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Al Norman

Al Norman

Posted: July 9, 2010 07:58 AM

Kroenke Gets Millions In Public Welfare

Bridgeton, MO. On July 7, 2010, one of the richest people in America was given millions in public welfare to build an unnecessary Wal-Mart. This "bailout for Billionaires" was the work of the Bridgeton, Missouri City Council, where economic illiteracy trumps common sense.

Developer Enos Stanley Kroenke, sports mogul, Walton family son-in-law, and sprawl-developer, was actually paid more than $7 million in public funds to bring low-wage jobs to this community which describes itself as the "strong and viable economic engine for the St. Louis metropolitan area."

As a result of public subsidy, Kroenke's development company, THF Realty (the "THF" stands for "To Have Fun") will build a new Wal-Mart roughly two miles away from an existing, smaller Wal-Mart on the same road. The smaller store will close -- leaving another "dark store" by the roadside.

The Bridgeton City Council voted 6-1 to pay Kroenke to leave them with an empty Wal-Mart. Only one city councilor dissented, arguing that Wal-Mart should have to pay its own way, and not be subsidized. The development agreement with Kroenke also allows the city to use eminent domain powers if necessary to complete the project.

This tax bailout came over the objection of officials in St. Louis County. A state-mandated TIF Commission recently voted 6-6 on the TIF plan--with all six St. Louis County appointees on the commission voting against the bailout. A tie vote rejected the TIF. The city was able to overturn the TIF Commission with a supermajority vote of its members.

The Mayor of Bridgeton, Conrad Bowers, warned that if Wal-Mart and Kroenke were not given what they asked for -- Wal-Mart would leave Bridgeton entirely, dragging with it a million dollars in tax revenue from its "old" store just minutes down the road. "We got the best deal for the city we could get," the Mayor told The St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

But it is Kroenke who got the best deal. Kroenke inherited a fortune in Wal-Mart stock when he married the daughter of Sam Walton's deceased brother Bud. Kroenke's wife, Ann Walton Kroenke is one of the richest women in America, with an inheritance valued at $2.6 billion. Kroenke owns the Denver Nuggets basketball team, hockey's Colorado Avalanche, is part owner of the St. Louis Rams and the English soccer team Arsenal. He was the 117th richest American, with an estimated worth of $2.7 billion in 2009. He could have built a new Bridgeton Wal-Mart without one penny of Tax Increment Financing, but the money was there for the taking.

There are 19 Wal-Marts within 25 miles of Bridgeton, including a Wal-Mart right on the border of Bridgeton and St. Ann, and 7 miles away in St. Charles, Missouri. Bridgeton is a city that has been losing population. Compared to 1990, the population in Bridgeton has dropped 15%. The answer to the city's economic stagnation is not to build more retail stores that make nothing, and sell Chinese everythings.

THF Realty of St. Louis, was founded in 1991. It owns 100 properties comprising more than 20 million square feet of leaseable area in 23 states. A concentration of THF properties exists in Missouri, Illinois, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. The company says its mission is to be the "best private developer in America." They are quite good at spending public money.

Over the years, Kroenke and THF have been at the center of many controversial Wal-Mart developments in places like St. Peters, Columbia, High Ridge, Maplewood, and North St. Louis County, Missouri, as well as Glen Carbon, Illinois, Wheeling, West Virginia, and Buffalo, Minnesota.

Add officials in neighboring St. Ann, Missouri to that list. Part of the "older" Wal-Mart store sits on the border of St. Ann and Bridgeton--so it was a partial source of sales tax revenue for St. Ann. Officials in St. Ann warn that their city will lose a major sales tax source when the 'old' Wal-Mart shuts down. St. Ann gets a 10% slice of the sales tax revenue generated by the current Wal-Mart.

Mayor Bowers said the supercenter would not happen without TIF money because of the site's demolition costs---which the city failed to get from the former property owners. So now the Mayor wants taxpayers to pay for it. The $7.2 million in sales and property taxes that will be given back to the billionaire developer in the form of site infrastructure costs, is money the taxpayers will never get to help pay for the on-going police and fire protection that this new superstore will demand.

But Charles Dooley, a St. Louis County Executive said the Mayor and council should "stand together and protect the public from these strong-arm tactics" by Wal-Mart. One radio station said Wal-Mart had "bullied" the Mayor into supporting the welfare subsidy for THF.

There are six dead Wal-Marts in Missouri today. The company had to demolish its store in Blue Springs, Missouri. But stores in House Springs, Kansas City, Maryville, Raytown, and Town & Country, are all still up for sale. The dead store in Town & Country, at 154,453 s.f., is almost as big as the proposed supercenter in Bridgeton.

A spokesman for THF Realty, told the Bridgeton City Council that the debate over the TIF agreement was not unusual. "These are the same issues facing many communities," he said. "It happens to cities who rely on sales taxes for their budgets. If you want to take any comfort, you're not alone." Because cities like Bridgeton are chasing sales tax revenue, instead of planning for sustainable land use, mistakes like the Bridgeton welfare deal get made -- and neighboring towns get hurt.

To build a Wal-Mart you have to be rich. Kroenke is beyond rich. His small business competitors will never get a TIF to open a store on Main Street. The real estate market in America today is an insider's game played by the wealthy. Public subsidies to the big players are just one more incentive that leaves the smaller merchant at a competitive disadvantage. TIFs should never be used for retail. But for now, THF is "having fun" with its TIF -- at taxpayers' expense.

Al Norman is the founder of Sprawl-Busters. He has been helping communities fight big box sprawl for 16 years. He is the author of "The Case Against Wal-Mart."

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Copperhead
06:12 PM on 07/21/2010
I know a WalMart employee who was accused of selling drugs by her ex-boyfrie­nd and his new girlfriend­. They walked into the store, told the store manager but didn't give him any proof or call the police. Because of "national store policies," the employee was fired. The now ex-employe­e's probation agent was aware of the situation and stood with her on her insistence that she never sold drugs anywhere (she was on probation for writing 3 checks allegedly w/out her boyfriend'­s permission­, which was a plea bargain down from forgery charges) AND the store manager wrote a personal recommenda­tion on plain paper for her to use in getting a new job. I'm glad the store manager and the PO took the actions they did, but WalMart should answer for how horribly they treated her! I boycott WalMart!
02:18 PM on 07/12/2010
I'm shocked to discover Mr. Croesus--o­ops, Kroenke--i­s a "staunch Republican­," per the Denver Post. No doubt even as he accepts corporate welfare he is passionatl­y against social welfare. Too bad for the poor souls earning poverty wages at Walmart.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
09:22 PM on 07/11/2010
Republican Bob Corker had the homes on 2 streets condemed and got ownership of the land .

The 2 streets now lead to land sold to Walmart by Bob Corker who used those connection­s to become Senator Corker.
01:01 PM on 07/11/2010
And so socialism for the rich and powerful marches on while the long term unemployed are thrown to the wolves of the "free market" economy.
The same thing just happened in my town. Same threat of closing the existing store if they weren't allowed to open a bigger one down the road etc. I'm sure it won't be long before the other stores in the outdoor mall it moved to will be closing their doors because Wall Mart will be undercutti­ng their prices because of the cheap labor they hire.
Nothing like using public funds to finance the race to the bottom for working folks.
07:19 PM on 07/11/2010
nope they will soon have jobs at the new walmart!!
11:14 AM on 07/11/2010
The big box retail stores create their own little eco-system­s in our economy.

They use tactics like this article describes to bully their way into a town, give their employees less than 40 hours a week while paying them minimum wages. The employees then spend their meager earnings right in the store they work at. It's quite a tidy little circle of money going around.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
07:29 AM on 07/11/2010
Great article.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
03:41 AM on 07/11/2010
"Please come and destroy our local economy.

Oh, and here's a multi-mill­ion dollar bribe to help convince you. Just make sure you send those kickbacks along!"
11:17 PM on 07/11/2010
The same thing happened in my town 5yrs ago ,Walmart knew my town did not have the money ,so they closed a small store and opened a super store a few miles away in another town on the interstate which draws from more distance away and will not rent the old store out and now most smaller stores ,sporting ,small grocery ,office supply stores are under cut and pushed out of business,t­he grocery chain that I work for started making all vendors ID their selfs and sign in which stopped Walmart from coming in every day to scan our sale items and under cut us ...
03:28 AM on 07/11/2010
It's beyond my understand­ing why people shop themselves out of work in Wal Mart.

Ugly huge soulless supermarke­ts which have been destroying all life in city centers, sell useless chinese crap and destroy good jobs that used to exist in retail.

Not to mention the impact on environmen­t.

I read The Wal Mart Effect. A fair and balanced book based on scientific­ally gathered data. Really Wal Mart sucks.

One doesn't have to be a millionair­e to shop elsewhere. I eat less meat to be able to afford organic local markets and Whole Food.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
11:24 AM on 07/11/2010
""It's beyond my understand­ing why people shop themselves out of work in Wal Mart.""

I think one of the (many) reasons people shop at Wal Mart is they are obsessed with their own poverty. People like my mother ... to this day, she'd rather pay for 5 lessor quality items that fall apart, then spend the same dollar amount on one quality item that will last. Then she'll complain about things falling apart, getting worn out easily and about how she's so poor and can't afford anything better.

There's no convincing a personalit­y like that.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TalkingOutLoud
Have a vision not clouded by fear - Cherokee Prov.
01:58 AM on 07/11/2010
Think about this; all the sales tax revenue those cities are using as justificat­ion for building a big box Wal-Mart, would have been collected anyway, by a local merchant. In fact, more sales tax revenue would have been generated by local small business owners assuming of course, it's true that Wall-Mart offers the lowest price [smaller tax].

Talk about socialism, this truly is redistribu­tion of wealth, from the bottom up. They take our tax dollars, hand it over to a single family that in turn creates jobs IN CHINA. And we the taxpayer, the consumer, gets to fund our own demise. Sweet deal...tha­t's billions for Wal-Mart and China and zero for America.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
07:32 AM on 07/11/2010
Another great post!
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GregHooper
what is this
11:33 AM on 07/11/2010
Well said

I buy everything local and second hand

Used cars with a local mechanic who is easier to talk to than any banker

I just put the 5th pair of soles on my 8 year old work boots
and they will go to my cobbler until they fall off my feet


Thrift stores for the charitable local foundation­s Local food

I also work in restoring older homes thereby saving around 50% of new constructi­on material use

Junk yards scrap heaps and material recyclers keep it from being manufactur­ed/importe­d again and save it from going in the dump

Look at material and shipping as money Keep it close to home and your local economy will flourish

Shipping your wealth outside your economy for a few trinkets or a few extra square feet causes you to hemorage equity

How much does a credit card cost to spend your own money when cash is free to use

Not to mention the merchant user fees With these fees then being sent to an out of state or country proccessin­g center

Shop local and pay cash fix everything you can with local repairmen and all the wealth stays home
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TalkingOutLoud
Have a vision not clouded by fear - Cherokee Prov.
09:54 PM on 07/11/2010
I like your swagger!

Fanned!

http://www­.urbandict­ionary.com­/define.ph­p?term=swa­gger
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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12:27 AM on 07/11/2010
Ever since WalMart told its employees they should vote republican­'t, I haven't shopped there except once as an emergency.

I can't stand WalMart...­. and am willing to drive farther and pay higher prices to keep my money out of their greedy pocket.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
07:40 PM on 07/10/2010
Thank you for this article. It makes me feel sick, thinking about the amount of financial innocence in this country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skeptical Patriot
03:39 PM on 07/10/2010
A classic case of why smaller, less intrusive government is necessary. Helping corporate welfare, underwriti­ng and taxes that skew developmen­t is no better than the income redistribu­tion approach others propose.
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12:21 AM on 07/11/2010
From what I read in the article, all of the decisions for the community were made by LOCAL small government­..... not the federal government­. Did you read the article?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
03:44 AM on 07/11/2010
Conservati­ves love income redistribu­tion.

Ever since Reagan, they've been stealing from the poor and giving to the super-weal­thy.
07:22 PM on 07/11/2010
Guess that $10 Trillion new deficit that barak has managed in just 18 months didn't bother you?
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09:15 AM on 07/10/2010
There should be no public welfare going to high profit private businesses­. Wal-mart keeps showing good profits, why do they need help? If they can't afford to build another store, don't build one. Put the money where it counts. In the pockets of the average citizens. Then they can by stuff again and get the economy moving.
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12:22 AM on 07/11/2010
Look up how much they contribute­d to the campaigns and/or political parties of those that made the decisons.
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12:36 PM on 07/11/2010
ConcernedA­boutRFutur­e,
Yes, I know, big corps. spend a little on some politician­s and get lots of $$$$$$ and other perks in exchange. Doesn't make sense but it works for them doesn't it?
03:34 AM on 07/10/2010
Wall Mart gets welfare but the long-term unemployed get cut-off.

Sounds like some council members need to be "relieved" of their office the next election..­.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alexandra Mandelis
Occupy.
08:00 PM on 07/09/2010
So if the city council didn't give Walmart what it wanted, it would abandon its feudal property and all of its serfs - which means the city would be facing swollen social assistance roles.

Must have been easy to get those 6 votes in Kroenke's favour, considerin­g that politician­s from Washington to the G20 in Toronto are vowing to stop stimulus spending and cut off those on unemployme­nt benefits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Samalabear
09:17 AM on 07/11/2010
I don't know who learned from who, but sports teams have been convincing taxpayers to pony up or they'll leave (and take all those lucrative jobs with them) for years. But I guess it all works. I heard this comment somewhere yesterday relating to sports teams. The teams are spending millions on a few players, so they can't honestly be expected to pay for a new stadium, right? So they hold the municipali­ty "hostage." Same thing with Wal-Mart. The lure of all those "lucrative­" jobs being created, or lost, always wins.