RECODIFIED TAX INCREMENT FINANCING ACT S.B. 1043:
SUMMARY OF INTRODUCED BILL
IN COMMITTEE
Senate Bill 1043 (as introduced 10-16-24)
Sponsor: Senator Sam Singh
Committee: Appropriations
Date Completed: 12-3-24
CONTENT
The bill would amend the Recodified Tax Increment Financing Act by modifying the definition
of "other protection obligation" to include an obligation issued or incurred by a tax increment
finance authority (TIFA) or by a municipality on behalf of an authority that met specified
qualifications.
The Act allows for tax increment financing (TIF) in a municipality for various economic
development projects. The TIF mechanism allows a tax increment financing authority (TIFA)
to establish a base property tax value for the affected area; any additional tax goes to the
authority for economic development in the defined area.
Under the bill, "other protected obligation" would include an obligation issued or incurred by
a TIFA or by a municipality on behalf of a TIFA to finance a public facility or project in a
municipality with a population of more than 111,000 but less than 114,000, according to the
most recent Federal decennial census, for specified purposes in a downtown area. The
obligation also would have to meet the following qualifications:
-- It would have to be issued or incurred after the bill's effective date.
-- It would have to be issued or incurred to finance a public facility or project described in a
TIF plan.
-- The obligation would not extend beyond 2059.
This analysis assumes the bill applies only to a municipality with a population between
111,000 and 114,000 according to the latest Federal decennial census.
"Other protected obligation" also includes an obligation incurred by a TIFA that meets both of
is a contract of lease originally executed on December 20, 1994, between the municipality
and the TIFA partially implement the TIFA's development plan and TIF plan. This type of
obligation may be amended to extend cash rental payments for up to 30 years through 2039.
The bill would extend this period to 30 years through 2059.
MCL 125.4301
FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would allow for all TIFAs eligible under subparagraph (viii) to extend their TIF through
2059. There are 62 TIFAs as of fiscal year (FY) 2022-23. It is unknown how many would be
eligible under subparagraph (vii), which requires a debt obligation to have been incurred
between August 19, 1993, and December 31, 1994, for a TIF plan subject to certain
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conditions. The bill's impact would be higher if the provisions applied to all TIFAs. Assuming
the bill applies only to a municipality with a population of more than 111,000 but less than
114,000, (according to the most recent federal decennial census, the City of Lansing is the
only municipality that meets this criterion), the bill would extend the TIFA's tax capture for
an additional 20 years. As of FY 2022-23, the Lansing TIFA captured approximately $5.0
million in revenue. Assuming the value of the properties stays relatively constant while the
TIFA is in effect, the bill would allow the TIFA to capture an additional $100.0 million. The
capture would not affect total local government revenue, but only how it would be allocated
between a municipality and a TIFA. This alteration would be a net-zero shift of funding. As of
FY 2022-23, the Lansing TIFA captured approximately $436,800 in State Education Tax
revenue. Extending the TIFA's authority would reduce SET revenue to the State by
approximately $8.7 million over the additional 20 years. The other roughly $91.3 million would
come from other local entities where the TIFA is located.
Fiscal Analyst: Bobby Canell
David Zin
SAS\S2324\s1043sa
This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official
statement of legislative intent.
Page 2 of 2 Bill Analysis @ www.senate.michigan.gov/sfa sb1043/2324
Statutes affected: Senate Introduced Bill: 125.4301