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Fielding a debate on District 428 land swap

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When the school district was buying land for the new high school, it made a credit deal with Macom Development worth $1.05 million so it could buy the land at a lower rate.

The school board and Macom agreed that if Macom did not develop on the roughly 30-acre property around the high school, the district would pay 4 percent of the $1.05 million credit – or $42,000 – a year starting in 2013.

Now that ShoDeen holds the property, that agreement is still in effect. The land swap would free the district from paying that $42,000.

If the land swap is approved, ShoDeen would pay the district $654,511 as reimbursements for public improvements that were made when DHS was built. ShoDeen also would not have to pay impact fees on its development either until the district receives 600 students from the developer’s Fairview or Irongate communities, or for seven years, whichever comes first.

School officials have said the school district has no use for the land near Huntley Middle School, while the property near the high school could be used for future expansion.

Chronopoulos doesn’t buy those arguments. There should be no need for an expansion at the high school after a $12 million referendum that helped build an $80 million building, which opened in 2011.

“We were told a few years ago when the referendum was passed that that would take care of us for the next several years,” she said. “We’d like some answers to that.”

Briscoe said the land swap has nothing to do with the new high school, which currently houses 1,800 students. However, he said no official can predict what the school’s needs will be 10 to 20 years from now.

“There’s also a potential that [the land near the high school] can be used for a variety of reasons,” Briscoe said, including additional parking or athletic fields.

ShoDeen Construction President Dave Patzelt presented the DeKalb Park District with two development proposals. The difference between the two plans was how much open space they had; in one proposal, 25 percent of the 41-acre parcel would be used for park space.


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