A page on the City of Wichita’s official, taxpayer-funded website provides information on the February 28th special election regarding a guest tax rebate for the Ambassador Hotel in downtown Wichita. While the page provides useful information, it makes a claim that is not accurate, and one which may persuade Wichita voters to vote Yes.
Specifically, a page on the city’s website states: “Developers would be allowed to collect the rebate for 15 years for costs associated with redeveloping the hotel.”
An informational sheet also on the city’s website says much the same, claiming that the purpose of the guest tax rebate is to “reimburse them for costs associated with redeveloping the hotel.”
Many city programs, such as TIF and CID, have specified, allowable uses for the funds provided by these incentive programs. But this guest tax rebate program does not. When the city makes these claims regarding the use of the guest tax, it makes it sound almost benign. Voters might feel persuaded to vote in favor of the rebate program using a reason that doesn’t exist in fact or in contract.
The guest tax is mentioned on pages 22, 25, 27, 81, 82, 95, and 98 of the agenda packet for the September 13, 2001 city council meeting. The packet includes the actual agreement between the city and the Ambassador Hotel development team.
None of the references to the guest tax rebate say anything about how the money may be used.
I asked the city about this, as to whether the city was adding extra meaning to the guest tax rebate that was not specified in the contract between the city and the hotel developers.
A response from city attorney Gary Rebenstorf disagreed with my contention. Rebenstorf wrote “The explanation you question is a factual statement and accurately reflects the purpose of the rebated taxes to help with costs associated with redeveloping the hotel. The development agreement, which details the development project, provides for the incentive. The guest tax rebates will provide operating cost relief with added cash flow to increase the developer’s capacity to carry more private debt and/or equity and thus cover costs associated with redevelopment of the hotel.”
But you be the judge. Is the guest tax rebate necessary, and will it be used for the purposes mentioned in city attorney Rebenstorf’s statement?
There’s no contract that requires the hotel developers to do so.
Furthermore, the hotel developers have said the hotel will open even if the guest tax rebate measure does not pass in the February 28th election.
The guest tax measure is more properly viewed as a ninth potential layer of taxpayer-funded government subsidy provided for this hotel. Eight layers are already in place and will not be affected by the outcome of the election.
It is only the ninth layer that is in question — a ninth layer that is unnecessary, and that goes directly to the developer’s pockets, despite the claims of the city’s attorney.
I believe there’s a technical business and legal term for that: gravy.
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