Why doesn’t your town like business?

Hostile attitude toward business growth must change to fix tax problem

By Mike McGann, Editor, The Times
You’ll excuse my sense of de ja vu.

Back in my youth as a young reporter, the hot catch phrase for the overbuilt and tax-revenue challenged northern New Jersey suburbs was “ratables.”

Ratables are a very special kind of real estate: they use little in the way of local or school district services, pay taxes and the best ones create lots of local jobs to spark the local economy. They are the polar opposite of the single-family home, in terms of taxes versus services.

I remember mentioning the need to encourage “ratables” during one or another political campaign and people mostly looked at me like I had three heads. Of course, and this still may be true, a lot people think that by building a lot of single-family homes, the local tax base goes up and taxes should go down.

Notwithstanding the fact that each and every single family home uses about 1.5 times in services relative to the amount of taxes they pay (obviously if you have kids, the multiple is much higher, lower if you don’t — one figure I saw suggested you need as many as 25 years of local school taxes on average to pay for your one kid to go through the system), suffice it to say that letting Toll Brothers run amuck in Chester County hasn’t improved the real estate tax issue.

Since we can’t unwind sprawl, what then?

In short, promote commercial and light industrial development.

Obviously, the effort that the Chester County Economic Development Partners Initiative outlines this past week is a good start. While there’s no need to make Chester County look like Marcus Hook, there’s little argument that the county needs ratables and clearly needs more good-paying jobs. Leveraging the county’s geographical location should be a “no brainer.”

Should be.

But a major hurdle is that too many townships in the county treat business and business development like it is a dirty word. Instead of finding ways streamline processes to welcome new business and grow existing ones, local government and local residents throw up barriers and are out-and-out hostile to such concepts. That’s at the cost of jobs and creating a better, more sustainable tax base for our communities and schools.

You know things are way out of kilter when a person once publicly described as “a left-wing California liberal” (thank you, State Rep. Steve Barrar) now finds himself wondering whether he’s awoken in Berkeley on the Brandywine — and recently found himself (on these very pages) described as some sort of capitalist stooge for defending commercial growth.

That would be me. I plead guilty to the capitalist charge. I’m a small businessman and have owned corporate stock since I was eight years old and began reading The Wall Street Journal.

I like business. I like making money.

What I don’t understand is the seeming lack of enthusiasm that so many municipalities and residents seem to have to others doing so.

If there’s a common theme (and yes, there are exceptions — but sadly they’ve been just that, exceptions) its watching municipalities throw up barrier after barrier to businesses relocating or expanding in Chester County. It shouldn’t take a year to get a building permit to renovate an existing building without changing its footprint. Millions of dollars of tax revenue and hundreds of jobs shouldn’t be held hostage because some local official won’t work with a developer. Similar behavior came within a hair’s breadth of sending a large warehouse and distribution operation — owned by one of the county’s most socially responsible companies, by the way — to North Carolina instead of southern Chester County.

I could go on, but it seems like overkill. I have to think in this highly competitive atmosphere word is going to get out, if it hasn’t already, “don’t bother with Chester County. They don’t like business there.”

So you might be saying, “so what? I have a good job. What do I have to lose?”

Plenty.

Unless you love high school and county taxes, you lose there. And when a county has a healthy and growing economy, one that is growing jobs, everyone benefits. Everyone’s business (yes, mine too) does better. House prices begin to rise again.

Don’t get me wrong, I love open space. I love clear air and water. But if all we build in Chester County are houses — and eventually the building boom will reignite — we will be buried in clogged up roads and high taxes, without the local jobs to support our local economy.

We might all be caught up in the presidential race this year — but elections that may have more impact on you and the future of our county happen in 2013 with municipal elections. You may not know who your supervisors, commissioners or council members are, but find out — some of them are running for reelection in 2013. Ask them “what are you doing to create jobs and grow our local economy?”

If they can’t answer that question, it might be time to find some new elected officials.

* * *

There poorly designed, poor implemented legislation and then there’s Pennsylvania’s Act 1.

You may know it as the 2006 law that governs how much your school taxes can be increased. It was supposed to take the burden off local property taxpayers and limit growth of schools spending.

But like the pension reform legislation of 2001 — you know, the one that’s caused a multi-billion dollar hole in the pension fund — it suffers from unintended consequences.

You see, Act 1 mandates a limit on the rate, not the total levy. And while in a booming economy (okay, back last century) with property values steadily increasing, it was a workable cap, maybe. But property values have fallen and property owners continue to appeal their property assessments and win, the net value of real estate continues to drop in Chester County.

As an example, Kennett Consolidated School District has lost some $4 million in tax revenue over the last four years. But Act 1 doesn’t take that into account.

The legislature and then Gov.-Ed Rendell didn’t foresee a time when property values might drop (although it was already a common issue in urban locales). Just like with the pension changes, they (OK, it was then-Gov. Tom Ridge, proving that the Pennsylvania state government can be short-sighted in a heartwarmingly bipartisan manner) didn’t see the stock market tanking, either.

Faced with this issue what did your pals in the state legislature do? Fix this obvious oversight? Nope. They moved Act 1 to a three-year moving average — great for the first year of an economic downturn, lousy for the first couple years (like now) as the economy gets better.

And yes, another legislative session has passed without doing anything meaningful (or anything, actually) about the pension mess, charter reform and so on.

Makes you feel all warm and fuzzy inside about the idea of sending your local legislator — one who is among the highest paid in the nation — back for another session in Harrisburg, doesn’t it?

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2 Comments

  1. i saw a program on cspan yesterday about the hottest new research trend: using a psychological approach(es) to interpret economic and political data; eg, personality and party choice. it would be interesting to run some tests on chester county residents particular those in local government roles like in townships. it might bring to light the irony in some of their positions on small business growth and development; how they celebrate the small business entrepreneur politically yet economically exclude him/her from their neighborhoods. of course, there are many ways local munipalities discourage business growth; failure to sustain, augment, or improve infrastructure; zoning, signage, even our beloved open-space. what has made our county so attractive may also be its achilles heal; i recently read a piece celebrating the ingenuity of the king ranch purchase and i wonder how much more of a benefit to everyone in the county if some of that land would have been used for light industry.

  2. A few years ago in Skippack Township a builder who had completed most of a single family home development offered to build a professional office building instead of more single family homes. The local people resounding rejected the plan and several more single family homes were built. They rejected new construction that would add to the tax base and maybe employ some local people. And the local township government put in its place single family homes that took away from the tax base.

    The township commissioners took to heart our zoning laws in place everywhere but established cities and towns. Zoning laws designed to separate places to live, places to shop and places to work. Maybe heavy industry should be separate from housing. But shopping, housing, offices and even light industries have co-existed for centuries.

    Our zoning laws serve the needs of the auto industry by making living without a car impossible. Some people do not yet understand that living distant from each other and where we work and shop; connected only by solitary trips in automobiles was a huge mistake.

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