Politics

Cities look to non-profits as cash source

Strapped for revenues, cities in much of the country are looking at ways to get tax-exempt charitable to make payments in place of property taxes they would otherwise owe.

Cities look to non-profits as cash source
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Ashli Blow

Strapped for revenues, cities in much of the country are looking at ways to get tax-exempt charitable to make payments in place of property taxes they would otherwise owe.

The  public finance crisis for local and state governments keeps rolling  along, a bit like a slow-motion train wreck.  Harrisburg, Pa., is on the  brink of bankruptcy.  In California, police departments say they must  cut back on enforcement of certain crimes.  Pensions and health care  continue to wreak havoc on municipal budgets everywhere.

Meanwhile, the mood in the country is against new taxes, while  several states have placed caps on property taxes.  And as anyone who  has balanced a home budget knows, it's simply unsustainable to have  expenditures going out outpace revenues coming in.

Against this backdrop comes heightened interest in collecting  payments in lieu of taxes, or PILOTs, from charitable nonprofit  organizations such as private colleges and universities, hospitals and  medical centers, and cultural institutions that are exempt from paying  property taxes in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Currently, at least 117 municipalities across 18 states have PILOT  programs in place; 82 of those cities and towns are in Massachusetts.   Boston has one of the longest standing and most revenue-productive  programs in the U.S., and Cambridge, home to MIT and Harvard, has the  oldest, dating back to the 1920s.  New Haven and Yale University have  worked out another model program.

The basic idea is that while these nonprofits are by law — and in  several states mandated by state constitutions — tax-exempt, they might  reasonably be asked to make a voluntary contribution that is a fraction  of what they would pay if they paid property taxes.  The payments  typically constitute a very small percentage of overall revenues  collected by municipalities; Boston's collection of $15.7 million in the  2009 fiscal year, for example, amounted to .66 percent of the total  city budget that year.

Nevertheless, in recent years, other cities have been getting into  the PILOTs business, primarily in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, but  also in the Midwest, plus North Carolina, Georgia, Montana, and  California. But the process has been uneven, ad-hoc and often  contentious, according to Daphne Kenyon and Adam Langley, authors of "Payments in Lieu of Taxes: Balancing Municipal and Nonprofit  Interests,"  published by the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.

Some cities and towns have been more aggressive than others as they  seek revenue from nonprofits.  Pittsburgh, Princeton, and Providence  tried to establish a controversial "tuition tax," and some state  Legislatures have contemplated an "endowment tax" on higher education  institutions as well.  In New Hampshire, the town of Peterborough  challenged the tax-exempt status of the MacDowell Colony, founded in  1907 to promote the arts and including an artists-in-residence program.   Selectmen argued that all but one of the artists were from out of  state, failing to meet the requirement that residents of New Hampshire  be admitted to a charity's benefits.  Having gotten the institution's  attention, they proposed a PILOT program, which the MacDowell Colony  refused.  The New Hampshire Supreme Court ruled against the selectmen,  leaving nothing but hard feelings all around.

Municipalities have also of course increasingly relied on charging  user fees that can help pay for basic public services, from police and  fire protection to streets and their maintenance or garbage collection.   Legal challenges abound in this area as well.

The better approach, the report's authors say, is to first decide if a  PILOT program is appropriate, then collaborate with nonprofits to  structure the program so it's reasonable, predictable, and transparent —  all as part of a town-gown partnership that is mutually beneficial.   Cities can set a target based on the cost of public services directly  benefitting nonprofits, and use the assessed value of tax-exempt  property or square footage to calculate suggested contributions.   Boston's goal is that nonprofits contribute 25 percent of what they  would pay if they were not tax exempt.

"PILOTs can provide crucial revenue for certain municipalities, and  are one way to make nonprofits pay for the public services they  consume," Kenyon and Langley say. "However, PILOTs are often haphazard,  secretive, and calculated in an ad hoc manner that results in widely  varying payments among similar nonprofits.  In addition, a  municipality's attempt to collect PILOTs can prompt a battle with  nonprofits and lead to years of contentious, costly, and unproductive  litigation."

Even in Boston's model program, there are wide disparities in what  institutions contribute: Boston University leads the way with $4.8  million, followed by Harvard University with $1.9 million.  Boston  College contributes $293,251, and Northeastern University a mere  $30,157.  Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino launched a PILOT Task Force to  revamp the program and collect more revenue in a more even way from  nonprofits.  City Councilor Stephen Murphy says he hopes a phased-in  expansion of the program will bring in $40 million per year in five  years.  The final recommendations of the task force are due out this  month.

There are big themes at work here that go to the core of U.S. cities  and their continued vitality.  So-called "eds and meds" — higher  education institutions and often related health care medical centers —  are an economic engine for many cities, more resilient during  recessions.  They employ thousands of local residents and support and  spin off all kinds of economic activity.  But when they expand, more and  more land goes off the tax rolls, while they continue to consume the  services that cities provide.

Baltimore is an especially interesting case.  The city recruited  nonprofits to locate there as an economic development strategy —  marketing the location as less expensive than Washington, D.C. but still  close-by — but ended up being a victim of its own success, in terms of  tax-exempt property.  A PILOT program had to be established.

Luring businesses with tax breaks and incentives is a tried and true  practice in the for-profit world.  But tax-exempt status for nonprofits  isn't a loophole or a subsidy, says Richard Doherty, president of the  Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Massachusetts.   It was established going back some 200 years because nonprofits provide  essential services that government does not.  Many institutions provide  community benefits in many ways, in the public education system or by  revitalizing parks and public space, which does not get calculated  sufficiently in setting PILOTs contributions.

The role of nonprofits in cities should not be underestimated, says  Doherty, who suggests that they are responsible for billions in economic  activity. He's against a one-size-fits-all, systematic or formula-based  approach, and favors the Connecticut and Rhode Island systems, where  the state reimburses cities and towns for some of the property tax  revenue they don't collect from nonprofits. Those reimbursements are  partial, however, and in hard times are easily cut from state budgets —  which brings us right back to the fundamental problem of state and local  governments going broke.

It's no surprise that public employee unions are beginning to take  particular interest in PILOTs.  And nonprofits of all kinds may have  some reason to be worried.  As cities assess the practice of collecting  payments in lieu of taxes, some are starting to look at secondary  schools as well as colleges and universities, museums, and even  churches.  It's possible only soup kitchens, which are charitable  nonprofit organizations like the rest, can feel comfortable that it's  with them that municipalities might draw the line.

Distributed by Citiwire.net.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal