254 S Chestnut Street / Old Junior High Building

The old junior high building, located at 254 S Chestnut Street, has been the “elephant” in the community for several years. The property was sold by the school district for $1 in 2005 in good faith that it would become a dinner theatre, then sold to a close-out warehouse company (where it was later condemned, with 16 tons of rotting food inside https://bit.ly/3MslaC3), then sold to the current owners who are using it as a salvage storage facility. It has a long and challenging past. Year after year the property has continued to deteriorate and generate many complaints to the village and police department.

The property is not only an eyesore but a drain on our property tax base. A property that could be producing a tax base of $50,000-$100,000 each year has only been generating $2500. The topic of “the old junior high” came up time and again during our comprehensive plan update this spring, ranking at or near the top of the list of issues residents would like to see addressed in our community. Overwhelmingly, residents want this issue dealt with once and for all.

The current owners of the property contacted the Village in April 2022 expressing an interest in selling and asking if the Village was interested in purchasing the property. The Village Board approved to extend a purchase agreement at the May 2, 2022 board meeting in the amount of $25,000 (the amount of the last property sale 10 years ago). The offer was accepted. The Village will be using a portion of our American Rescue Act Plan (ARPA) funds for this purchase, so these dollars will not come out of the general fund. The sale will close on August 1, 2022.

This is a proactive and empowering approach that will provide us some control over the development of the property, allowing us to decide what happens with that property in the future, how best to integrate it back into the neighborhood, and eventually recover our investment!

The Village’s Community Development Authority (CDA) started pulling together a plan at their May 12, 2022 meeting to make a proposal to Pierce County for a portion of their ARPA funds to help pay for the cost of demolition. The county would benefit, too. By investing those funds into a project that will increase both housing stock and tax base, both the village and the county come out ahead. See the proposal here.

The Board is also pursuing the option of turning this property into a Blighted Tax Incremental District (TID) for residential use. Doing so will offer the village the means to pay back any costs associated with the project using the increase in tax base from the property. Our goal is to utilize this approach so there will be no tax impact to village residents. There will be a Joint TID Review Board meeting in the future to discuss this option. I recommend you all attend to learn about using a TID in this situation.

Know we are working strategically and methodically through this process with the village’s future and best interests as our top priority.