Beyond the 49 abatement deals, the IDA owns property outright: 16 parcels, about $10 million of assessed value, with no project attached and mostly no tax paid. Some of it is the agency doing exactly the job it exists to do. Some of it is an arena it has been trying to resell since 2016. And three more parcels carry the IDA's exemption code with no explanation we can find.
Eight parcels, about $2.9M, are the industrial land bank: vacant lots along the Airport Corridor in Big Flats and Horseheads: Speer Dr and Kahler Rd, 254 Industrial Park Rd, Daniel Zenker Dr, Hibbard Rd, Lowe Rd and County Route 77, all held for resale to employers. Buying land, holding it, and selling it to a company that will build on it is a core, uncontroversial thing an industrial development agency does. It is the reason the agency has the power to own property at all. We flag it here for completeness, not as an accusation.
The questions on this page are narrower and specific: the arena, the aviation building, and the parcels nobody can explain.
In June 2016 the IDA bought First Arena at 155 Main St for $3.5 million, $1 million of it from Casella landfill community funds, and said it planned to resell the facility (NY1, June 14 2016 ↗; Chemung County Matters, Dec 2018 ↗). Ten years later it still owns it, assessed at $2.0M and exempt.
The arena sits across the street from the Mark Twain block, in the densest and most valuable land in the county. Our value-per-acre analysis shows what downtown parcels generate when they are on the roll. This one isn't. The city's exposure to the IDA →
The former warplane-museum building in Big Flats, assessed at $3.0M, the largest single parcel in the inventory. The IDA acquired it in January 2020, and during the pandemic it served as the county's mass-vaccination site (mytwintiers ↗). The roll classes it as High-Tech Manufacturing. Its current tenant is unknown to us. We could not establish from public records what, if anything, occupies it today, and we would rather say so than guess.
1316 College Ave is the inverse of everything else on this page: an office building the IDA owns and pays full property tax on, assessed at $1.3M. It is the agency's only significant taxable holding. We note it because it cuts against the grain of the story. The IDA is not reflexively exempting everything it touches.
About the "in our data since" column. Our roll extract begins with the 2021 roll, so a parcel marked "≥ 2021" has been there at least that long and probably longer. First Arena, for instance, has been IDA-owned since 2016 but only enters our extract later, when the roll's owner name matches. The column tells you when a parcel first appears in this dataset, not when the IDA acquired it. Assessed and taxable values are the 2025 roll.
← Back to the IDA overview ·
related: IDA & Elmira,
The Board,
Tax Value per Acre.
Parcels: NYS ORPTS assessment rolls
(7vem-aaz7,
2021–2025), filtered to parcels owned by the Chemung County IDA or carrying exemption code
18020, by scripts/extract_ida_parcels.py → scripts/build_ida_json.py
→ ida.json. The arena's purchase price, the
county's $1,000,000 public-access payment and the $375,909 capital payment come from the
CCIDA's audited FY2023 financial statements
(View/469),
verified against the archived PDF. The 749-document enumeration is our own crawl of the
CCIDA document center. Full catalogue on the Data & Sources page.