CITY MANAGER UPDATE | MAY 5, 2009
City Council Authorizes Development Agreement Between the City and Echo/Continental
by Virginia Barney, City Manager, City of UA
I am pleased to report another milestone in our community’s long-awaited journey toward a revitalized Kingsdale Shopping Center.
At a Special City Council Meeting of Monday, May 4, City Council adopted Ordinance #41-2009 authorizing me as City Manager to enter into a Development Agreement with Echo/Continental
and a Compensation Agreement with the Upper Arlington Schools. Per the developer’s request, the legislation was adopted with an emergency clause, providing the level
of certainty Continental needs to complete its purchase of the site and begin its work in earnest.
Part of Continental’s request to the City through the Development Agreement includes City participation of approximately $5.3 million. This investment will be used to
support the purchase of approximately five acres to facilitate office development and public improvements. The Development Agreement also spells out in great detail the
responsibilities and commitments from both the City and Echo/Continental, mapping out how this project will occur over the course of several years.
In order to fund this investment without taking away from other City programs or projects, Tax Increment Financing (TIF) will be used. The Schools were asked to partner with the
City through the Schools’ Compensation Agreement, which was approved by the School Board on the morning of May 4. Through this Agreement, the Schools will not lose any of
the property taxes it currently receives from the site, but will forgo 25% of the increased property taxes due on the completed project (while gaining 75%), until the TIF Program has
been paid off.
Throughout the years, discussions with interested developers and consideration of various proposals have always referenced the need for a level of public participation to make any
redevelopment a reality. Reasons include the high value of the land and the higher costs associated with redevelopment versus new development. In addition, while the City
would realize a greater fiscal return from the construction of office space, developers gain a higher return-on-investment from retail construction. Therefore, City involvement
is required to help make the addition of office space at the site a reality – essentially investing to obtain the difference in land and construction value between office
and retail.
I am confident we have a good solution for Kingsdale and our community. Residents will benefit from a revitalized shopping district that includes Giant Eagle’s
state-of-the-art Market District grocery store, new restaurants and gathering spaces. Using a TIF Program enables the City to repay its debt through the expanded tax base that
will result from the improvements – and based on Contintental’s estimates, the initial phase will add approximately $15.7 million in new construction, generating over
$400,000 in new property taxes. And the City gains control of efforts to achieve office space by purchasing land, with no debt incurred on this purchase until the initial retail
phase has been constructed in order to generate the necessary TIF dollars to support this step.
