Aurora eyes hearing for TIF district for Hollywood Casino

Chicago Tribune
 
Aurora eyes hearing for TIF district for Hollywood Casino
Wild Casino

Aurora City Council members are set to vote next week on establishing the review board and public hearing for a new tax increment financing district.

The proposed Farnsworth-Bilter TIF District is tied to the Hollywood Casino resort project at Farnsworth Avenue and Bilter Road, near the Interstate 88 interchange.

Aldermen meeting as a Committee of the Whole this week put the two ordinances regarding the TIF district on unfinished business for next week’s City Council meeting. Aldermen on the Finance Committee last week unanimously recommended the two ordinances.

The TIF district is contemplated as part of the incentives for the Hollywood Casino resort.

The ordinances are part of the beginning process to set the date for the Joint Review Board, which is made up of representatives of all taxing bodies in the proposed TIF area, and the public hearing.

The Joint Review Board would be set for Nov. 8 in the lower level of the city’s Development Services Building, at Broadway and Benton Street. The public hearing would be before the City Council at its Dec. 12 meeting.

The reason establishing the TIF district needs two ordinances is because it would amend TIF District 7, which expires soon, and establish the new Farnsworth-Bilter TIF District.

The current TIF District 7 runs from Farnsworth Avenue and Bilter Road along Interstate 88 to Mitchell Road.

The new Farnsworth-Bilter TIF District would be a micro-TIF, carved out of property at Farnsworth and Bilter. It includes three lots the city owns and is deeding to the casino along Farnsworth, as well as the former Gaslight Manor property and a chapel property next door. The casino would ultimately own all that land for the project.

Earlier this month, the city officially announced its intention to amend TIF District 7 and establish the Farnsworth-Bilter TIF District.

The casino resort development would include a casino with about 900 slot machines and 50 live table games - including a baccarat room and a poker room - a Barstool Sportsbook, a 220-room hotel, a full-service spa, several bars and restaurants, about a 10,000-square-foot event center, and an open, outside entertainment area.

The location will feature 1,600 parking spaces, both at street level and in a parking garage, with the potential of adding another 500 spaces if needed, casino officials have said.

The city and Penn Entertainment have a redevelopment agreement that has the city giving the land and donating $50 million to the casino, which it will pay back. The city would plan to pass $58 million in general obligation bonds for that money.

The payback would be done through the Farnsworth-Bilter TIF District. It would be tied to the bond payments. City officials have estimated that the land will generate about $5.5 million in property taxes a year, which would make the bond payments.

If the TIF district does not generate enough to make the bond payments, Penn Entertainment would make up the difference, according to the agreement.