Category Archives: 2. Meetings

Tax Incremental Financing, a Remarkable But Poorly Understood Urban Development Tool

–submitted by Dave Mollenhoff; photo by Valerie Johnson

TIF Panel 6 22 2016

[Pictured here from left: Mike Barry, Natalie Erdman, Dan Thompson and Steve Walters]

Few Wisconsin voters understand what tax incremental financing (TIF) is, but since its introduction in 1975, it has proved to be one of the most powerful and effective urban development tools in Wisconsin’s history.  On Wednesday members were privileged to hear a panel explain this poorly understood topic.  Speakers were: Dan Thompson, former executive director of the Wisconsin League of Municipalities;  Natalie Erdman, Director of the Madison Department of Planning, Community and Economic Development; and Mike Barry, Assistant Superintendent for Business Services for the Madison Metropolitan School District.  The panel was artfully moderated by Steve Walters, with WisconsinEye.

Thompson reminded the audience that by the 1970s the suburbanization of homes and factories left huge swatches of once valuable central city land vacant and blighted.  City leaders sought financial incentives to revitalize downtowns and closed-in neighborhoods.  This was why Governor Patrick Lucey encouraged the legislature to approve a TIF law for Wisconsin.

Erdman explained how the law works by using Tax Incremental District #36, known as the Capital East District.  She noted how this sprawling area along East Washington Avenue from Blair Street to the Yahara River, long known for its car dealerships, had great potential.  However, developers could not undertake projects there because squishy soil required expensive foundations and contamination from old factories had to be remediated.  When the City created TID 36 its real estate was assessed at $75 million.

To realize the district’s extraordinary potential, the City developed a comprehensive plan. Projects included expensive high-rise mixed use projects such as The Constellation and the Galaxie, the renovation of Breese Stevens Field, street improvements, and Central Park refinements.

By 2015 assessed values of land and improvements in TID 36 had soared to $132 million and many more large projects are about to break ground and are being planned.  This huge increase in real estate values caused an additional $1.5 million to flow into the city treasury every year.   Under tax incremental financing these increased taxes are used to pay back the City’s front-end development costs.

During the district’s life—typically about 13 years in Madison—taxes continue to get collected and distributed to all taxing jurisdictions, but at level of the district before redevelopment.  Then when the district is terminated, all taxing jurisdictions start getting the bonus taxes created by the increased values.

Barry explained how school districts and cities work together to enjoy the increases in real estate taxes generated by tax incremental districts.

“Thank God for tax incremental districts,” exclaimed Rotarian Bob Miller who is also mayor of the city of Monona.  “Without it we would be in a sorry state.”  Miller explained how his suburb was able to use TIF to do a $20 million upgrade to Monona Avenue.

Special appreciation goes to Carol Toussaint and Roth Judd for fomenting and producing this exceptionally informative program.

For more information on TIF visit this link: https://www.revenue.wi.gov/slf/tif.html

Our thanks to Michael Barry, Natalie Erdman and Dan Thompson for serving on this TIF panel with Steve Walters of WisconsinEye moderating.  We also thank Dave Mollenhoff for preparing this review article and WisconsinEye for videotaping.  CLICK to watch the video.

Goal of Zero Suicide as a Model for Community Transformation

–submitted by Jerry Thain; photo by Valerie Johnson

Edward CoffeyDr. Edward Coffey, President & CEO of the Menninger Clinic, as well as Professor of Psychiatry, Behavioral Sciences & Neurology at Baylor College of Medicine, was in Madison June 7-8 for a collaborative meeting of 150 health and other community organizations to discuss treatment of depression and the goal of zero suicide.  He spoke at our meeting of June 8th about his work in this field.

Assisted by funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, research and work to reach a goal of Perfect Depression Care (PDC) has been a focus for Dr. Coffey in recent years.  He noted that suicide rates in the US  have increased over the last 15 years, especially among middle-aged white males, and the rate in Wisconsin is now at 13.5 per 100,000, although Dane County has a lower rate.

PDC became a goal of both the Institute of Medicine & the American Psychiatric Association when each issued reports indicating that the mental health care system was in chaos and needed a total overhaul.  Dr. Coffey said there are six dimensions to achieving PDC:  Safe; Effective; Patient-centered; Timely; Efficient & Equitable.  He described rules developed to attain these goals.  As to why perfection is sought, he noted that a 99.9% effectiveness rate would result in 12 babies delivered to the wrong parents and 2 unsafe landings at Houston airport daily, among other things.  Therefore, the goal to deal with suicide is to eliminate it, not just to reduce it dramatically.  There must be a planned care model for treatment of depression that will be a system in which an informed, activated patient who has productive interaction with the health care professional treating the patient is the result.  The six dimensions to achieve PDC are achieved only when treatment is perfectly safe and the patient is 100% satisfied that the other five dimensions have been met.  Efforts to implement such a system at the Henry Ford Behavioral Health Sciences where he works have seen significant decreases in suicide rates there.  The audacity of seeking perfection was noted by Dr. Coffey but he emphasized that anything less is unsatisfactory.  In 2012, the US government adopted the concept of zero suicide in its report on suicide.  In Wisconsin, there is a state wide suicide prevention strategy, but it has not endorsed the zero suicide goal to date.

Dr. Coffey concluded his presentation with a challenge to the Madison community to become the healthiest community in America even as he works toward that in his own community of Houston.

Did you miss our meeting this week?  CLICK to watch the video. 

UW Men’s Basketball Update

–submitted by Bob Dinndorf; photo by John Bonsett-Veal

Coach Greg Gard

UW-Madison Men’s Basketball Coach Greg Gard (right) pictured here with Club President Ellsworth Brown

“Losing to Maryland, a number 5 team in the country, on a 28 foot shot by an All-American with a defender in his face is not adversity.”  Coach Greg Gard used this statement to help his players and fans gain a sense of proportion about the game of basketball versus life.

Gard was named head coach at UW-Madison on March 7, 2016, and is in his 15th season on the Badgers basketball staff, serving as the team’s associate head coach since July 2008.

As associate head coach, Gard served as the Badgers’ recruiting coordinator in addition to on-floor coaching duties, opponent scouting and game preparation and the constructing of future game schedules. He also served as the director of the Badger Boys Basketball Summer Camps.

Gard came to the Badgers after spending the previous two seasons as Bo Ryan’s assistant at UW-Milwaukee. Previously, Gard served as an assistant to Coach Ryan at UW-Platteville from 1993-99. Coach Gard began his career at Southwestern and Platteville High Schools.

Well educated for this job, Coach Gard is a 1995 graduate of UW-Platteville with a degree in physical and health education. He earned a Master’s degree in counselor education from UW-Platteville in 2007.

Coach Gard was joined by his wife, Michelle, at the meeting. He was lavish in his praise for her support as he has made his way through these past sixteen years. His young family enriches the perspective he is able to bring to his work helping young men develop their potential as players and as people. He was thoughtful and reflective answering questions from club members. Coach Gard enjoys the public relations side of the job, describing the visit by Barneveld first graders to the Kohl Center in the morning of the Rotary meeting as well as other appearances he has made throughout the state. As a native of Cobb, Wisconsin, Coach Gard said he will not lose sight of the roots of Wisconsin, its people and our midwest region. Badger basketball is in good hands.

Did you miss our meeting this week?  Watch the video here.

Is the US Becoming Increasingly Anti-Science?

–submitted by Ben Hebebrand; photo by John Bonsett-Veal

Scheufele DietramAt the April 20 meeting of the Rotary Club of Madison, our guest speaker, UW-Madison Professor Dietram Scheufele (pictured here at right with Club President Ellsworth Brown) presented an interesting insight into how polarized opinions have become as a result of an increasingly greater tendency for like-minded segments of our population — tribes, if you will — to subscribe to the news and information that fits their ideology.

Under the title of “Is the U.S. Increasingly Anti-Science?” Professor Scheufele claims that about half the U.S. population agrees with global warming and the other half does not.

Among the primary reasons for this split in opinion is a tendency for humans to associate with those who think like us — a phenomenon that in recent times has led to our media becoming opinion-driven, as is evidenced by the rise of Fox News on one end of the spectrum and MSNBC on the other end.

Media outlets such as these “give people what they want to believe in,” said Scheufele, although the consumption of information and research should really be a non-partisan endeavor. Scheufele illustrated our nation’s increasing polarization with various examples, including a study of political blogs published on the Internet that feature tremendously high cross-referencing with like-minded political blogs, but hardly any crossover between different ideologies. “We don’t go by content; we go by category,” said Scheufele. Social media, Scheufele said, is based on a business model that gives the consumers what they want. He said steering Internet traffic to the opposite point of view or need or want “doesn’t sell.”

To break through this polarization, Scheufele suggested that one method to unite various constituents of our nation is to focus on bottom-line issues we can all agree on. In the case of global warming, Scheufele said it would be most likely that we could get behind the idea of investing in green energy so that we can export green energy technology to other nations. Global competitiveness, Scheufele said, is something we can agree on.

 CLICK to watch the video on our YouTube Channel.

Literacy Network Reaches Out

–submitted by Larry Larrabee; photo by Karl Wellensiek

BurkhartAt our March 30 meeting, our very own Rotarian, Jeff Burkhart, described for us the scope of The Literacy Network of Dane County where he is the executive director.  With 900 volunteers providing over 30,000 hours of help each year to those with impaired literacy skills at 28 locations in Dane county, the literacy network reaches out to the 55,000 with impaired literacy in the county.

The network serves over 1000 learners each year by providing literacy learning services in the areas of employment, education and health care, the latter including locating health care services and communicating with health care providers.  Jeff used numerous anecdotal examples of the wide variety of learners needs from learning to read and complete job applications to acquiring computer and report writing skills needed to keep a job.

Sixty percent of the programs learners are mothers with children at home.  By helping these mothers to read English better, they are able to read with their children and to understand better the expectations of their teachers.  The level of literacy of mothers is highly correlated with the academic performance of their own children.

Jeff Burkhart described how the Literacy Network directly or indirectly helps in the areas of employment, achievement gaps, recidivism, health care and poverty.  It makes Dane County an even better place to live, not only for others with literacy issues but also for the rest of us who take reading for granted.

Watch the video on our club’s YouTube channel here.

Bradley Versus Kloppenburg Debate

–submitted by Mary Borland; photos by Karl Wellensiek

Bradley RebeccaKloppenburg JoAnneThis week’s Rotary program featured State Supreme Court candidates, Justice Rebecca Bradley and Judge JoAnne Kloppenburg. Rotary Club of Madison partnered with WisconsinEye to produce this forum. WisconsinEye reporter Steve Walters moderated the forum and the broadcast was livestreamed to WisconsinEye viewers using computers or mobile devices.

Opening and closing remarks were made by each candidate as to why they should be elected to the WI Supreme Court.   Bradley cited business experience and litigation experience; and Kloppenburg cited experience, independence/non-partisan background.

When the candidates were asked how voters can determine who to vote for, Bradley stated her judicial philosophy and her judicial role models she aligns with to carry out the law as reasons to vote for her; and Kloppenburg said she will stand up to partisan interests and that Wisconsin needs an independent judge, politics versus qualifications is important. There were rebuttals by both candidates with both stating they would put their personal opinions aside when judging.

Questions around open records laws and when to recuse oneself were asked, as well as the candidates thoughts on public campaign financing, with differing points of views. Watch WisconsinEye on Charter Channel 995 and Time Warner Channel 363 to see the forum for yourself as you prepare to vote on April 5.

Our thanks to the Supreme Court Candidates for appearing this week and to WisEye for livestreaming our forum this week.  You can watch the video here.