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You Can Do The Math Nthp 2011

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Slides from session given at National Trust for Historic Preservation Annual Conference on calculating economic impact of preservation policies, October 10, 2011
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Economic Arguments for Preservation: Do the Math to Make the Case Della G. Rucker, AICP, CEcD Wise Economy Workshop For National Preservation Conference October 21, 2011
Transcript
Page 1: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Economic Arguments for Preservation: Do the Math to Make

the Case

Della G. Rucker, AICP, CEcD Wise Economy Workshop

For National Preservation ConferenceOctober 21, 2011

Page 2: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Our Plan:

• What’s the problem?

• Who benefits?

• Introduce a key idea

• Figure out what we are measuring

• (Prove that you can) Do the math

Page 3: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

The Problem:Property owners sometimes want to tear down or mess up buildings for reasons preservation people can’t fathom:

o “But it’s such a beautiful building!”

o “Why on earth would they want a parking lot rather than that building?”

o “Don’t they understand what that will do to the neighborhood?”

Page 4: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

More of the Problem

• Three different definitions of value:o Property owner o Business ownero Local

government/community

• Three different time frames• Responsible to three

different groups

Page 5: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

A quick sketch

Definer Type of value

Time frame Responsibleto

Property owner Cash flow from rent

Short Self/other owners of building

Business owner Business revenue Longer Self/partners/ investors

Community Quality of life Longest Self, other residents, other parts of community

Page 6: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

More of the Problem:

• The property owner will do what’s in his or her best interest.

• Their best interest may not be the same as the best interest of o Businesses in that building,o Other business owners or property

owners nearbyo Area residents o The local government

Page 7: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

The Real Problem

When property owners make choices that impact the economic health of others, they have created

an externality.

Page 8: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Concept #1: Externalities

• “An external effect, often unforeseen or unintended, accompanying a process or activity.” (dictionary.com)

• When I make choices in my economic self-interest, and those choices impact someone else, those impacts are the externalitiesof my choices.

Page 9: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Common externalities• I let my kids scream wildly in

the back yard, and my

neighbor’s sick daughter

couldn’t sleep.

• I dumped chemicals in the back of my lot, and now the EPA has to clean it up.

• I don’t maintain my building,

and the value of buildings

around me goes down.

Page 10: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Who gets stuck dealing with most of our externalities?

Page 11: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

A solution:

The more we can convince elected officials of the impact that preservation decisions will have on their community’s financial health -the more they see that poor preservation choices create negative externalities – the more likely we are to persuade them that it is good public policy to support historic preservation.

Page 12: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

What economic issues do

governments deal with?

• Private sector:o Growth

o Profitabillity

o Stability

o Vacancy

• Public sector (fiscal):o Tax revenues

o Costs of services

Page 13: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

What kinds of externalities can botching up a

building make for other property owners?

• Make area less appealing for customers-����

• Decrease rental/property value of spaces

• Decrease amount of affordable space for new businesses.

Page 14: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

What kinds of externalities does this create for local governments?

• Loss of property tax revenue

• Loss of space for creating new employment

• Loss of sales tax revenues.

• Increased public safety costs

• Loss of support for infrastructure repairs

Page 15: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Fine. But words

are just words….

Page 16: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Do the Math: Show the impact of good decisions on property values

• Compare average property values of preserved areas to unpreserved areas with similar buildingso Common example: National Register districts compared

to non-National Register.

o It’s easier to get property value data than ever[link to auditor example]

o Can also use sales prices – get a Realtor © to help you.

Page 17: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

A hypotheticalValue

Building A $100,000

Building B $300,000

Building C $80,000

Building D $150,000 Avg Letter Dist: $166,000

Building E $200,000

Building 1 $100,000 Avg. Number Dist $159,000

Building 2 $250,000

Building 3 $175,000

Building 4 $150,000

Building 5 $120,000

Page 18: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Keys to success:• Use the largest samples

you can.

• Double check your math.

• If using Auditor data, know when the last assessment was and, if they typically undervalue, by how much.

Page 19: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

If it’s not working• Look at more areas

• Partner with a similar community to get more sample areas

• Look for unusual factors in the area you’ve chosen. Are some closer to the highway than others? Further from the center of town? Larger or smaller buildings?

Page 20: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Estimating the impact on the ability to grow new businesses• Especially important when

demolition of a commercial or potentially commercial building is proposed.

• Premise: small businesses are extra important to a community because they create most of the new jobs. o But they have different space

needs than established businesses.

o Older buildings often fit this best.

Page 21: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Econ concept #2: Opportunity Cost

• The money or other benefits lost when pursuing a particular course of action instead of a mutually-exclusive alternative. (www.dictionary.com)

Page 22: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Types of opportunity costs• I decide to quit my job and go

back to grad school so that I can move into a better position in the future.

• I buy the last piece of vacant land in town and build houses on it instead of a factory.

• We tore down the smaller, inexpensive spaces in town, and now small businesses have no where to get started.

Page 23: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

What’s the opportunity cost to small business growth ?

• Compare commercial/office rate in historic or downtown area to rate for area as a wholeo A good Realtor© should be able to help you find this

information

o An affordable space is by definition one that a growing small business could use - SizeUp © is a good new tool to help figure that out.

• The fewer spaces affordable to small businesses we have, the more stuck our local economy is going to be.

Page 24: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

A hypothetical• A review of SizeUp© or interviews with Realtors©

indicates that most small businesses (preferably focusing on a type that you know City wants, like tech or restaurants) can afford an average of $6/sf rent.

• Average rent in suburban strip area of town =$10 sf

• Average rent downtown = $5.50 sf.

• Extra credit: what % of downtown space does a proposed demo represent?

Page 25: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Estimating lost revenues - property

taxes

• The parts:

o Assessed value (link)

o Property tax rate (millage)o Adjustments, deductions,

rollback, caps, etc

• The formula: o Assessed Value X Millage –

Adjustments = Property tax obligation

Page 26: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Estimating opportunity costs from lost

income/earnings tax

• The parts: o Estimated number of employees

• Actual (might be low) or

• Potential based on national/regional average per square feet

o Income/earnings tax rate

o Estimated percent of employees paying income taxes to locality (may be receiving reciprocity or abatement)

• The formula: o (Employees X income tax rate) = income

tax obligation

Page 27: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Estimating opportunity costs from lost

sales tax• The parts:

o Estimated sales • Actual (might be low) or• Based on typical local experience, or• based on national/regional average per square feet

o Sales Tax rate • May differ from one county or city to next

• May have different parts (part to state, part to county)

• The formula: o Estimated sales X sales tax rate =

sales tax obligation

Page 28: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Other types of taxes: • Business Establishment-type taxes

• Tax on profits

• Tax on personal property or inventory

• Tax on holdings

• Capital gains

• Etc., etc., etc…..

Page 29: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

So…you’ve done the math, now

what?

• Share your findings

• Show your work

• Remember that it’s an estimate, not a precise measure

• Use it as one of the tools in your toolbox – it’s not the only one.

Page 30: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Questions?

Page 31: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

Thank you!

Della Rucker, AICP Wise Economy Workshopwww.wiseeconomy.com

513/[email protected]: @DellaruckerFacebook: Della Rucker Aicp Cecd

Page 32: You Can Do The Math    Nthp 2011

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