Monday, March 18, 2019

Hudson Yards got twice as much tax subsidies as Amazon and their condos' property taxes are dirt cheap






































6 Sq Ft

 The $20 billion, 28-acre Hudson Yards megaproject has been in the news recently as its official March 15 grand opening approaches. The New York Times reports that the nation’s largest residential development has gotten more than a little financial help from the city government to get there. In fact, public records–and a recent study by the New School–reveal that the development has received nearly $6 billion in the form of tax breaks and additional government assistance, twice the controversial $3 billion in incentives held out to Amazon to entice the retail tech giant to bring its second headquarters to Queens.


Where did $6 billion in taxpayer dollars go? Included in that tally were the $2.4 billion spent by the city to bring the 7 subway line to Hudson Yards; $1.2 billion was set aside for four acres of green space within Hudson Yards. The City Council kicked in $359 million to shore up interest payments on bonds when the development fell short of its revenue projections.

The point to be made is that the world’s most successful real estate developers–In this case Related 
 Companies and Oxford Properties Group–are among the biggest beneficiaries of generous government tax breaks, meant to encourage development.

Of the incentives given to the Hudson Yards project, defenders say they’ll reap an enormous benefit to the city in the form of thousands of new jobs created. The subway extension is definitely a boon, and who can argue with parks and improvements at what was for years a jumble of old factories, tenements and a stretch of rail yards once known as “Death Avenue.

But the city was lacking a subway stop on the far west side before the wealthy developers made it happen, and the counter-argument in both the case of Amazon and Hudson Yards is that big businesses with big profits at stake should pay their own way rather than getting government incentives–particularly tax breaks–sorely needed elsewhere.

The New School’s recent analysis, headed by Bridget Fisher and Flávia Leite, focuses on a particularly fortuitous property tax break that developers within the Hudson Yards area benefitted from which has cost the city more than $1 billion so far. This incentive can mean as much as a 40 percent discount for future developers in the area for as long as 20 years.


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yeah well the Hudson yards aren't in JVB's dist. and to the best of my knowledge they used union labor to build...

Anonymous said...

Exactly, big development gets a ton of tax incentives.
Amazon was blocked because of the behind door dealings and lack of kickbacks.

Your politicians could care less about the tax credit amazon was being given. Their palms weren't greased and that's when you saw them come together.

Bottom line no matter where the jobs came from NYC/State would have made money on the payroll taxes.

Anonymous said...

THERE ARE ONLY TWO WAYS TO GET RICH IN NYC, 1) BECOME A POLITICIAN 2)BECOME A REAL ESTATE DEVELOPER.