Pricing the Farash gift 

At first glance, news that a big-time local developer wants to donate high-profile downtown property to the County of Monroe sounds good.

            But Max Farash has handed county legislators a dilemma: Is it wise to accept the gift --- even if it will cost the cash-strapped county and city money for at least a few years?

            Farash has offered to donate three downtown properties to the county: 150 East Main Street, 34 St. Paul Street, and 37 South Fitzhugh Street. Farash is also offering 152 parcels totaling roughly 30 acres in the Miller Heights subdivision of Brighton.

            Of the downtown properties, 150 East Main is easily the largest and most high-profile.

            Largely vacant, 150 East Main is actually a series of buildings made to look like one by its façade. Old, deteriorating, and filled with asbestos, the property would be a massive and costly rehab project.

            Monroe County officials have not returned requests to name the potential usages for the buildings. But in a press release issued on July 16, Doyle said the county would work with business leaders, community representatives, and the city to determine a productive use for each property. And Doyle told the Democrat & Chronicle that 150 East Main, known as the Gateway Center, will likely be demolished.

Which leads to cost. The Gateway building itself, approximately 325,000-square-feet, is assessed at $2.15 million. And the land on which it sits is assessed at $1.05 million.

            For the venture to make sense in the short run, the county would have to demolish the property at a cost less than the value of the land. And the range of the demolition cost depends largely on the amount of asbestos in the Gateway.

            But there are other losses potentially in store for the county on this deal. By taking ownership of the properties, the county is removing them from the city and county property tax rolls. But if a private developer eventually buys them and develops them, they'll go back on the tax rolls, perhaps at a higher value than they were under Farash. The question is: How long will it take to find a private developer?

            According to 2003-2004 property tax records, the three downtown properties brought in $264,807.17 to the city. County property taxes on the three downtown buildings for 2003 total $101,550.95. Both city and county property taxes on the buildings have been paid through the current tax year.

            There are potential gains for Farash: He will no longer have to pay property taxes on any of the buildings he donates. And he might be able to get a tax write-off on the donations.

The Farash donations are likely to be the subject of discussions at the County Legislature's next Ways and Means Committee meeting on August 6. And the full legislature is expected to vote on the issue at its next meeting, August 12.

            But some Democratic legislators say they simply don't have enough information to vote. (The lej's Republican majority leader, Bill Smith, did not return City's calls for comment.)

            In his July 1 referral, Doyle makes no mention of the impact the donations will have on the county's finances. That sort of information is typically included in referrals to the Lej.

            But since the county administration has no specific use for the properties in mind, Doyle's exclusion of any potential costs and benefits in his referral is understandable. It just doesn't make the Lej's job any easier.

            "I don't know what their plans are," says Stephanie Aldersley, the Lej's Democratic minority leader. Aldersley says she and assistant minority leader Chris Wilmot met with a county official and "he purported not to know what the county is planning to do with the properties."

            "Obviously we're still gathering information on this," Aldersley says.

            County Legislator Mitch Rowe is in the same boat as Aldersley. "Clearly there are going to be carrying costs for the county for whatever period of time they're going to be the owners. And clearly there's going to be lost revenue to the county and city in forgone taxes," says Rowe, who also serves as assistant to Rochester Deputy Mayor Jeff Carlson. "There are some questions that need to be asked about the true impact to the county in terms of lost revenue and what it's going to cost the county to take over ownership of these properties. And just what is the plan?"

"I think they're asking legitimate questions," says City Council President Lois Giess of the county legislators. "What's the purpose of the building [at 150 East Main]? Are we going to be saddled with the expense of taking it down or dealing with the asbestos issues?"

            "But acquiring those properties as a donation really gives an opportunity to do something with that land," Giess says. "You acquire these properties where the expense of cleaning them up is balanced by the public benefit. In this case, it could be really open-ended."

            One scenario has 150 East Main and 34 St. Paul being demolished to make room for the downtown transit center. Both properties are adjacent to the site the transit center would occupy. And if those properties are demolished for this purpose, federal funding could be used to pay for the demolition.

            But the Rochester Genesee Regional Transportation Authority, the developer of the transit center, has already spent millions of dollars on designs for the project that do not include those properties, making this scenario unlikely.

            Still, Giess sees other reasons why a new transit center will add to the value of the Farash donations. "I think the transit center project is going to make all of that land in the northwest quadrant --- the Main and Clinton downtown area --- more valuable. And I think we're going to see people more interested in investing in that property."

April Poetry Discussion: A Multitude of Voices

April Poetry Discussion: A Multitude of Voices @ Penfield Public Library

Registration is open. Come join other book-lovers from our community as they...
Cookbook Book Club

Cookbook Book Club @ Fairport Library

Join us as we discuss a variety of Mediterranean cookbooks this month!...
Kids' Book Club

Kids' Book Club @ Penfield Public Library

Registration for grades 3-5 is open. Do you love to read? Here’s...

View all of today's events »

Website powered by Foundation     |     © 2024 CITY Magazine