Tuesday, May 13 2025

The Rock Hill School district has filed suit against the City of Rock Hill.

Here is the full release below

 

Rock Hill School District filed a lawsuit this morning against the City of Rock Hill asking
the courts to assist the school district in enforcing the 2020 Third Agreement to the Intergovernmental
Agreement also known as the “Downtown TIF”. Rock Hill Schools is represented by Desa Ballard,
Attorney with Ballard & Watson in West Columbia, SC.
“The school district can be a partner in economic development when it benefits our students, but our only
mission is to educate our students; the District’s goal is not being the financial mechanism for the City’s
development projects. We are disappointed in the lack of follow-through from the City of Rock Hill, and
are forced to take this step in order to protect the educational future of our students,” said Helena Miller
Chairman of the Board of Trustees.
Rock Hill Schools has historically partnered with the City of Rock Hill and County Council in several Tax
Incremental Financing Plans or TIFs, and the Downtown TIF in question was a consolidation of many of
these past agreements. The school district forfeited $85 million dollars of tax income from the Knowledge
Park area over a thirty-year time period in exchange for a series of agreed-upon terms such as
educational space in Knowledge Park for student education and experiences, help with zoning on a
property that the District hopes to sell, and renegotiation of utility rates among others. As of today, the
City of Rock Hill has failed to report their spending of the school district’s money in a requested
independent audit, the zoning issue is still not resolved, there is no opportunity for students to learn in a
dedicated space in Knowledge Park and the City of Rock Hill has fraudulently overcharged the district for
utilities for the sum of $23 million dollars.
“We entered this agreement in good faith, and it is heartbreaking to see our students being taken
advantage of. We have tried to work with city officials to resolve this over the past two years, and this is
our last option to make sure our students are given what the agreement states they should be afforded,”
Miller said.

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