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iaHID'f2511C2ommerce>Print>With loans to developers,all was usually forgiven <br /> Finance & Commerce http://finance-commerce.com <br /> With loans to developers, all was usually forgiven <br /> by Chris Newmarker <br /> Published: October 24th, 2012 <br /> In many cases, simply building a structure and _....__._.___ ___.._— <br /> occupying it was enough to get a loan forgiven <br /> under the two-year"temporary authority to <br /> —32%grants <br /> stimulate construction" that the Minnesota state <br /> Legislature created in 2010. ' <br /> Thirty-five cities and local entities took $35.9 million <br /> in extra funds from their tax increment financing <br /> districts and used the money to help fund more than <br /> $510.6 million-worth in construction projects. <br /> 2 <br /> Out of 76 projects that received money, 24 were <br /> simply outright grants, and another 17 were <br /> loans where forgiveness was often tied to <br /> getting things built, according to a Finance & <br /> Commerce investigation. 22%forgivable loans <br /> Even though a goal of the state law was to create <br /> construction jobs, 13 of the 17 projects receiving <br /> forgivable loans either did not keep track of jobs or did not have the information readily <br /> available. <br /> The situation begs the question: Does anyone ever pay back forgivable loans? <br /> The forgivable loans and grants make up more than half the $35.9 million spent statewide: $7 <br /> million were forgivable loans and $12.9 million were grants. <br /> A typical forgivable loan was the $1.25 million that Inver Grove Heights provided the <br /> McGough-led team that created the Argenta Hills retail development off Amana Trail, which <br /> includes a $15 million, 135,000-square-foot Target store that opened in July. <br /> Inver Grove Heights did not require a specific number of jobs for the developers to keep the <br /> money, said City Administrator Joe Lynch. Rather, the developers got to keep the $1.25 million <br /> if the Target opened by December 2012, and stayed open for five years. Half of an additional <br /> 30,000-square-foot building also has to be available for occupancy by the end of the year. <br /> The developer turned in invoices with construction expenses to get reimbursed for them. <br /> "That's why we went the route of a forgivable loan, so that if they didn't construct and they <br /> didn't complete and they didn't open under certain time frames that the money would be <br /> given back to us," Lynch said. <br /> According to Lynch, basing forgiveness on getting buildings constructed and occupied was <br /> easier than counting jobs because retail jobs are often transient. One person might work 12 <br /> hours one week and another person 12 hours the next week, Lynch said. <br /> St. Louis Park gave $605,000-worth of forgivable loans to three projects — the largest being <br /> $500,000 for a $3.5 million renovation project that allowed aluminum anodizing company <br /> Hardcoat to move inside the city to a 30,000-square-foot building at 7317 W. Lake St. <br /> So what does Hardcoat need to do to keep the money? "They have to hold and maintain the <br /> property and not sell it for five years," said Greg Hunt, St. Louis Park's economic development <br /> coordinator. <br /> Hardcoat turned in "certificates" with expenses that could then be reimbursed with the loan. <br /> Hunt said the city's priority was to get more uses into vacant buildings and create full-time <br /> finance-commerce.com/wp-content/plugins/tdc-sociable-toolbar/wp-print.php?p=52341 <br />