At a meeting of the Goochland County Audit Committee on May
2, District 5 Supervisor Ken Peterson gave an overview of the history of the
Tuckahoe Creek Service District debt. Go here to view the presentation: https://www.goochlandva.us/DocumentCenter/View/9557
Update
Thanks, and apologies to the commentor who took GOMM to
task for failing to mention the Herculean efforts of the late Rebecca T. Dickson
who worked tirelessly to correct the deficiencies of the TCSD and county
finances in general during a very difficult period in the county’s history. Her
contributions to the excellence in Goochland government cannot be overstated.
Shortly after becoming Goochland County Administrator in
2009, Rebecca T. Dickson worked withs staff and outside consultants to “get
arms around” every facet of the TCSD. Dickson reported to the TCSD Advisory
committee, which included major landowners in the district, that “31 feet of
butcher paper” had been tacked to the wall and covered with details and
questions about the TCSD. Questions included billing policies for service and
ad valorem tax, and even exact locations of trunk lines and water meters.
By the end of 2010, when the fiscal contraction of the
Great Recession began to kick in, the county was shocked by the FY 2009
Certified Annual Financial Report, which found 40 material misstatements, and
was labeled as a blueprint for the monumental mismanagement by Dickson’s
predecessor. This was outside the TCSD.
It is believed—and this is conjecture because Dickson was
the consummate professional—that she and the late Ned Creasey, who was elected
District 3 Supervisor in 2007, did what they could to fix the TCSD, but were
meet with, at best, indifference from the other supervisors. Following the 2011
election, when four new supervisors took office, meaningful mitigation of the
TCSD issues started.
Scan GOMM from its start in 2008 through 2013 for
details.
The TCSD was created in 2002 to foster economic development.
Bonds were issued through the Virginia Resources Authority to fund construction
of water and sewer trunk lines in eastern Goochland. District boundaries are
roughly the Henrico line on the east, the Hanover line on the north, Rt. 6 to the south, and Manakin Road to the west.
Not all of West Creek is part of the TCSD and not all of the
TCSD is in West Creek. The Capital One Campus, for instance, was built before
the TCSD was created and obtains its utilities via a different arrangement.
The machinations behind the 2002 VRA bond issue are murky. An
assumption used to justify Goochland’s ability to service the debt was an expected
annual growth rate of seven percent. Part of the debt is in bonds that cannot
be paid off early, a sign of how poorly the first funding mechanism was
structured.
The documents creating the TCSD included the levy of an ad
valorem tax was levied on all of its property. Landowners in the “footprint” of
the TCSD were invited to join. Some did, others declined. Inclusion in the TCSD
runs with the land, no matter how many times it is subdivided. Some landowners
in the TCSD have paid ad valorem tax for more than 20 years and have no prospect
of utility service.
During meetings encouraging landowners to join the TCSD, the
proposed ad valorem tax was 15 cents per $100 of valuation. When imposed, it
was 50 cents and levied before construction began to create a “cushion” to meet
debt service obligations. The ink was
barely dry on the approval documents before the county went to war with the
owners of West Creek over real estate valuations of the 3,500-acre business
park.
Two multi day trials challenging the 2001 West Creek
assessment were held in Goochland Circuit Court. One in 2003, whose decision
was overturned, resulted in a second trial in 2006. It is believed that the
county spent more than $1 million in legal fees and related expenses on this
litigation.
In the interim, the only development in West Creek was the CarMax
headquarter complex. Indeed, West Creek resembled a nature preserve more than
an economic engine. Growth in the rest of the TCSD was feeble. There were rumors
that the owners of West Creek investigated putting their land into a
conservation easement, which would have significantly lowered land values crippling
the TCSD and county finances.
When the Great Recession kicked in, property values
declined, reducing the county’s ability to service the TCSD debt. In 2011,
before new supervisors, better able to understand and fix its abysmal
dysfunction, took office, the TCSD had a lower rating than the Detroit sewer
system.
Peterson, a retired Wall Street bond trader, used his
expertise to restructure the TCSD debt to avert default and reduce the cost of
debt service. The deal went from horrible to manageable, a gargantuan task.
At its start, the only residential development envisioned in
the TCSD was Kinloch. The 2002 supervisors refused to even consider creation of
high-density zoning districts supported by public utilities. A few years later,
desperate for users of the TCSD water and sewer, residential enclaves that paid
ad valorem tax were permitted.
In 2012, the supervisors approved building apartments on 60
acres of West Creek. This spurred development in The Notch, opposite Wawa on
Broad Street Road. To date, the north end of West Creek includes the Retreat Apartments,
Sheltering Arms Rehabilitation Hospital, the Residence Inn, medical office
buildings, and Avery Point, an upscale continuing care community. A Honda
dealership and medical office building west of 288 are in the development
pipeline. Apartments have been added in the center and south end of West Creek,
along with a couple of breweries. Mosaic, a 55+ community with about 500 homes,
is under development there.
On the north side of Broad Street Road, also in the TCSD,
are the Audi dealer, Drive Shack, and the county’s first Chick fil-A.
The ad valorem tax is rarely, if ever, mentioned by
realtors, developers, or builders. New homeowners learn about it when they
receive a “bonus” tax bill.
While the ad valorem tax is clearly shown on the county
website under “taxes,” few home buyers seem to bother to research this. Ad valorem taxes obscurely appear on settlement
statements listed as “town taxes”.
Following Peterson’s presentation, residents of Parkside
Village, who have a chronic and virulent case of buyer’s remorse, complained
about the tax.
(These are the people
who bought homes near an active rock quarry and whined when they found out.
Didn’t they investigate where all the dump trucks driving by their new homes
were coming from? Haven’t they ever heard of Google Earth? They also failed to
notice that Ashland Road is an industrial corridor and objected to “Project
Rocky” which will also pay ad valorem tax.)
One man declared the valorem tax is “taxation without
representation.” The tax was imposed in 2002 by duly elected officials of Goochland
County on land voluntarily included in the TCSD. Another resident screamed
about how much she was paying for water. She refused to understand that the ad
valorem tax revenue is used only to service the debt on the TCSD bonds.
Wherever she came from—it’s doubtful she lived in a dwelling
served by an on-site well—the municipality funded installation of public utilities
whose costs were undoubtedly woven into her property tax rates. Even with the 32-cent ad valorem tax on top of
the 53-cent real estate rate, Goochland tax rates are the same as Henrico, and
lower than Chesterfield’s 91 cents, and Richmond’s $1.20. Hanover uses a
complicated formula for its real estate tax, which makes it difficult to
compare and not very transparent.
No one likes to pay taxes. The services we need, especially
at the local level, are not funded by fairy dust. The supervisors, and everyone
who pays the ad valorem tax, want it to go away as soon as possible. This does
not involve waving a magic wand.
Goochland should put warning signs at its border in a large,
easy to read font, “Move here at your own risk.” Maybe then people would do research
before they sign on the dotted line.
(Full disclosure. In 2021, GOMM World Headquarters moved
to the TCSD and pays ad valorem tax.)
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