Posted: 01/27/2011 12:01:00 AM PST
With
all the attention to large redevelopment agencies like San Jose's, I'd
like to offer a glimpse of what redevelopment means to cities with fewer
than 50,000 residents and with small tax bases.
Homes became too expensive for locals, and while property taxes increased, our small town continued to lack amenities of larger communities: medical facilities, doctors, white-collar jobs and industrial jobs, for example. Instead, we saw a race of retail and fast-food stores to get a place on Highway 152 so they could capture the commuters on their way to work "over the hill."
Living in a small town with a short supply of stores and employment opportunities means most of our sales tax goes out of town, and those living in town have to commute elsewhere to find a decent-paying job. We lost our small-town atmosphere, gained overpriced homes, and the city was faced with the challenge of providing service for this new population.
In 1996, a redevelopment agency was formed. The RDA service area consists of our commercial and industrial sections as well as a small amount of "old Los Banos." Instead of working with special developers, we have worked with our community to provide projects that citizens and our RDA board felt were necessary.
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Posted by Steve Sinai
7 comments:
That's nice, Los Banos. You got some nice sidewalks and trails. So did we. We dont need no more subsidized business. If there is a need, private industry will finds its way. Just like the old days.
This is a thoughtful article (best to read all), with some implications for Pacifica. Los Banos had two Redevelopment opportunities. With the first they apparently built quality or upscale housing. With the second (if available from the State) they will hope to build commercial and industrial sections, so that their population will not have to travel "over the hill" for services and jobs.
Redevelopment provides tax revenue advantages within the qualified city (blighted) redevelopment area. Money stays local, rather than goes to the State. As I recall the tax revenue advantage is something like 80%, that's a whole lot of tax revenue advantage. Then, Anon (1/28, 10:20pm) "private industry will find its way." Win for the city, win for citizens, win for private industry.
We, the people, always lose when government is involved. Government can not force people to stay in an area if work is elsewhere. Stupid thinking. Plus, no one is buying houses. Pay attention.
How about just a nice downtown with no new houses or condos? Add a community based park with a place to play for kids, a roller rink, theatre, shops, a gorgeous new library and civic center... POOF! (yawn) was I talking in my sleep again?!
What are you talking about Anonymous person???? "We, the people, always lose when government is involved." wrong!
"Government can not force people to stay in an area if work is elsewhere." Agreed, but... qualified redevelopment is requested by a city as a community advantage. Not having to travel "over the hill" to work and for services is good, efficient urban, (also green) planning. There is no "government troll" who lives under a bridge to encumber the flow of traffic in or out of a city.
"We the people" in the USA we are a 312 million population (just like you and me). Government is our representative oversight, protection, and basis for funding civic infrastructure and public and private partnership innovation. Maybe you would prefer to have that "representation by the people for the people" farmed-out to Halliburton or to India?
Ever heard of Ghost Towns? They exist for a reason. You cant force people to stay put for the green benefit. Stupid. GOvernment has been hijacked by a bunch of brainwashed money hungry pension package grabbing breed of slave owners. Stop the beast. Do not feed it any longer. Think outside of the bureaucratic red box. Be free.
Anyway, if government worked so well, all the money, tax money we give to infrastructure , would actually go to fix infrastructure. IT IS BROKEN! STOP FEEDING THE BEAST.
If "free" is you 3:08 PM, forget it.
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