries of the redevelopment project area municipality.
24     For purposes of this paragraph, termination means a closing
25     of a retail operation that is directly related to the
26     opening of the same operation or like retail entity owned
27     or operated by more than 50% of the original ownership in a
28     redevelopment project area, but it does not mean closing an
29     operation for reasons beyond the control of the retail
30     entity, as documented by the retail entity, subject to a
31     reasonable finding by the municipality that the current
32     location contained inadequate space, had become
33     economically obsolete, or was no longer a viable location
34     for the retailer or serviceman.

 

 

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1     If a special service area has been established pursuant to
2 the Special Service Area Tax Act or Special Service Area Tax
3 Law, then any tax increment revenues derived from the tax
4 imposed pursuant to the Special Service Area Tax Act or Special
5 Service Area Tax Law may be used within the redevelopment
6 project area for the purposes permitted by that Act or Law as
7 well as the purposes permitted by this Act.
8     (r) "State Sales Tax Boundary" means the redevelopment
9 project area or the amended redevelopment project area
10 boundaries which are determined pursuant to subsection (9) of
11 Section 11-74.4-8a of this Act. The Department of Revenue shall
12 certify pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 11-74.4-8a the
13 appropriate boundaries eligible for the determination of State
14 Sales Tax Increment.
15     (s) "State Sales Tax Increment" means an amount equal to
16 the increase in the aggregate amount of taxes paid by retailers
17 and servicemen, other than retailers and servicemen subject to
18 the Public Utilities Act, on transactions at places of business
19 located within a State Sales Tax Boundary pursuant to the
20 Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, the Service Use
21 Tax Act, and the Service Occupation Tax Act, except such
22 portion of such increase that is paid into the State and Local
23 Sales Tax Reform Fund, the Local Government Distributive Fund,
24 the Local Government Tax Fund and the County and Mass Transit
25 District Fund, for as long as State participation exists, over
26 and above the Initial Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales
27 Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts for such
28 taxes as certified by the Department of Revenue and paid under
29 those Acts by retailers and servicemen on transactions at
30 places of business located within the State Sales Tax Boundary
31 during the base year which shall be the calendar year
32 immediately prior to the year in which the municipality adopted
33 tax increment allocation financing, less 3.0% of such amounts
34 generated under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax Act

 

 

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1 and Service Use Tax Act and the Service Occupation Tax Act,
2 which sum shall be appropriated to the Department of Revenue to
3 cover its costs of administering and enforcing this Section.
4 For purposes of computing the aggregate amount of such taxes
5 for base years occurring prior to 1985, the Department of
6 Revenue shall compute the Initial Sales Tax Amount for such
7 taxes and deduct therefrom an amount equal to 4% of the
8 aggregate amount of taxes per year for each year the base year
9 is prior to 1985, but not to exceed a total deduction of 12%.
10 The amount so determined shall be known as the "Adjusted
11 Initial Sales Tax Amount". For purposes of determining the
12 State Sales Tax Increment the Department of Revenue shall for
13 each period subtract from the tax amounts received from
14 retailers and servicemen on transactions located in the State
15 Sales Tax Boundary, the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts,
16 Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or Revised Initial Sales Tax
17 Amounts for the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act,
18 the Service Use Tax Act and the Service Occupation Tax Act. For
19 the State Fiscal Year 1989 this calculation shall be made by
20 utilizing the calendar year 1987 to determine the tax amounts
21 received. For the State Fiscal Year 1990, this calculation
22 shall be made by utilizing the period from January 1, 1988,
23 until September 30, 1988, to determine the tax amounts received
24 from retailers and servicemen, which shall have deducted
25 therefrom nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax
26 Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
27 Initial Sales Tax Amounts as appropriate. For the State Fiscal
28 Year 1991, this calculation shall be made by utilizing the
29 period from October 1, 1988, until June 30, 1989, to determine
30 the tax amounts received from retailers and servicemen, which
31 shall have deducted therefrom nine-twelfths of the certified
32 Initial State Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax
33 Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts as
34 appropriate. For every State Fiscal Year thereafter, the

 

 

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1 applicable period shall be the 12 months beginning July 1 and
2 ending on June 30, to determine the tax amounts received which
3 shall have deducted therefrom the certified Initial Sales Tax
4 Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
5 Initial Sales Tax Amounts. Municipalities intending to receive
6 a distribution of State Sales Tax Increment must report a list
7 of retailers to the Department of Revenue by October 31, 1988
8 and by July 31, of each year thereafter.
9     (t) "Taxing districts" means counties, townships, cities
10 and incorporated towns and villages, school, road, park,
11 sanitary, mosquito abatement, forest preserve, public health,
12 fire protection, river conservancy, tuberculosis sanitarium
13 and any other municipal corporations or districts with the
14 power to levy taxes.
15     (u) "Taxing districts' capital costs" means those costs of
16 taxing districts for capital improvements that are found by the
17 municipal corporate authorities to be necessary and directly
18 result from the redevelopment project.
19     (v) As used in subsection (a) of Section 11-74.4-3 of this
20 Act, "vacant land" means any parcel or combination of parcels
21 of real property without industrial, commercial, and
22 residential buildings which has not been used for commercial
23 agricultural purposes within 5 years prior to the designation
24 of the redevelopment project area, unless the parcel is
25 included in an industrial park conservation area or the parcel
26 has been subdivided; provided that if the parcel was part of a
27 larger tract that has been divided into 3 or more smaller
28 tracts that were accepted for recording during the period from
29 1950 to 1990, then the parcel shall be deemed to have been
30 subdivided, and all proceedings and actions of the municipality
31 taken in that connection with respect to any previously
32 approved or designated redevelopment project area or amended
33 redevelopment project area are hereby validated and hereby
34 declared to be legally sufficient for all purposes of this Act.

 

 

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1 For purposes of this Section and only for land subject to the
2 subdivision requirements of the Plat Act, land is subdivided
3 when the original plat of the proposed Redevelopment Project
4 Area or relevant portion thereof has been properly certified,
5 acknowledged, approved, and recorded or filed in accordance
6 with the Plat Act and a preliminary plat, if any, for any
7 subsequent phases of the proposed Redevelopment Project Area or
8 relevant portion thereof has been properly approved and filed
9 in accordance with the applicable ordinance of the
10 municipality.
11     (w) "Annual Total Increment" means the sum of each
12 municipality's annual Net Sales Tax Increment and each
13 municipality's annual Net Utility Tax Increment. The ratio of
14 the Annual Total Increment of each municipality to the Annual
15 Total Increment for all municipalities, as most recently
16 calculated by the Department, shall determine the proportional
17 shares of the Illinois Tax Increment Fund to be distributed to
18 each municipality.
19 (Source: P.A. 93-298, eff. 7-23-03; 93-708, eff. 1-1-05;
20 93-747, eff. 7-15-04; 93-924, eff. 8-12-04; 93-961, eff.
21 1-1-05; 93-983, eff. 8-23-04; 93-984, eff. 8-23-04; 93-985,
22 eff. 8-23-04; 93-986, eff. 8-23-04; 93-987, eff. 8-23-04;
23 93-995, eff. 8-23-04; 93-1024, eff. 8-25-04; 93-1076, eff.
24 1-18-05; 94-260, eff. 7-19-05; 94-268, eff. 7-19-05; 94-297,
25 eff. 7-21-05; 94-302, eff. 7-21-05; 94-702, eff. 6-1-06;
26 94-704, eff. 12-5-05; 94-711, eff. 6-1-06; revised 12-9-05.)
 
27     Section 15. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by
28 changing Sections 7-121 and 7-122 and by adding Sections
29 7-115.5 and 7-122.5 as follows:
 
30     (735 ILCS 5/7-115.5 new)
31     Sec. 7-115.5. Blight. Notwithstanding any provision of law
32 to the contrary, in a condemnation proceeding in which the

 

 

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1 property is in an area designated by the condemning authority
2 by ordinance as blighted, the condemning authority must
3 demonstrate and prove by a preponderance of the evidence that
4 the area is "blighted" as defined in Section 11-74.4-3 of the
5 Illinois Municipal Code or, alternatively, in the applicable
6 statute authorizing the entity to exercise the power of eminent
7 domain. The existence of an ordinance designating an area as
8 "blighted" is not prima facie evidence of blight. An ordinance
9 designating an area as "blighted" shall not be presumed to be
10 valid for purposes of the condemnation proceeding.
 
11     (735 ILCS 5/7-121)  (from Ch. 110, par. 7-121)
12     Sec. 7-121. Value.
13     (a) Except as to property designated as possessing a
14 special use, the fair cash market value of property in a
15 proceeding in eminent domain shall be the amount of money which
16 a purchaser, willing but not obligated to buy the property,
17 would pay to an owner willing but not obliged to sell in a
18 voluntary sale, which amount of money shall be determined and
19 ascertained as of the date of filing the complaint to condemn
20 unless otherwise provided in subsection (b). In the
21 condemnation of property for a public improvement there shall
22 be excluded from such amount of money any appreciation in value
23 proximately caused by such improvement, and any depreciation in
24 value proximately caused by such improvement. However, such
25 appreciation or depreciation shall not be excluded where
26 property is condemned for a separate project conceived
27 independently of and subsequent to the original project.
28     (b) If the trial or quick-take proceeding is commenced
29 within one year after the complaint for condemnation is filed,
30 then the fair cash market value of property in a proceeding in
31 eminent domain shall be determined and ascertained as of the
32 date of filing the complaint to condemn.
33     If the trial or quick-take proceeding is commenced later

 

 

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1 than one year after the filing of the complaint to condemn, the
2 fair cash market value of the property shall be determined and
3 ascertained as of the 180th day before the date on which the
4 trial or quick-take proceeding was commenced.
5     The court may, in its discretion, require that the fair
6 cash market value of the property be determined and ascertained
7 as of the date of filing the complaint to condemn even if the
8 trial or quick-take proceeding is commenced later than one year
9 after the filing of the complaint to condemn if the court
10 determines that:
11         (i) the property owner caused an unreasonable delay and
12     the fair cash market value of the property increased
13     between the date that the complaint for condemnation was
14     filed and the 180th day before the trial or quick-take
15     proceeding was commenced; or
16         (ii) the condemning authority caused an unreasonable
17     delay and the fair cash market value of the property
18     decreased between the date that the complaint for
19     condemnation was filed and the 180th day before the trial
20     or quick-take proceeding was commenced.
21     If the property owner challenges the condemning
22 authority's right to exercise the power of eminent domain, the
23 challenge is not, in and of itself, an unreasonable delay on
24 the part of the property owner.
25     (c) The provisions of subsection (b) apply only to
26 condemnation proceedings brought for the purpose of private
27 development as defined in Section 10 of the Statute on
28 Statutes.
29 (Source: P.A. 82-280.)
 
30     (735 ILCS 5/7-122)  (from Ch. 110, par. 7-122)
31     Sec. 7-122. Reimbursement; inverse condemnation. Where the
32 State of Illinois, a political subdivision of the State or a
33 municipality is required by a court to initiate condemnation

 

 

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1 proceedings for the actual physical taking of real property,
2 the court rendering judgment for the property owner and
3 awarding just compensation for such taking shall determine and
4 award or allow to such property owner, as part of such judgment
5 or award, such further sums, as will in the opinion of the
6 court, reimburse such property owner for the owner's reasonable
7 costs, disbursements and expenses, including reasonable
8 attorney, appraisal and engineering fees actually incurred by
9 the property owner in such proceedings.
10 (Source: P.A. 82-280.)
 
11     (735 ILCS 5/7-122.5 new)
12     Sec. 7-122.5. Reimbursement; condemnation for private
13 development.
14     (a) In all condemnation proceedings for the taking or
15 damaging of real property under the exercise of the power of
16 eminent domain for private development purposes as defined in
17 Section 10 of the Statute on Statutes, the court rendering
18 judgment shall determine and award or allow to the property
19 owner, as part of that judgment or award, such further sums as
20 will, in the opinion of the court, reimburse the property owner
21 for the property owner's reasonable costs, disbursements, and
22 expenses actually incurred by the property owner in those
23 proceedings, including:
24         (1) reasonable attorney's fees, expert fees, and
25     appraisal fees, subject to subsections (b), (c), and (d) of
26     this Section;
27         (2) as defined by the federal Uniform Relocation
28     Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of
29     1970, as amended, and implemented by regulations
30     promulgated thereunder:
31             (A) the actual reasonable relocation expenses of
32         the owner and the owner's family and the owner's
33         business, farm operation, or personal property;

 

 

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1             (B) the amount of any direct losses of tangible
2         personal property incurred by the owner as a result of
3         relocating or discontinuing the owner's business or
4         farm operation, but not to exceed an amount equal to
5         the reasonable expenses that would have been required
6         to relocate the property;
7             (C) the actual reasonable expenses incurred by the
8         owner in searching for a replacement business or farm
9         operation; and
10             (D) the actual reasonable expenses of the owner
11         that were necessary for the owner to reestablish the
12         owner's displaced farm operation, nonprofit
13         organization, or small business, but not to exceed
14         $10,000; and
15         (3) any other reasonable costs incurred by the property
16     owner.
17     (b) Any award of attorney's fees under this Section shall
18 be based solely on the net benefit achieved for the property
19 owner, except that the court may also consider any non-monetary
20 benefits obtained for the property owner through the efforts of
21 the attorney to the extent that the non-monetary benefits are
22 specifically identified by the court and can be quantified by
23 the court with a reasonable degree of certainty. "Net benefit"
24 means the difference, exclusive of interest, between the final
25 judgment or settlement and the last written offer made by the
26 condemning authority before the property owner hires an
27 attorney or, if the condemning authority does not make a
28 written offer before the property owner hires an attorney, then
29 "net benefit" means the difference between the final judgment
30 or settlement and the first written offer. The award shall be
31 calculated as follows:
32         (1) 33% of the net benefit if the net benefit is
33     $250,000 or less;
34         (2) 25% of the net benefit if the net benefit is more

 

 

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1     than $250,000 but less than $1 million; or
2         (3) 20% of the net benefit if the net benefit is $1
3     million or more.
4     (c) In assessing attorney's fees incurred by the property
5 owner in defeating an order of taking or an order for
6 apportionment, or other supplemental proceedings, when not
7 otherwise provided for, the court shall consider:
8         (1) the novelty, difficulty, and importance of the
9     questions involved;
10         (2) the skill employed by the attorney in conducting
11     the cause;
12         (3) the amount of money involved;
13         (4) the responsibility incurred and fulfilled by the
14     attorney;
15         (5) the attorney's time and labor reasonably required
16     to adequately represent the client in relation to the
17     benefits obtained by the property owner; and
18         (6) the fee or rate customarily charged for legal
19     services a comparable or similar nature.
20     In determining the amount of attorney's fees to be awarded
21 under this subsection (c), the court shall consider the fees
22 the property owner would ordinarily be expected to pay for
23 these services if the condemning authority were not responsible
24 for the payment of those fees. At least 30 days before any
25 hearing to assess attorney's fees in accordance with this
26 subsection (c), the attorney shall submit to the court and to
27 the condemning authority the attorney's complete time records
28 and a detailed statement of services indicating the date,
29 nature, and cost of the services rendered and accounting for
30 the time spent performing those services.
31     (d) The property owner shall submit to the court a copy of
32 any fee agreement between the property owner and the owner's
33 attorney. The amount of attorney's fees due in accordance with
34 the fee agreement shall be reduced to the amount of attorney's

 

 

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1 fees awarded under this Section.
2     (e) The provisions of subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) of
3 this Section apply only to condemnation proceedings that are
4 brought for the purposes of private development, as defined in
5 Section 10 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
6     Section 90. The State Mandates Act is amended by adding
7 Section 8.30 as follows:
 
8     (30 ILCS 805/8.30 new)
9     Sec. 8.30. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8
10 of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for the
11 implementation of any mandate created by this amendatory Act of
12 the 94th General Assembly.
 
13     Section 95. Home rule preemption. Except as otherwise
14 specifically provided, neither the State, a unit of local
15 government, including a home rule unit, nor a school district
16 may exercise the power of eminent domain in a manner that is
17 inconsistent with the amendatory changes of this amendatory Act
18 of the 94th General Assembly. This Section is a limitation
19 under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the
20 Illinois Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home rule
21 units of powers and functions exercised by the State.
 
22     Section 97. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
23 changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
24 that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
25 represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
26 not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
27 made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
28 Public Act.
 
29     Section 99. Effective date; application. This Act takes

 

 

09400SB3086sam001 - 101 - LRB094 19181 EFG 55678 a

1 effect upon becoming law and does not apply to any action that
2 was commenced prior to April 15, 2006.".