Disney accounts for 80-90% of the taxpayer funds in the district.
In typical municipalities, that is irrelevant to the election and representation of the people. If I own an apartment complex with 1000 units, I get 0 votes, and each tenant of mine gets 1 vote, even if I'm paying 90% of the revenue in a town.
If Disney took one vote, and gave every tenant on Disney's property a vote, that would be more fair, but Disney has no interest in doing that.
When the board says tax payers, they are primarily talking about and avoiding saying “Disney”.
While Disney pays the taxes to the district, ya'll keep arguing that they aren't the only beneficiary because they lease land to other people. When I stay in a Disney hotel, I am one of those people, so by that argument, I am the taxpayer, along with all of the business owners leasing land from Disney.
Its just not in any way fair to Disney to get to make every decision for the district.
Once again, those services are provided. These are Orange County’s impact fees:
Fire - Provided by the District
Law Enforcement - Provided by the cities
Parks & Recreation - Not Applicable
Schools - Not Applicable
Transportation- Provided by the District
I think you aren't understanding what impact fees are for. I am a developer. If I build a community or commercial establishment, I have to pay for all the roads for my residents or tenants to use out of my own funds. I have to pay taxes on all of that, I don't get help from the municipality. ON TOP OF THAT, I have to pay impact fees. So if I build a community, I might put $2 million into roads inside of the community. On top of that, I would have to pay, say, $1.5 million to the county to improve roads OUTSIDE my community, because its understood that the residents in my community will have an IMPACT on other roads as they travel around the area. Under the normal impact fee schedule for Disney's owned hotels and businesses on the property, Disney would have been required to pay SEVERAL HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS to improve roads OFF of Disney's property, because many people who stay on Disney's property will likely want to go other places, like, say, Universal. Disney avoided all that... Universal paid the impact fees on all their hotel rooms.
Sorry, I didn't qualify this one as "majority Disney, they're not the only land owner and tax payer within the district, just the overwhelming majority one". Probably need to add "all the other land owners have agreements with Disney that give Disney significant control over what those other land owners can do and that all of them became owners after the district already existed and knew how it worked when entering the agreement". It's a huge pain to type that out every time. I thought we all got to that point a hundred plus pages ago.
So can I, as a developer, tell people they must support me in all elections and future endeavors as a condition of buying homes from me? No, of course not, that is absurd. The people and businesses in the district, through a secret ballot, should be able to push for what they want without fear of repercussions from Disney. Clearly they can't, everyone knows that.
The Disney Springs complex itself was developed by Disney for Disney’s benefit, of course. However, the vast majority of employees at that destination do not work for Disney and the vast majority of the revenue doesn’t end up in Disney‘s pockets. And the garage is open to the public at no charge. The garages are clearly beneficial to the public and loads of businesses independent of Disney. The fact that Disney is the developer of the complex doesn’t change that.
When I build a shopping center, the employees who end up working at that shopping center don't work for me, and the whole thing are clearly beneficial to the public and loads of independents businesses, including all my tenants. Why do I have to pay taxes when I build my parking lots, and then not only that, but every year, have to pay property taxes on my facility? How is that fair?
If funding parking garages results in more accessibility, free parking, and results in higher attendance which benefits the local businesses who are tenants at Disney springs, which helps the Florida economy, and the economy of the resort district, it was a good use of tax payer dollars (majority of which come from Disney).
Florida's economy would have been helped more by the alternative, which would have been Disney built the same exact parking garages, paid sales tax and impact fees while building them, and then every year paid property taxes on them. That would have allowed all of the county's tax payers to benefit instead of just Disney.
Hopefully not charging us by the word.
Don't worry, they'd be charging Disney by the word, not you
The lost sales tax revenue was less about 0.6% of their sales tax revenues for 2016 - and considering the construction stretched across multiple years, you can see how inconsequential it was. Meanwhile, the finished project has had a sustained benefit for the County because they get to collect additional property taxes for the added improvements.
If its so inconsequential, why is Disney going through all this to evade such a small amount of taxes? Also, the problem is the county DOES NOT get to collect additional property taxes for the improved parking facilities, that is something they specifically avoided.
The same story applies to ALL of the services RCID provided... the energy plants provide power only Disney, but evade taxes that anyone else doing the same would have to, etc...
If you guys think parking lots, roads, and such should not be taxes, lets not tax it for ANYBODY in the state of Florida, but only exempting Disney is unfair.