Note: The Tischler Report that's the subject of these essays can be found here.
Land-use profit/loss study is valuable planning tool
By JON THAXTON Posted Mar 14, 2000 at 12:01 AM Updated May 8, 2006 at 7:42 AM
On Feb. 28, the Sarasota County Economic Development Board received a completely different kind of consultant’s report. Unlike the typical report that estimates the cost to build a library or repair a road, this report attempts to quantify the bottom-line profit or loss for the daily services government provides to our homes, our children and our businesses.
The concept is simple business mathematics: First you determine the price of production, subtract gross receipts, and the result equals your net profit or loss. Only in this case we are not talking about hypothetical widgets or doorstops, we’re talking about homes, businesses and schools and libraries.
The county contracted the economic consulting firm, Tischler and Associates, to estimate the fiscal and economic impacts of selected prototypical land uses in Sarasota County. In other words, compare how much it costs the county to produce the infrastructure (roads, schools, water, sewer, etc.), against how much money the county receives in taxes (real estate, gas, tourist, etc.) and fees (storm-water, recycling, utility, etc.).
The results are not what you might expect.
Most residential housing developments turned out to be a financial burden on the county. According to the Tischler report, a typical Sarasota subdivision, where lot sizes average 75 by 125 feet, and prices range from $150,000 to $230,000, costs the county $1.53 for every $1 of revenue it generates. OUCH! No higher math skills needed here. Surprisingly, even apartment complexes with 5.5 units per acre cost the county $2.65 for every dollar of revenue they generated.
The only residential land uses that cost the county less money for services than the revenue they generated were more expensive 5-acre ranchettes (57 cents spent for every dollar generated) and mobile home parks (75 cents spent for every dollar generated). Agriculture, commercial buildings and industrial sites also fared well in the fiscal and economic impact study, all costing significantly less money to service than the revenue they generate.
So how can these findings help us plan for a better community? First, the age-old assumption that agricultural and park lands take property off the tax rolls and would be more productive as subdivisions, is, at least in my opinion, officially hogwash. Using data from specific land uses in Sarasota, the Tischler report confirms that simply because a property produces more taxes, it does not assure that it will not be a liability to taxpayers. This may in part explain the multi-hundred-million-dollar revenue shortages needed for roads, schools and water.
A second point to consider when using this report for community planning is that it is only one of many planning tools required to make a community a quality place to live, work and play. We don’t want housing options to be limited to mobile home parks and expensive ranchettes out in the boondocks.
A significant force that affected the calculations found in this report is schools. Unlike typical residential suburban developments, commercial buildings, agriculture, industrial parks, rural residential and mobile home parks do not produce large numbers of school-age children. So, do we begin to award special benefits to those land uses that produce a positive revenue flow and penalize the less “profitable” ones? I personally do not want to live in a community that targets childless development. Education, just like ignorance, is a community expense -- only education is cheaper. We all share in the costs and benefits. Likewise, it is disturbing to imagine a community where affordable housing options are discouraged and forced into neighboring counties.
While the Tischler report raised as many questions as it answered, it was money well spent by the commissioners. The report has given us invaluable information to consider in our community planning process. However, it is somewhat unsettling now to realize how many decisions were made in the past without the benefit of this knowledge.
Thaxton update 2006
Tax base needs to be built upon a balance of various land uses
I believe that the Tischler report has influenced both nongovernmental initiatives and numerous, though not all, County Commission development decisions.
In 1999 the County Commission and the Economic Development Board hired Tischler & Associates to conduct an economic and fiscal impact analysis for 19 prototypical Sarasota County land uses. The economic analysis measured broad impacts to the general economy, and the fiscal impact analysis determined the cost and revenues from new development on the county budget.
The report concluded that most forms of residential development are likely to generate budget deficits. The findings suggested that developing residential homes from vacant land produced a net tax loss, despite an increase in gross tax revenues. Ultimately, the cost of infrastructure and services required by the new residential development exceeds the increased tax revenues generated. The report also concluded that many forms of commercial development, high-end residential development and agriculture produced a net tax benefit to the county budget.
When the report was issued in February 2000, many in the residential development industry feared the Tischler report would be misinterpreted and misused by government officials and anti-growth advocates as a means to stop growth. In response to these fears, I wrote a guest column, published in the Herald-Tribune, that suggested the report’s conclusions should not be used as a single factor to determine whether development should be approved or what kind of development should be approved. Instead, I argued, the information should be used as a tool, along with many other tools available to the community, to support an appropriate rate, form and amount of new development.
Last week two groups with completely different positions asked me: What has been done with the Tischler report? Has the county used the report’s findings to influence development decisions? Or has the report found a comfortable place on that notorious government shelf where it will forever remain dormant and unused?
I believe that the Tischler report has influenced both nongovernmental initiatives and numerous, though not all, County Commission development decisions.
While the Tischler report and many other studies have demonstrated a potential net negative fiscal impact for many forms of residential development, a decision to approve only “profitable” forms of development isn’t that simple. Unlike a for-profit corporation, government’s role often is to provide services that are not profit centers, such as indigent health care and education.
One of the main reasons that many forms of residential development don’t “pay their own way” is schools. Residential development that doesn’t generate school-age children was found to produce a net tax benefit. Conversely, most homes priced in the affordable and work-force ranges produce net tax revenue losses. Then are we to approve only childless and million-dollar homes? That is not the kind of community that I want to live in, and it certainly isn’t the standard that has made Sarasota the community that it is today.
Managing a viable community involves a great deal more than one economic measurement of profit and loss. A tax base built upon a balance of various land uses is essential to a stable economy and a livable community. This often requires using revenue from one land use to support another.
That is not to say the Tischler report has been ignored -- it has not. The report provided additional evidence that the county needs to diversify its ad valorem tax base, to reduce dependence on residential properties. The county also refocused its economic development strategies based upon this finding. Nonpolluting “export” industries with high-paying jobs have become the target for economic development policies, replacing a priority on tourism and housing development.
Additionally most elected officials now realize that growth, simply for the sake of adding properties to the tax rolls is not a sound reason to approve development. It may have been valid at one time, or under different funding scenarios, but not anymore. Today’s development should be scrutinized at a higher level that includes a comprehensive balance of benefits and responsibilities.
Sarasota County Commissioner Jon Thaxton (District 5) served on the state’s Impact Fee Task Force.
Showing posts with label residential. Show all posts
Showing posts with label residential. Show all posts
Sunday, June 10, 2018
Monday, January 16, 2017
Growth eruption: The city of Sarasota
via the Herald Tribune:
Your visual guide to all of the completed, underway or planned projects in downtown Sarasota.
By John HielscherStaff Writer
Call it the billion-dollar boom.
Construction is completed, underway or planned on projects that will bring more than 4,200 new apartments, condominiums and hotel rooms in and around downtown Sarasota.
Developers and their lenders are betting heavily that Sarasota is ready to handle such an eruption of growth, which also includes new office and retail spaces.
Dozens of projects, some spanning the maximum 18 stories, will permanently change the appearance of the city, a post-recession surge of building fueled by pent-up demand and confidence in the future.
The city has issued building permits valued at more than $1 billion in the past three years. While that total include all types of construction, such as repairs and renovations, the new projects are the top-dollar draws.
In the 2016 fiscal year alone, the city processed $442 million worth of permits.
The Elan Rosemary apartment, at $33.6 million, the Embassy Suites hotel, at $25 million, and the DeMarcay condo and retail, at $23.7 million, were among the largest.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
1500 State Street
1500 State St.
20 condominiums, 4,699 square feet office space, 3,708 square feet retail space
$4.2 million
State Street Partners SRQ LTD.
The Jewel
1301 Main St.
19 condominiums, retail space
$19.4 million
Main Street J Development
The DeSota
1401-1445 Second St.
180 apartments, 15,000 square feet retail space
$40 million
Carter Acquisitions LLC
Hotel Sarasota
1255 N. Palm Ave.
163 rooms, 10,000 square foot ballroom, restaurant
$13 million
Floridays Development Corp.
Embassy Suites & Spa
202 N. Tamiami Trail
180 rooms
$40 million
JEBCO Ventures
VUE/Westin
1 N. Tamiami Trail
141 condominiums, 255 hotel rooms, 14,000 square foot ballroom
$120.7 million
Kolter Group
Valencia at Rosemary Place
Cocoanut Avenue
30 townhomes
$3.38 million (first 18 units)
Icon Residential
Cityside
700 Cocoanut Ave.
489 apartments, 8,700 square feet commercial space
$25.7 million (phase 1 of 229 units)
Rosalyn Holdings LLC
Vanguard Lofts
1343 Fourth St.
Six townhomes
$2.4 million
Tetra Terra Development
Risdon on 5th
1350 Fifth St.
22 condominiums, 7,000 square feet office and retail space
$6 million
Steven Bradley
Rosemary Square
1440 Blvd. of the Arts
39 apartments, 30,000 square feet retail and office space
$6.2 million
Rosemary Square LLC
Elan Rosemary Apartments
710 N. Lemon Ave.
286 apartments
$33.6 million
Greystar GB II LLC
Citrus Square, phases 2 and 3
505-555 N. Orange Ave.
28 condos, 4,200 square feet commercial space
$4.4 million
MBFC LLC
Urban Flats
1401 Fruitville Road
228 apartments, 3,700 square feet retail space
$30 million
Framework Group LLC
School Avenue Townhomes
41 School Ave.
37 residential units
$4.3 million
Icon Residential
Sabal Palm Plaza
1936 Ringling Blvd.
28,660 square feet office space
$5 million
Mark Kauffman
The "Q"
1750 Ringling Blvd.
39 townhomes
$8.4 million
JEBCO Ventures
Sansara
300 S. Pineapple Ave.
17 condominiums, 2,632 square feet commercial space
$11 million
MK Equity Corp.
Orange Club
635 S. Orange Ave.
15 condos, nine townhomes
$8.7 million
Vandyk USA
Echelon
624 S. Palm Ave.
17 condominiums
$20 million
The Ronto Group
One88
688 Golden Gate Point
Eight condominiums
$8.6 million
Vandyk Sarasota-Golden Gate Point LLC
PLANNED
Lemon Avenue Pad Site
Lemon Avenue at Pineapple
4,310 square feet of retail/restaurant, 4,310 square feet office space
NA
State Street Partners SRQ Ltd.
The Mark
1400 State St.
157 condominiums, 35,000 square feet of retail, 11,000 square feet office space.
NA
Kolter Group
DeMarcay
33 S. Palm Ave.
39 residential units, 2,400 square feet retail space
$23.7 million
XAC Developers
Quay Sarasota (See also SRQ: Another Day, Another Quay)
N. Tamiami Trail
695 residences, 175 hotel rooms, 38,972 square feet office space, 189,000 square feet retail space
$1 billion
GreenPoint Communities LLC
The Sarasota Modern
1242 Blvd. of the Arts
81 hotel rooms
$17 million
Cocoanut Arts LLC
DRAPAC
1329 Fourth St.
62 residential units, 2,820 square feet commercial space
$4.2 million
DRAPAC Capital Partners
Zaharada
1542 Fourth St.
Six condos, 5,150 square feet retail space
$4.8 million
Rosemary District Development LLC
Florida Studio Theatre
751 Cohen Way
Five residential units
$1.2 million
Florida Studio Theatre
Office building
2010 Main St.
3,370 square feet retail/restaurant space, 3,370 square feet office space
$760,000
The Schimberg Group
Fruitville Hotel
1351-1365 Fruitville Road
118 rooms
NA
Choice Hotels International
Azure on Palm
711 S. Palm Ave.
15 residental units, two guest suites
$9.4 million
Thirty-Four-Seventy-Five LLC
Enclave at Laurel Park
1938 Laurel St.
17 single-family and attached homes
$1.2 million.
David Weekley Homes
HUB Building
1697 Second St.
97 residential units, 6,271 square feet office space
$14.9 million.
Biter Idea Vault
Sarasota Station
2211 Fruitville Road
393 apartments
NA
S.S. Sasquatch (Vengroff)
Allure
111 Golden Gate Point
10 townhomes
$7 million
JEBCO Ventures
609 Golden Gate Point
609 Golden Gate Point
8 condominiums
NA
Golden Gate Point Ventures LLC
Aqua
280 Golden Gate Point
Eight condominiums
$11.0 million
280 Golden Gate Point LLC
Hampton Inn & Suites
1330 Fruitville Road
162 rooms
NA
JEBCO Ventures
Payne Park Village
295, 301, 325 and 601 South School Ave.
135 townhomes
NA
David Weekly Homes
COMPLETED
State Street Garage
1538 State St.
395 parking spaces, 13,873 square feet retail space
$11.3 million
Garage by city of Sarasota, retail by WMR Consulting
Aloft Hotel and apartments
1 N. Palm Ave.
138 hotel rooms, 139 apartments, 6,000 square feet restaurant, 2,175 square feet retail space
$31.1 million
JWM Management
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