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GCI Working Paper Series - 2007

Does Form of Fiscal Governance Matter:
Fiscal Practices and Outcomes in Chicago Suburbs

Rebecca Hendrick
Associate Professor of Public Administration
College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs
University of Illinois at Chicago
January 2007
GCP-07-01
This paper explores the extent to which government performance varies between traditional council-mayor structures and reformed council-manager structures. Little research exists on the linkage between type of government and financial management practices outside of budgeting or performance measurement. The research presented here uses both qualitative and quantitative data on suburbs in the Chicago metropolitan region and a relatively unique, three-stage research design to address these analytical problems and provide more detailed inferences about the linkages between fiscal governance, financial management practices, and financial conditions in these local governments. The findings demonstrate interesting and complex relationships between fiscal governance (and form of government), financial management practices, financial conditions, and other factors important to these conditions.


Optimal Leverage in Real Estate Investment with Mezzanine Lending

John F. McDonald
Professor Emeritus, Economics and Director, Center for Urban Real Estate
University of Illinois at Chicago
January 2007
GCP-07-02

The paper presents a theoretical analysis of the optimal leverage for the purpose of investing in real estate under the condition that borrowing in excess of a standard amount such as 70 to 80 percent of the purchase price must be accomplished through a mezzanine loan with a high rate of interest. The conditions under which a mezzanine loan is used are derived. It is shown that a larger mezzanine loan is used the greater is the required expected after-tax rate of return to equity. Investors who choose greater risk require a higher expected after-tax return to equity and therefore borrow more and purchase more real estate with a given equity investment.


Preparing Adolescents to Read-To-Learn in the 21st Century
Louis M. Gomez
Professor of School Education and Social Policy
Northwestern University
Kimberly Gomez
Assistant Professor
College of Education
University of Illinois at Chicago
January 2007
GCP-07-03
This paper explores ways to remedy adolescents’ failure to acquire reading-to-learn skills and explains the importance of being able to understand texts from diverse disciplines in order to be successful in the professional workplace and enhance overall life chances. The authors suggest that inquiry-centered learning environments in schools might better prepare students for the educational demands of careers in the 21 century labor market. They also offer suggestions about how these learning environments might better be coupled with the support of reading and literacy.


Engaged Scholarship at the University

Ann Feldman
Associate Professor, Department of English and Director of First Year Writing Program
University of Illinois at Chicago
February 2007
GCP-07-04

The complex relationship between the university and the city provides the context for this chapter, which explores not only the changing nature of scholarship in the metropolitan research university, but how its changing intellectual climate should, in turn, change our conception of writing instruction for students who attend college in the city. It is argued that engaged research -- participatory, reciprocal research -- depends on an awareness of research as a discursive practice; that is, on how language and rhetoric are used to shape emerging knowledge. When both faculty members and students focus on engagement, their relationship to the city is enhanced, while also enhancing undergraduate education and, in particular, writing instruction.


The Ecological City: Metaphor versus Metabolism

Sharon Haar
Associate Professor, School of Architecture
University of Illinois at Chicago
February 2007
GCP-07-05
In this study – a textual and visual analysis – I look at the ways the term “ecology” has been used to motivate western-style modernism in a global context and to prescribe and advance design decisions based largely in formal, compositional, and stylistic assumptions. Among the questions I am interested in is how new frameworks – sustainability, sustainable communities, and sustainable design – extend earlier ecological metaphors and the extent to which they have sublimated stylistic and formal design ideas without truly resolving the impact of modernization on the landscape.


Maximization of Non-Residential Property Tax Revenue by a Local Government
John F. McDonald
Professor Emeritus, Economics and Director, Center for Urban Real Estate
University of Illinois at Chicago
February 2007
GCP-07-06
The paper presents a model of the market for commercial or industrial real estate at the local level that is used to derive an equation for the property tax rate that maximizes tax revenue – given that demand for real estate at the local level is highly elastic and capital is mobile in the long run.


Addressing Controversy in the Classroom:
Teaching about Immigrant Rights in Chicago Schools

Irma Olmedo
Associate Professor, College of Education
University of Illinois at Chicago
April 2007
GCP-07-07
This article examines the issue of teachers’ decisions to address controversial issues as teaching opportunities in the classroom, using the recent immigrant rights mobilizations of 2006. As public reports of planned deportations of the undocumented were heard, especially in communities in urban areas with high proportions of these populations, many families were gripped with fear about their status. This research involved exploring the classroom-based activities of Chicago teachers to engage their students in inquiry on these issues, and the participation and perspectives of children that resulted from these activities.


The HistoryMakers: A New Primary Source for Scholars

Julieanna Richardson
2006 Vernon D. Jarrett Senior Fellow
Great Cities Institute
University of Illinois at Chicago
April 2007
GCP-07-08
This paper explores the possibilities of increasing the use and accessibility of The HistoryMakers’ video oral history archive. The archive of oral histories of African American “HistoryMakers” from a wide range of backgrounds is a potential resource for academics, school teachers, students, and historians alike. Information is presented on the current state of the archives, potential future uses, and the importance of documenting and preserving these oral histories to gain a deeper understanding of African American history and experience.


Comparing the Efficiency of Urban Transit Park and Ride Lots
Using Data Envelopment Analysis

Darold T. Barnum, Sue McNeil, & Jonathon Hart
December 2007
GCP-07-09
This paper discusses the need for a performance measure that compares the efficiencies of subunits within an urban transportation organization, reflects the diversity of inputs and outputs, and is objective and consistent. The paper presents a method for developing such a performance indicator, and illustrates its use with an application to the park-and-ride lots of the Chicago Transit Authority. The proposed method applies Data Envelopment Analysis supplemented by Stochastic Frontier Analysis to estimate efficiency scores for each subunit. The paper demonstrates how the scores can provide objective and valid indicators of each subunit’s efficiency, while accounting for key goals and values of internal and external stakeholders. The scores can be practically applied by a transit agency to identify subunit inefficiencies, and, as demonstrated by several brief case studies, this information can be used as the basis for changes that will improve both subunit and system performance.


Using Panel Data Analysis to Estimate Confidence Intervals for the DEA Efficiency of Individual Urban Paratransit Agencies
Darold T. Barnum, John M. Gleason, & Brendon Hemily
December 2007
GCP-07-10
This paper demonstrates a methodology using Panel Data Analysis to estimate confidence intervals for the Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) efficiency of individual urban paratransit agencies and the statistical significance of trends in individual agency efficiency. The procedure accounts for stochastic variations of the inputs and outputs of the target agency as well as stochastic variations of the inputs and outputs of its efficient benchmark peers. The procedure is demonstrated using nine years of data from 34 urban paratransit agencies.