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The Administrative Services Committee of the DeKalb County Board met
Tuesday, August 5, 2003 at 7:00 p.m. at the DeKalb County Government
Administration Building’s Conference Room East. Chairperson Leifheit called
the meeting to order. Mr. Faivre, Mr. Pritchard, Mr. Sands, Mr. Steimel, Ms.
Tobias, Mr. Van Buer, Mr. Wiegand, and Mr. John A. Wilson were present. Also
present were Ms. Joan Berkes-Hanson, Mr. Ray Bockman, Mr. Ken Campbell, Mr.
Gary Hanson, Mr. Jim Scheffers, Mr. John Dykes, and Ms. Colleen Kissane.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
Mr. Wiegand moved, seconded by Ms. Tobias to accept the minutes of
June 4, 2003. Motion carried unanimously by a voice vote.
APPROVAL OF AGENDA
Mr. Steimel moved, seconded by Mr. Faivre to approve the agenda.
Motion carried unanimously by a voice vote.
TAX ABATEMENT PROGRAM
Chairman Leifheit called on Mr. Bockman, County Administration to give his
recommendation on the tax abatement program. Mr. Bockman had previously sent
the committee a copy of a letter sent to Chairman Wilson of the Public
Infrastructure and Development Committee (which will be placed on file along
with these minutes in the Finance Office.) Mr. Bockman distributed some
information dated 1999 entitled, "Comparison of Equalized Assessed
Valuations by Class of Property" and the most recent report of the
Supervisor of Assessments, "Recent Midwest Real Estate Incentive Programs"
which will be placed on file along with a copy of these minutes in the
Finance Office. He wanted to answer two questions that he had previously
been asked by committee members.
The first question was "How does our 3.8% total value in industrial property
compare to other counties around the state of Illinois?" His comparison
showed that DeKalb County’s 3.8% was about half of the value with the rest
of the state and the following percentages: Statewide 11.5%, Cook County
16.2%, Collar counties 7.9%, and the rest of the state 7.6%.
The second question was "Do tax abatement programs really make a
difference?" He stated it became apparent with a presentation given by
Venture One Real Estate marketers of Park 88. Both they and the Economic
Development Corporation had done some post-mortems on deals that got away.
He used the Midwest Tax Incentive Program handout to show that Dixon,
Joliet, Minooka, New Lennox, and University Park all secured a major
industry which Park 88 may have been
considered but did have a tax incentive program in place. He stated
that solely having a tax incentive may not be a lure an industry here but if
there was a plan in place it wouldn’t put the county out of the running. The
county has steadily sat on this 3.8% over the years continually practicing
the same strategies. He recommends that something different needs to be done
such as the tax abatement plan to see if the county can get more than the
3.8%. Mr. Bockman then asked for questions or comments and a discussion
ensued.
Mr. Van Buer asked if counties with universities were effected. Mr.
Bockman confirmed that it does play a role because of the tax exempt
status with the university.
Mr. Sands expressed his concern over a policy giving tax incentives to
other competitive industries, as well as the fairness of the policy to
established industry. Mr. Sands said that as long as this was an
industrial incentive verses retail incentive that it would be a good idea
to help bring more industries to benefit the county.
Mr. Wiegand asked if 3.8% includes the square footage of manufacturing
entities shutting down their operations. Mr. Bockman stated that it should
be included as current stock. Mr. Wiegand asked if new construction
industrial space competes with invested industrial space that is
underutilized. Mr. Bockman stated that it was totally unutilized. Mr.
Bockman also added a word of caution that if the policy is put in place to
be prepared to set the same type policy in any community in the county.
Mr. Van Buer said that he was bothered by the fact that local taxes
are way down the list of as to companies wanting to locate. He is
concerned giving the winners a bonus after they already may have made
their decision to move here. He said that the postmortems really don’t
share what the real decision was or if it was based on tax incentives. He
stated that the county would have to give up tax revenues to pay for
services in the infrastructure and would like an answer to what the
private sector’s rate of return will be. Mr. Bockman said the presumption
in offering an incentive is because you are afraid they won’t locate here.
The rate of return is very good from the county’s perspective because they
don’t invest anything and will receive property taxes for as long as the
building stands. He restated that it only works if the incentive is what
caused them to make their decision which is difficult to predict.
Mr. Pritchard stated that the county is willing to consider incentives
for anyone that can offer to improve the economic activity of the area
including businesses here that may want to expand. He stated, of course,
the requirements need to be met and that it is going to add jobs and add
to property value. He said that the county will not be the only ones
abating but that other governmental units will also be participating.
Mr. Sands asked Mr. Bockman if the plan was a 5 year or 10 year plan.
Mr. Bockman stated that the recommendation was for a 5 year plan because
businesses have become much more transitory these days. Mr. Sands asked
for the number of acres at Park 88 and when the abatement would begin on a
building with this plan. Mr. Bockman stated that there were 425 acres at
Park 88 and that the abatement would begin the year the building is
taxable.
Mr. Faivre was concerned with allowing the County Board Chairman sole
authorization for this plan. Mr. Bockman said there is no rush and time to
study this plan is available. He said that if a suggestion to have the
authorization be from a committee, commission or sub-commission that it
was agreeable or he could offer another suggestion.
Mr. Wilson stated that if you do give the tax abatement incentive to
Park 88 then the county should be willing to do the same thing for anyone
who wants to do the same thing anywhere in the county.
Mr. Pritchard stated this plan is not like some tax incentives where
governments build infrastructure or use tax dollars to do something to get
a development. This is the builder’s money that is not collected in year
1-5 but the county collects all of the money in year 6. He stated that
taxpayers wouldn’t have lost anything by giving that kind of incentives.
He stated that if you look at the numbers, everyone benefits in year one
because you have a fifty dollar an acre piece of farm ground today that we
are sharing taxes on and they build anything and it will be six times that
amount of money.
Chairman Leifheit concluded that the information was brought to the
committee as an informational item and that it would be voted on by the
Public Infrastructure and Development Committee and then it will go to the
full county board.
GISWEB IMPLEMENTATION UPDATE
Joan Berkes-Hanson, Director of Information Management, was asked to give an
update on the GISWeb Initiative. She stated that GISWeb was up and running
on the County's website July 31, 2003. She explained that IMO has subscribed
to the suggestion to use a "crawl, walk, run" approach in making the site
available to the public. She mentioned two issues that were a challenge to
IMO.
First, IMO cannot control Internet-users' computer environments the way they
can configure County employees' computers. When enabling access for County
employees, IMO visits each user, loads the required plug-ins (free software
that enables the display of graphics) and provides one-on-one training. For
home and business users accessing GISWeb via the Internet, IMO provided a
link to the required free downloads and wrote instructions and on-line help,
but some users will need additional help.
Second, Ms. Berkes-Hanson explained that interactive sites like GISWeb
involve trade-offs between simplicity and ease of use with limited
information available - versus complexity of use with a great deal of
information available. She explained that GISWeb is a very complex database
and that queries of the database involve approximately 34,000 parcels. That
presents a challenge in terms of instructions and on-line help for the
general public. She stated that the planned software upgrade which will make
the site easier to manage is on-target to be completed by the end of
October.
Berkes-Hanson reported that 164 users visited GISWeb during its first week
online. Another challenge is getting out the word that GISWeb is available
to the public. Ms. Tobias raised the question that the free plug-in didn’t
work for her on her office computer. Ms. Berkes-Hanson stated that she had
another user download, but not actually install the plug-in. Ms. Tobias
stated that she had completed those steps. Ms. Berkes-Hanson offered to
visit her site to resolve the issue. Chairman Leifheit commented that her
and her staff have been using GISWeb and found the information very useful.
Ms. Berkes-Hanson concluded her update with an invitation to those who have
not looked at http://www.dekalbcounty.org/gis/GISWeb.html
to check it out.
CAPITALIZATION POLICY FOR FIX ASSETS
Mr. Hanson distributed a Fixed Assets Capitalization Policy daft dated
8/5/2003 which included an Attachment A listing descriptions of assets and
the number of years/useful life examples and an Attachment B naming
definitions and assumptions. (A copy of which will be placed on file along
with these minutes in the Finance Office). The purpose of the policy is to
provide direction to staff for handling discretionary areas within generally
accepted accounting principles for governmental entities as applied to fixed
assets, and to inform the public. Mr. Hanson stated that other counties have
hired engineers and accounts to help with this task but DeKalb County is
taking a low-key approach and still satisfy the accounting requirements. He
stated that this committee will ask the board to adopt a policy to confirm
the assumptions that are made and the plan that is in use so that people who
read the financial statement will know what has been put into it. Mr. Wilson
asked how to find the cost of an asset such as the Courthouse. Mr. Hanson
reported that the determined value would be listed as the historical cost,
not what it is worth today. Mr. Pritchard asked if it was a policy decision
to use cost versus replacement. Mr. Hanson said no and added that the cost
is a mandate. He said that if a historical cost can’t be determined then
estimating a reasonable cost should be used.
GASB #34 (The Governmental Accounting Standards Boards) is requiring for the
first time counties to inventory things such as roads, bridges, etc. It will
be implemented at the end of this fiscal year. Mr. Hanson noted that the
Highway Department is making great progress in this enterprise. He concluded
his report with a mathematical story-problem to have the committee determine
an asset’s value, depreciation, annual depreciation to the budget,
accumulated depreciation, net value and the value gain. (A copy of which
will be placed on file along with these minutes in the Finance Office .) The
answers were arrived at in short work by a combined effort from the members.
CENTRAL PLANT UPDATE
Mr. Campbell, Facilities Manager introduced some of this staff who came to
the meeting. Mr. Jim Scheffers, Maintenance Supervisor, Mr. John Dykes,
maintenance and Ms. Colleen Kissane who works in their print shop and her
husband, who also was introduced. Next, Mr. Campbell gave the committee a
Power Point media presentation entitled "Central Plant Update." The list of
current projects as well as some additional projects complete with beautiful
detailed photos were displayed.
Finish Generator Hook-Up in Legislative Center and Administration
Building - COMPLETED
Courtroom Construction - COMPLETED
Courthouse Fire Alarm Replacement - In Progress
Courthouse Painting – Phase I COMPLETED
Generator Install @ Health Department - 95% COMPLETED
HVAC Controls @ Health Department - 98% COMPLETE
Security System Upgrade @ Health Department - COMPLETED
Courthouse Tuckpointing, Cleaning and Sealing - 95% COMPLETE
Storage Area Refurbish - In Progress
Courthouse Steps - In Progress
Mechanical Room Refurbish - In Progress
He also gave information on additional unexpected projects that are an
extension of 911. He listed those and gave detailed information on those
projects as well:
Run new network cables to dictaphones
Workstations that need counter tops that needed to be cut
Added a Back-up Air Conditioner Unit at 911
Circuit Clerk’s new computers blew the circuits which new boards
were added
The Legislative Center’s HVAC problems have now been ironed out
HVAC added at Health Department’s Server Room
Health Department had a large compressor burned out
Mr. Wilson asked if the installation of the generator was for the entire
Health Facility. Mr. Campbell stated that it was for the Health Department
and Multi-Purpose Room but not the Rehab and Nursing Center part of the
Health Facility as they have their own generator. Mr. Steimel asked if the
generator at the Administration Building had been called into use this
summer. Mr. Campbell said that when the building lost power, then the
generator kicked on as expected. Mr. Sands asked how the HVAC’s system in
the Administration Building was working as he received a memo from the
County Clerk. Mr. Campbell reported that the unit went out and they got it
temporarily working but both the stages went on all night resulting in the
temperature not rising above 65 <.
Mr. Sands asked if it had been ironed out and Mr. Campbell affirmed it had
been fixed. Mr. Wilson commented that the flowers around the courthouse
looked great which the committee unanimously voiced their praise as well.
WALKING TOUR OF NEW COURTROOM
The board members were given a walking tour of the new courtroom located on
the third floor of the DeKalb County Courthouse by Mr. Campbell after the
meeting was adjourned (see below). The State’s Attorney’s Office previously
occupied that space but they moved to their new location in the Legislative
Center. The courtroom should be ready in the next couple of weeks and will
be used primarily as a family court room.
ADJOURNMENT
Chairperson Leifheit asked if there were any other concerns that needed to
be addressed. She called for the meeting to be adjourned and to meet across
the street at the DeKalb County Courthouse for a tour of the new courtroom.
(See above).
Mr. Wiegand moved, seconded by Mr. Van Buer to adjourn at 8:30 p.m.
Motion carried unanimously by a voice vote.
Respectfully submitted,
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Sue Leifheit, Chairman
__________________________
Lisa K. Sanderson
Secretary
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