Tuesday, September 22, 2009

More Housing Won't Pay the Bills

By Ed Rast

Did you know that San Jose has over 53% of Santa Clara County’s population but only 40% of its jobs?

Don’t believe me? Have a look at these charts. Pay particular attention to the charts for population and jobs. You'll find that San Jose's percentage of Santa Clara County's population rises from 52.9% to 53.8% between 1990 and 2010 (projected). You'll also see that San Jose accounts for only 35.8% to 39.6% of jobs countywide over that same span.

Why are the ratio of jobs to employed residents and the jobs/housing balance important for having an adequate city budget?

From a City of San Jose document on population, jobs, and housing:

“Historically, San José has had a shortage of jobs compared to the number of employed residents living in the City, commonly referred to as a jobs/housing imbalance. A jobs/housing imbalance, especially when there is a relative deficit of jobs, can be problematic because it results in longer commutes as City residents travel to other locales for employment. This same imbalance can result in financial hardships for a city due to the costs associated with providing services to residential land uses in relation to revenue generated.”

Table 4.13-1 in this document provides an overview of the historic and projected number of households, jobs, employed residents, and population in San José. The data in Table 4.13-1 indicates that the City was having success in correcting the historic imbalance, but recent jobs data shows that we slipped back again, making our budget deficit worse, thus requiring a reduction in staff and city services

In the Mercury News from Wednesday, October 24 2007, Mayor Chuck Reed said, “Eliminating San Jose's status as Silicon Valley's bedroom and better balancing the growth of new jobs with new housing is the key to getting out of this structural budget deficit." I would tend to agree.

So, how are we doing at achieving the Mayor’s goal? Let’s have a look at the San Jose General Plan Update: Projections of Jobs, Population and Households For the City of San Jose (Table 3, Page 9). This update predicts San Jose will account for 44.2% of countywide jobs by 2040, but if you crunch the numbers here, you’ll find that ABAG has allocated San Jose slightly over half of the County’s projected job growth. That's a pretty rosy prediction given the current business environment in our city.

Homes, unless they are very expensive, do not generate enough city tax revenue to pay for the services they require to maintain, thus generating a budget deficit. This is unlike businesses, which generate more revenue that their services cost based on California public finance policy.

Population growth without the required jobs to pay for city services and infrastructure has an adverse affect on the general fund budget and San Jose’s ability to provide adequate city staff, services, and infrastructure to residents and businesses

San Jose receives back from the state about $11-12 cents of every property and sales tax dollar. Property taxes are about 21% and sales taxes range between 24-29% of the general fund budget, with imposed taxes from other cities, licenses, user, or service fees — mostly paid by businesses — plus revenue from state and federal governments making up the rest of general fund revenues.

Jobs-rich cities like Palo Alto, Santa Clara, Milpitas, Campbell and other Santa Clara County cities that have more jobs than employed residents have the excess business tax revenue to pay for services for their residents. Almost a decade of budget deficits and the highest cost of doing business in the county has discouraged business and job growth in San Jose. See my previous posts, “Cost of Doing Business” and "Just the Taxes, Ma'am" for additional information about jobs and taxes.

To ensure that the City’s fiscal condition is stable, predictable, and adequate in the long term to serve the proposed development without detrimental impact to services for the rest of the city.

San Jose should strongly consider setting: 1. jobs/housing triggers as proposed in Coyote Valley or other residential growth controls; and 2. a jobs-per-employed-resident target of 125 jobs rather than current 100, which has never been met.

8 comments:

  1. Bravo, Ed. Finally someone lays out the numbers sensibly.

    But I'm confused by Chuck Reed's quote. Didn't he support a bunch of efforts to convert industrial land to residential? Isn't this the opposite of what we want to do and what he says?

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  2. More houses = more people. More people = more calls to the police. More calls to the police...uh oh, sorry. We don't have enough police officers to respond to your calls. Outstanding forethought brought about by our city leaders to forecast the needs for public safety to help ot all the new residents of San Jose when we build places for them to stay.

    At this rate, San Jose will be a ghetto metropolis in the next 10 years, and you'll see officers only responding for priority calls involving in progress crimes. Lets keep building!!!

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  3. Great article Ed.

    As a patrol officer, and driving around the city, I have noticed for many years parcels of land being converted into high density, low income, I mean affordable, apartments. There does not seem to be any rhyme or reason as to where they are put. Once they are built, we invariably start getting many police and fire calls for service at these complexes. Too bad more of this land was not used for business purposes to actually generate income for the city. The developers seem to call the shots with the city leaders.

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  4. Please look at Mercury article

    City officials say that since 1990, the council has allowed 1,400 acres of the city's total "employment lands" -- or about 9 percent of what had existed prior to that date -- to be converted to residential uses. The conversion rate was most rapid in recent years under former Mayor Ron Gonzales, even as Gonzales and the rest of the council adopted the policies designed to stop it.

    The practice persisted this year under Reed, who joined a unanimous council in April in approving the rezoning of 21 acres of industrial land on Race Street near Interstate 280 to allow more than 1,000 new homes.

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  5. 2 recent industrial to residential deals for Lew Wolff approved by Council

    1) San Jose Earthquakes owner Lew Wolff has agreed to pay $132 ( price reduced to $89 million ) for 66 acres of the former FMC manufacturing plant, about 18 of which will be set aside for the stadium and parking. Hotel and housing The city bought the land in 2005 for $81 million.

    2) Wolff plans to pay for the deal using proceeds from a development in Edenvale ( profits for getting residential zoning and flipping property to residential developers worth 1/2 - $1 million in profit per acre or $39-78 million to Wolff after he get Council rezone vote for 78 acres of commercial and industrial property he owns there for residential development. That would open that property for construction of an estimated 1,500 town homes. ( More city services and little tax to pay for them )

    Council will soon approve more industrial to residential conversion for political contributor / developer Barry Swenson

    VTA / Ohlone 8.25 acres industrial land to residential for with few jobs, little retail for new homes while developer make million while city budget deficit increases by millions

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  6. Seems to me like another way to fix this would be to raise residential property taxes, if that were permitted.

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  7. Why talk about raising taxes? I think Ed has made a pretty strong case for the argument that San Jose has become increasingly less friendly to business from the standpoint of taxation. I also think that he's made a pretty strong case for the argument that the current model is not sustainable. Wouldn't it be better to change the business climate so that more and larger companies find San Jose to be a desirable city in which to conduct their business? Wouldn't this be a more sustainable model than increasing residential property taxes?

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  8. Raising residential taxes should not be a solution and voters are not likely to approve since California and San Jose have highest taxes in US

    We receive below average state and city services while public safety, streets and other important core services are under funded and under staffed while they waste million of our taxes

    Do you actually trust state, county or San Jose government or politicians to actually spend your new taxes on what the voters approved to be spent on when we constantly see millions in special and general taxes:

    - diverted to other spending, after declaring this year's government "budget emergency" (gas taxes),

    - frequently see after a new tax is voter approved the existing budget funds taken away from desired services now that there is new taxes with the result little or not increase in funding so politicians can spend the taxes on another insiders project

    - wasted on inefficient, mismanaged or not needed ( underused golf courses, Hayes Mansion, Mexican Heritage Plaza or bailing out more mismanaged non profit and 100's more ) government spending

    - millions routinely spent on tax subsidies to non profits, corporations, developers, and political insiders - you know the names and projects - that average voter / taxpayer doesn't know about and if they did would not approve

    We have year after year raised our taxes, rewarded bad tax spending behavior, taken money away from our families and not made our communities better with new taxes.

    It isn't time to say NO ?

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