George F.
Will:
Chicago mayor acts as
if lease is more
The city keeps parting with long-term municipal
assets
for short-term infusions of cash.
February 08, 2007
By
George F. Will, Washington Post
CHICAGO - Eighteen years ago, Richard M. Daley
went into the family business, which is the
business of being mayor of this city. Back then,
he hardly could have imagined that he would
become an accomplished practitioner of today's
new wrinkle in public finance, here and
elsewhere. He says his father, who died in 1976,
would approve, but one wonders.
Richard J. Daley, who was mayor from 1955 until
his death, was a builder. He thought of urban
success the way many mayors then did and still
do, as the improvement and enlargement of the
city's physical assets -- bridges, roads, public
housing, etc. Today, some mayors and governors
are discovering the wisdom of, in effect,
cashing in municipal or state assets.
That is why two years ago Chicago became the
first city to sell a toll road. Actually, it has
leased it for 99 years, which is much the same
thing as selling it. The 7.8-mile, six-lane
Skyway goes from the
Indiana Toll Road (which
the state of Indiana last year leased for 75
years to a Spanish-Australian group for $3.85
billion) to Chicago's Dan Ryan Expressway.
Skyway was built in the 1950s to bring workers
and material to and from the steelworks on the
South Side. Most of the steelmaking has gone
elsewhere, but Skyway was still a sufficiently
attractive investment to have drawn $1.83
billion from the same consortium that leased the
Indiana Toll Road.
Now, 99 years is a long time. Ninety-nine years
ago the Cubs won the World Series; things
change. But that is for the
consortium to worry
about. Meanwhile, the city has fewer immediate
worries because of the one-time infusion of
$1.83 billion. The money has financed a $500
million long-term reserve and a midterm reserve
that has (note the carefully crafted noncommitment) "mitigated the need to raise
taxes over the next eight years."Mitigated,"
indeed.
Some of the $1.83 billion has been used for city
services, and some has been used to retire city
debt -- which has caused the three major credit
rating agencies to upgrade the city's rating to
its highest level since 1978. This makes it
cheaper for Chicago to borrow money, thereby
increasing the value to the city of the lease
arrangement.
The city also has leased, again for 99 years,
four underground parking garages for $563
million -- $61,342 for each of the 9,178 parking
spaces. What probably will
be next? Midway Airport, which is used by 11
airlines and almost 18 million passengers a
year.
Daley believes that Census figures are evidence
of what will happen if
he wins his wager on forgoing some future
revenue streams in order to put money to work
immediately. Chicago, like many other cities,
lost population in the 1950s. And the 1960s,
1970s and 1980s. But in the 1990s it gained at
least 112,290 residents, a 4 percent increase.
(Daley believes the Census undercounts
African-Americans and Latinos, who together are
a majority of Chicagoans.)
By selling future revenue streams, Daley
believes the city can ignite a virtuous cycle:
Buying improvements "as quickly as possible" in
education and infrastructure can lure people
back into the city, thereby improving the city's
tax base and cultural vibrancy, which enables
further improvements that attract still more
residents.
Unfortunately, Daley's theory -- that it can be
better to get a sum X immediately, rather than
getting over many years a sum Y that is
substantially larger than X -- assumes something
that cannot be assumed. It assumes that
governments will
prudently husband sudden surges of revenue from
the lease or sale of assets. Still, his theory
has adherents downstate, in Springfield.
The state government is hoping to lease the
state lottery for at least $10 billion. The
purchaser would get most of the lottery's
revenues and profits for up to 75 years. Last
year, the lottery made $630 million on revenues
of $2 billion.
Daley stresses that the assets sold are not
"core competencies" of the city government, such
as public safety and education. Actually, what
competencies are really "core" is debatable.
Leasing -- privatizing -- some cities' school
systems probably would make the systems more
competent. Perhaps the moral of Chicago's story
is that what government can shed, it should
shed.
This lesson was illustrated exactly 50 years ago
by Murray Kempton, the finest practitioner of
the columnist's craft, when he heard the great
defense attorney Edward Bennett Williams deliver
his successful closing argument for Jimmy
Hoffa's acquittal. Kempton's conclusion: "To
watch Williams and then to watch a Department of
Justice lawyer contending with him is to
understand the essential superiority of free
enterprise to government ownership."
George
F. Will's column is distributed by the
Washington Post Writers Group.
Copyright 2007 Star Tribune. All rights
reserved.
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