Honorable Yvonne S. Wilson Representative, District 42 State Capitol, Room 115-B 201 West Capitol Avenue Jefferson City, MO 65101-6806
Dear Representative Wilson:
You have submitted the following question to our office:
If a project (a) has previously been approved as a "redevelopment project" under the Real Property Tax Increment Allocation Redevelopment Act, Sections
99.800 et seq., RSMo ("TIF"), and (b) is receiving funding through "PILOTs" and "EATs" under TIF (but not "new state revenues" under TIF), does Section99.960 .8, RSMo, or any other provision of the Missouri Downtown and Rural Economic Stimulus Act, Sections99.915 et seq., RSMo ("MODESA"), preclude that project from subsequently being approved as a "development project" under a MODESA "development plan" and receiving funding under the MODESA development plan through only the "state sales tax increment" and/or the "state income tax increment" under MODESA while still continuing to receive funding through "PILOTs" and "EATs" under TIF?
The Missouri Downtown and Rural Economic Stimulus Act ("MODRESA") was enacted by Conference Committee Substitute for Senate Substitute for Senate Committee Substitute for House Committee Substitute for House Bill 289, 92nd General Assembly, First Regular Session (2003). That legislation provides for MODRESA to be codified at Sections
MODRESA is a complex and detailed law and we will not undertake to summarize it fully in this opinion. For purposes of this opinion, it suffices to note the following. The legislation authorizes a municipality to establish development financing to aid certain development projects. See Sections
Your opinion request addresses the relationship between state supplemental downtown development financing and financial assistance under another state statute, the Real Property Tax Increment Allocation Redevelopment Act, Sections
You specifically ask about the effect of Section
A development project approved for state supplemental downtown development financing may not thereafter elect to receive tax increment financing pursuant to the real property tax increment allocation redevelopment act, sections
99.800 to99.865 , and continue to receive state supplemental downtown development financing pursuant to sections99.915 to99.980 .
(Emphasis added.) By its terms, this provision would force a development project to forgo state supplemental downtown development financing if it first received approval for that financing and then subsequently elected to receive tax increment financing pursuant to the TIF statute. But your opinion request assumes the opposite sequence of events: you ask what happens with respect to a project that first receives financing pursuant to the TIF statute, then subsequently receives approval for state supplemental downtown development financing under MODRESA. Section
In interpreting a statute, Missouri courts look first to the plain and ordinary meaning of the words enacted by the General Assembly. Cox v.Dir. of Revenue,
It bears noting, though, that Section
In that vein, you also asked whether any other provision of MODRESA would preclude a project that is already receiving financing pursuant to the TIF statute through PILOTs and EATs from later obtaining state supplemental downtown development financing and keeping its TIF funding. There are several provisions of MODRESA that may ultimately preclude such a combination of financing. For example, one prerequisite for obtaining state supplemental downtown development financing for a development project is "that the development area would not be reasonably anticipated to be developed without the appropriation of" the state sales and/or income tax revenues created by the project. Section 99.960.1(5). Seealso Section
Further, Section
State supplemental downtown development financing shall not be used for retiring or refinancing debt or obligations on a previously publicly financed redevelopment project without express approval from the director of the department of economic development and the Missouri development finance board. No approval shall be granted unless the application for state supplemental downtown development financing contains development projects that are new projects which were not a part of the development projects for which there is existing public debt or obligations.
This provision, too, could preclude a combination of state supplemental downtown development financing and financing through the TIF statute in certain circumstances.
More broadly, Section 99.960.3 provides that state supplemental downtown development financing is available only if approved by the Missouri Development Finance Board. So Section 99.960.3 would preclude such financing if the Missouri Development Finance Board determined that the statutory provisions noted above or other provisions of MODRESA precluded state supplemental downtown development financing, or if that Board otherwise determined that the combination of state supplemental downtown development financing and TIF funding was not appropriate.
In sum, it would depend on the circumstances whether provisions of MODRESA other than Section
Very truly yours,
JEREMIAH W. (JAY) NIXON Attorney General
