[Adopted 10-4-1994; amended 8-22-1995 (Ch. 6, Art. IX, of the 2010 Code)]
[Amended 7-11-2000; 8-10-2010]
There shall be an Economic Development Incentive (EDI) Board
which shall be comprised of the following:
A. Mayor of
the City of Taunton.
B. President
of the Municipal Council or designee.
C. Chairperson
of the Committee on Economic Development and Technology.
D. Chairperson
of the Industrial Development Commission.
E. Economic
Development Director.
G. Neighborhood
advisory member.
H. Chairperson
of the Board of Assessors.
I. Executive
Director of Economic and Community Development.
There shall be six economic opportunity areas (EOAs) consisting
of contiguous areas as defined below and as shown on the maps on file
at the office of the City Clerk:
A. EOA No.
1, Weir: Portions of census tracts 6139 and 6140 representing the
Weir section of the City running from High and Ingell Streets to Weir
Street along Somerset Avenue to Sixth Street; turn towards the Taunton
River, and back to West Water Street along the Penn Central Railroad.
B. EOA No.
2, Heart of Taunton: Portions of census tract 6138, the Heart of Taunton
and the downtown area business and office district.
C. EOA No.
3, Whittenton: Portions of census tracts 6131 and 6136, the Whittenton
Industrial Area and Business District.
D. EOA No.
4, Industrial Park: Portions of census tract 6132 representing the
expansion property to the Myles Standish Industrial Park, bounded
by the Penn Central Railroad, Fremont Street, Bassett Street, the
Paul A. Dever School campus, and the original Myles Standish Industrial
Park.
E. EOA No.
5, Arlington Street: Census tract 6137 representing the property which
is bounded by Arlington Street, the Penn Central Railroad, and the
Bennett Street Extension.
F. EOA No.
6, Cape Dory: Portions of census tract 6141 representing the East
Taunton area, including the Cape Dory property on Middleboro Avenue
and the business district.
Tax increment financing (TIF) zones shall be located within
the proposed economic opportunity areas and shall include those portions
of the respective census tracts which are zoned for industrial/commercial/general
business and neighborhood business purposes. There shall be six TIF
zones corresponding to the six economic opportunity areas as defined
above.
Specific public projects that are required to facilitate further
economic development and that would be financed through cost betterments
and special assessments shall be incorporated into TIF plans and agreements
as each is negotiated.
[Amended 7-11-2000]
It is the intent of the Municipal Council to authorize tax increment
exemptions from property tax on a project-by-project basis.
A. Term. Under no circumstances shall the term of any specific agreement
exceed 20 years in duration.
B. Calculation. The exemption shall be calculated in accordance with
the General Laws of Massachusetts and any regulations promulgated
thereunder.
C. The exemption shall be limited to the incremental new tax value of
the property that is approved as part of a certified project.
D. Effective date. The exemption shall become effective on July 1 following
the date on which the EACC approves the TIF plan and agreement.
E. All tax increment financing agreements shall be binding upon subsequent
owners of such parcel of real property until the expiration of said
TIF agreement. Parties to such agreements shall notify the City and
the EACC in writing of any ownership changes. The EDI Board shall
forward to the Board of Assessors a copy of each executed TIF or special
tax assessment agreement together with a list of parcels included
therein.
The Municipal Council reserves the right to establish a maximum
percentage of the cost of any public project that shall be recovered
through betterments or special assessments against one parcel with
respect to which a TIF agreement is executed. In addition, the Municipal
Council shall determine on a project-by-project basis the need for
or the appropriateness of either special assessment or TIF financing.
Tax increment financing in accordance with the TIF plan and
agreement shall become effective upon approval by the Economic Assistance
Coordinating Council established by MGL c. 23A, § 3B, and
the regulations adopted pursuant thereto.
[Amended 7-11-2000]
Each certified project shall submit an annual report to the
EDI Board no later than July 31 of each calendar year. Upon receipt
of said annual report, the EDI Board shall submit a copy of said report
to the Municipal Council and the EACC.
[Adopted 6-17-2003 (Ch. 16, Art. V, of the 2010 Code)]
Any agreement negotiated pursuant to §
239-13 must be approved by the Municipal Council, after consultation with the Board of Assessors, and signed by the property owner, the City Solicitor and the Mayor and the same shall be notarized and attested to by the City Clerk.
Said agreements must deal with property or portion of the property
from or at which there has been a release of oil and other hazardous
material(s) and said property is zoned for commercial or industrial
use.
An agreement may be entered into only with a property owner
who did not own the property or portion thereof at the time the oil
or other hazardous material(s) was released and said owner did not
cause or contribute to its release.
A copy of any agreement executed as required in §
239-14 shall be provided to the following:
E. Massachusetts Commissioner of Revenue.
F. Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.
G. Unites States Environmental Protection Agency, Regional Office, which
includes the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
All validly executed agreements shall take effect upon filing
of the above copies.