Archive for the ‘Frankfort’ Category

Kentucky approves tax incentives for Ark Encounter

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

From the Business Courier: http://www.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/news/2011/05/19/kentucky-approvestax-incentives-for.html

Kentucky approves tax incentives for Ark Encounter

Business Courier

Date: Thursday, May 19, 2011, 4:49pm EDT

The Kentucky Tourism Development Finance Authority gave final approval today to grant tax incentives for the Ark Encounter project in Grant County.

The authority gave final approval to plans by Ark Encounter LLC for a theme park with an investment of $172.5 million. The project’s maximum incentive would be more than $43.1 million over 10 years, coming from the sales tax generated by the project.

The Business Courier broke the story in November about the proposed development halfway between Cincinnati and Lexington.

Ark Encounter plans to build a Noah’s Ark-themed amusement park, expected to create 900 full- and part-time jobs on a 300-acre site.

Ark Encounter is partnering with Answers in Genesis to build the attraction. Answers in Genesis is best known for the Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky., which has drawn 1 million visitors in its first three years of operation.

Hunden Strategic Partners presented a report to the authority showing Ark Encounter would meet the criteria of attracting at least 25 percent of visitors from outside the state by the fourth year of operation and that it would have a positive impact on the state’s economy.

The net fiscal impact on the state would be between $64.6 million and $119 million during the 10 years in sales and income tax above and beyond the incentive, depending upon several variable on the projected attendance.

The authority considers applications under the Kentucky Tourism Development Act, which allows eligible tourism attractions a rebate of sales tax of up to 25 percent of project capitol over a 10-year period.

Americans United for Separation of Church and State said bringing jobs to the state isn’t enough for the state to promote a religious enterprise like the Ark Encounter.

“The state of Kentucky should not be promoting the spread of fundamentalist Christianity or any other religious viewpoint,” Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United, said in a news release. “Let these folks build their fundamentalist Disneyland without government help.”

 

Biblical theme park couldn’t pass up Ky. offer

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Biblical theme park couldn’t pass up Ky. offer

By ROGER ALFORD — Associated Press

Posted: 12:43pm on Jul 15, 2011; Modified: 6:28pm on Jul 15, 2011

Ark Encounter, a for-profit biblical theme park, is planned to be built on an 800-acre site in Grant County. Artwork of the planned park shows the Tower of Babel at left, a first-century walled city in center, Noah’s Ark at right, and an amphitheater at bottom center. 

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Originators of a proposed biblical theme park that would include a full-size replica of Noah’s Ark had considered sites in Indiana, Missouri and Ohio but ultimately chose to build in Kentucky because of the state’s generous package of tax incentives, one of the developers said.

Mike Zovath, co-founder of the Answers in Genesis ministry that previously built the Creation Museum in Kentucky, told The Associated Press that the state’s offer of tax incentives worth more than $40 million was too good for the newly created Ark Encounters LLC to pass up.

“We weren’t sure where we going to build until the state of Kentucky approved the incentives,” Zovath said. “Until then, it was still up in the air.”

The Kentucky Tourism Development Finance Authority approved the incentives in May for the $172 million project that’s otherwise being financed by a group of unidentified private investors.

“That incentive package was by far the most enticing of any anywhere east of the Mississippi,” Zovath said.

Zovath said developers had hoped to build reasonably near the Creation Museum just south of Cincinnati because they believed the two sites would be mutually beneficial in drawing tourists.

The biblical theme park would include a replica of the Tower of Babel, a first-century village, theaters, lecture halls, retail shops, restaurants, a petting zoo, and live animal shows featuring giraffes and elephants.

Gov. Steve Beshear said he’s pleased the developers chose Kentucky because of the hundreds of jobs the theme park would bring to the state.

“I knew that they were looking at several locations at that time, but they sat down and talked to our tourism people and learned what all Kentucky could do. I felt like we were very competitive,” he said.

Rob Hunden, a consultant who reviewed the proposal for the Tourism Development and Finance Authority, said the project is expected to draw nearly 1.4 million visitors a year.

The theme park is projected to create 600 to 700 full-time jobs and have an economic impact of more than $250 million in its first year of operation.

Providing government tax incentives for a project with a religious theme had drawn opposition on grounds of church-state separation.

Americans United for Separation of Church and State executive director Barry W. Lynn criticized Kentucky’s decision, saying the state “should not be promoting the spread of fundamentalist Christianity or any other religious viewpoint.”

With environmental and archaeological reviews nearing completion, groundbreaking has been tentatively scheduled for next month.

“We’re moving along at a good pace,” Zovath said. “We haven’t run into any obstacles with the site.”

© www.kentucky.com and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved. http://www.kentucky.com

$43 million tax break approved for Ark Encounter theme park

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

$43 million tax break approved for Ark Encounter theme park

By Beth Musgrave — bmusgrave@herald-leader.com

Posted: 12:00am on May 20, 2011; Modified: 11:59am on May 20, 2011

FRANKFORT — A controversial Bible-themed amusement park received approval Thursday for up to $43 million in state tax incentives over a 10-year period.

The Kentucky Tourism Development Finance Authority, which oversees tax credits for tourism and film-related projects, unanimously approved the tax credit for the Ark Encounter project, which is scheduled to break ground in August outside Williamstown in Grant County.

In addition to the tax rebate, the state may spend an estimated $11 million to improve an interchange off I-75 near the 800-acre site in Northern Kentucky.

The park has been criticized by late-night talk show hosts and those who say the state should not give tax breaks to a business that espouses a particular religious view. But Gov. Steve Beshear has defended the incentives, saying the state cannot deny the application on religious grounds. The park alone could generate as many as 600 to 700 new jobs, according to a consultant’s report. That number doesn’t include jobs created from construction or from new hotels or restaurants.

Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, based in Washington D.C., blasted the board’s decision Thursday.

“The state of Kentucky should not be promoting the spread of fundamentalist Christianity or any other religious viewpoint,” said the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United. “Let these folks build their fundamentalist Disneyland without government help.”

Lynn said his group will sue if they find the tax rebate violates the Constitution’s guarantee of the separation of church and state.

Beshear has said the law does not allow the state to discriminate against a for-profit business because of the subject matter.

The Answers in Genesis group, which started the Creation Museum that opened in Petersburg in May 2007, will handle daily operations of the theme park, expected to be completed by 2014. Since the Creation Museum opened, it has received more than 1 million visitors, its backers say.

To receive the state tax rebate, tourism projects must be open more than 100 days a year, cost more than $1 million and attract at least 25 percent of visitors  rom out-of-state by their fourth year of operation.

The Ark Encounter project exceeds all of those requirements, said consultant Rob Hunden of Hunden Strategic Partners, the consulting firm that presented their findings to the tourism authority before the vote. The theme park will cost more than $172 million to build, be open year-round and attract more than
86.4 percent of its visitors from out-of-state, Hunden told the board.

An executive summary of the consultant’s report was made available to the media. However, the entire report was not released because it contained proprietary information.

The 800-acre park is expected to have a life-sized replica of Noah’s Ark, a Tower of Babel, petting zoos and other live animals and an assortment of Bible-themed exhibits.

If the park does not espouse a particular philosophy, such as creationism, it will draw a larger audience, Hunden estimated. Under that scenario — which Ark Encounter backers said Thursday they will follow — the park is estimated to draw about 1.2 million visitors a year and have a net economic impact, minus the sales-tax rebates, of about $119 million over a decade.

The rebate allows the company to receive some of its sales tax back over 10 years. However, if the project does not generate sales taxes as expected, it will not receive the rebate, said Carolyn Ridley, chairwoman of the tourism authority.

Mike Zovath, senior vice president of the Ark Encounter project, would not disclose the major investors in the project but said that project backers are still raising money and hope to have all of the $150 million needed for initial construction by the end of June. The Hunden report cited the lack of funding as a major concern.

“If it is not fully funded, it will either not open or it will be less of a major attraction or success,” the report said. “However, if that is the case, then the rebate it will be eligible for will be reduced.”

Zovath said the group is confident that they will be able to raise the money. Hunden’s report said the cost of the reconfigured highway interchange will be about $11 million, but that’s an estimate. The state should not construct the interchange until there are assurances that the funding for the park is in place, the report said.

Transportation Cabinet spokesman Chuck Wolfe said the cabinet will do its own initial study, which will include a cost estimate, in the next two months. There is an interchange near the proposed site, but that interchange would have to be reconfigured so it could handle more vehicles, he said.

“The governor’s position is that as long as the developers follow through with their commitment, then it will be a priority,” Wolfe said.

The project is not yet in the state’s road plan, which the legislature and the Transportation Cabinet use to guide road projects. If the developers come forward with the money for building the park, then Beshear will ask that the interchange be placed in the road plan in January.

Rep. Darryl Owens, D-Louisville, has filed requests to the Tourism Arts and Heritage Cabinet about the Ark Encounter through the state’s Open Records Act. Owens said Thursday that he has received some answers from the cabinet, but a May 2 letter in which he asked more questions about the origins of the project and how it was approved for incentives have not been answered.

“I am disappointed that this appears to have been fast-tracked and there just was not a lot of vetting,” Owens said.

© www.kentucky.com and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved. http://www.kentucky.com