Before Mayo Clinic gets half a billion dollars from Minnesota taxpayers, legislators want the city of Rochester to dig deeper into its own pockets.
"I intend to start by having the local community chip in a lot more than they are," said House Taxes Committee Chairwoman Ann Lenczewski, DFL-Bloomington.
The health care giant — also the state's largest employer — is asking for more than $500 million in taxpayer funding to support its $3 billion makeover for downtown Rochester.
Mayo argues that unless the city gets more amenities like hotels, restaurants and theaters, the world-renowned clinic will be forced to divert its resources to its clinics in warmer, friendlier, Sunbelt states.
The Taxes Committee response to Mayo's plan was to split the bill in half. By voice vote Tuesday, legislators sent part of the bill on to the Capital Investment Committee, where Mayo's requests will have to slug it out with hundreds of other projects on the bonding bill wish list.
The tax provisions will remain in Lenczewski's committee, to be debated and possibly included in this year's tax bill.
"I think some people think this motion is to kill this proposal and it is not," Lenczewski said. "This is to keep it alive."
The tax committee's debate is likely to start with questions about why Rochester is not first raising more local taxes to pay for its own downtown face-lift.