Though Rosemont – a small village just outside Chicago – has
only 4,200 residents, leaders there felt it necessary to spend more than $64
million on entertainment from 2015-2018.
Rosemont is well known as a suburban entertainment hub. It’s home to hotels,
shops, restaurants, independent baseball and softball stadiums, a convention
center, arena and theater. But local taxpayers, already dealing with a high
county and state tax burden, had to foot much of the bill.
From 2015-2018, Rosemont leaders spent:
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$60 million in tax increment financing, or TIF, for a
stadium for the Chicago Dogs, an independent baseball team
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$3 million in revenue sharing to the Chicago Wolves hockey
team
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Over $250,000 in catering costs for Rosemont Catering
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Nearly $240,000 on video development to Big Shoulders
Digital Video Productions
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$225,000 to iFly Indoor Skydiving toward a lease
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Over $200,000 to Verizon Wireless for cellphone service
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Nearly $200,000 to Disturbing Productions LLC to operate a
haunted house
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The village also paid $65,000 to pizza maker Gino’s East.
TIFs help fund other Rosemont entertainment spending. Rosemont
is only two-square miles but it has five TIF districts presently intended to
promote economic development. By law, TIF districts freeze property taxes for
other taxing bodies at the level of when the TIF was first created and keeps
revenue constant for those bodies for up to 23 years. Any revenue collected
above that amount is put into a special fund the municipality controls for an
economic development project.
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So property tax wealth that could have gone to core local government
functions instead went to entertainment projects, such as hotels,
restaurants and sports. TIF, combined with other focus on
entertainment projects, might be of questionable worth to taxpayers
there. But the dedication to this kind of spending has been a nice
financial boon for those who run the village.
The Stephens family, which has managed Rosemont since the village
was founded in 1956, has had family members making extravagant
salaries despite the modest local median household income. Rosemont
Mayor Brad Stephens and his nephew Christopher Stephens, executive
director of the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center, are both among
the highest-paid municipal executives in the world, making more than
$250,000 a year each. Meanwhile, the median household income in
Rosemont was just $47,000 from 2015-2018.
Rosemont leaders would be best served focusing on core government
services and ways to alleviate the area’s high tax burden. While
entertainment options are a nice luxury for a municipality to have,
they are just that – a luxury, not a priority. Overburdened
taxpayers in the collar counties can’t afford to have additional tax
dollars flowing to hotels, restaurants or independent baseball
teams. They instead need relief, and much of that comes with local
government cutting back on waste.
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