 V. Richard Haro/The
Coloradoan
ON THE ROAD: Traffic heads west on Highway
392 in Windsor.
|
Finding and
maintaining a balance between a vibrant economic base and strong
quality of life can be a moving target for municipalities.
When the economy was strong, cities were flush with money
generated by growth.
When the economy tanked, cities dependent on growth saw revenue
drop across the board.
Fort Collins' tax revenue fell more than $5 million short of
projections last year.
The fallout resulted in wage and hiring freezes and cuts in some
city services.
That's led some city officials to wonder aloud if Fort Collins'
strict growth policies have been shortsighted.
With about 54 percent of the city's general fund coming from
sales and use taxes fueled largely by growth, Fort Collins Mayor Ray
Martinez repeatedly said "the city needs to take a sharp look at how
it generates sales taxes."
Disincentives?
The city's tax revenue struggled in a down economy last year, but
Loveland's sales and use tax proceeds rose nearly 6 percent, far
outpacing expectations.
"Why is that?" Martinez asked.
Some say it is because the city has made it difficult for
developers and businesses to operate in Fort Collins while Loveland
has offered incentives to lure residential and commercial growth.
"It has become so expensive here and the process is so extensive
and drawn out, it's just not economically feasible for small
companies," said Larry Kendall, broker/manager of The Group Inc.
real estate.
"If the goal as a city is we don't want more business growth, if
we'd just as soon see them leave, that is being accomplished."
In 1997, The Group predicted sales and use taxes would drop and
housing costs would rise sharply under the newly adopted City Plan,
Kendall said.
"You can't rely just on residential growth," he said. "You have
to have a commercial component, or else you can't have a viable city
in terms of providing basic services."
In Fort Collins last year, revenue from building permits sank
about $735,000 even though single-family permits had a record year.
Total construction value on permits dropped from $347.6 million
in 2001 to $280.6 million last year.
In Berthoud, building permits and revenue dropped so sharply
after a 5 percent growth cap passed in 2000 that the town added $38
to recent water bills to meet bond payments.
A group of Berthoud residents now wants voters to rescind the cap
and allow for managed growth rather than restricted growth.
Quantity vs. quality
So, how can municipalities encourage growth while maintaining
quality of life?
It's a precarious balance, said Berthoud Town Administrator Jim
White.
"You have to have enough growth to be economically responsible
and viable and at the same time not allow growth that is alarming to
residents.
"It's a difficult balance to achieve. We're trying to get a level
of understanding for all the parties involved so they can get to a
place where most residents can live with the results," White said.
Growth and quality of life are not mutually exclusive, said Gene
Vaughan, owner of Re/Max First Associates in Fort Collins.
"Quality of life starts with having a job, and having your kids
be able to have a job and to live in an economically vibrant
environment," he said.
"We have people who want all these things that they interpret to
mean quality of life, like open space and a performing arts center,
but they neglect to ask the question of who is going to pay for it?"
Ultimately, providing good jobs and a good tax base pays for the
amenities that make up a good quality of life, Vaughan said.
Ramon Ajero, chairman of the Sierra Club's Poudre Canyon Group,
challenges the notion that growth is inevitable.
"Our current thinking has become so focused on continued and
endless growth that we rarely, if ever, consider there might be
other paths toward achieving economic vitality."
The first step to finding the balance is clarifying goals
regarding jobs and infrastructure, Ajero said.
There's a difference, he said, between providing jobs and
infrastructure for current residents vs. providing jobs and
infrastructure that primarily fuel future growth.
Fort Collins Deputy City Manager Diane Jones said striking the
balance is a matter of trying to clearly understand and provide what
people in the community want.
"What combination of services, what level of service and how it
impacts their lives is up to them," she said. Those are decisions
that need to be made locally.
"All of the elements come into play in terms of housing, jobs,
the environment, quality of life and what we're trying to achieve,"
she said.
"They are intertwined in a tapestry that forms the community.
It's up to the decision-makers how best to move toward that
tapestry."
Jones advocates strong local planning to achieve the balance.
The Colorado Municipal League agrees that planning remains a
sacrosanct responsibility for local officials.
Regional response needed?
But others are calling for state intervention, or at least
regional planning to ensure well-planned growth in Northern
Colorado.
Ajero said the over-reliance on sales tax revenue pits
neighboring communities against each other as they compete for sales
tax revenue-generating commercial sites.
"Annexation wars and races to the interstate don't make for good
planning," Ajero said.
"It makes sense to explore revenue sharing and other approaches
that could alleviate those pressures."
The communities already share the financial burdens of providing
residential services and infrastructure, "we should explore ways to
share the benefits as well."
Fort Collins developer Jay Stoner, however, believes the state
needs a uniform growth management plan to keep municipalities from
driving growth to neighboring towns and counties.
"Piecemeal regulations cause people to move somewhere else to get
what they want for what they want to spend," said Stoner, developer
of The Hill at Cobb Lake northeast of Fort Collins.
The city can manage its own growth, he said, but regulations here
can send potential developers into Larimer County.
If Larimer County changes, people will go to Weld. "And, that
causes sprawl," he said.
But growth has fallen off the state's radar, overtaken by more
pressing economic concerns.
"Several years ago, the economy was on fire and the Legislature
was preoccupied with growth management," said Sam Mamet, associate
director and chief lobbyist of the Colorado Municipal League.
"Now, this Legislature is preoccupied with economic development
because the economy is not on fire," he said.
That's the nature of Colorado's boom-and-bust heritage, "from the
gold mining days until now," said Mamet.
But, just because growth is not high on the legislative agenda
doesn't mean there is not a problem.
"Everyone was groaning about growth two years ago," said Stephan
Weiler, assistant professor of economics at Colorado State
University.
"Now they're saying it wouldn't be bad to have a little of that
growth," he said.
The conversation needs to go beyond generating revenue and
building permits, said Dave Theobald, research scientist with the
Natural Resource Ecology Lab and assistant professor in the Natural
Resource Recreation and Tourism Department at CSU.
"You have to ask does it cost more to provide services," to the
new homes, Theobald said.
Common goals
Theobald advocates regional planning as the best answer right
now.
He points to Boulder, which imposed a growth cap more than two
decades ago as a courageous step in molding that city.
Its shortcoming, he said, was that the city's plan was not
regional.
With the average price of a single-family home in Boulder in
excess of $472,000 in 2001, Boulder has one of the slowest growth
rates along the Front Range.
But, by the late '90s it also had the worst traffic because
two-thirds of Boulder's workforce couldn't afford to live there and
has to drive into the city to work, Kendall said.
Bill Neal, developer of Rigden Farms in Fort Collins, said the
development industry is convinced that growth more than pays for
itself in terms of the fee structure in Fort Collins.
Yet, there are people who are just beginning "to realize we are
one region," Neal said.
Residents, he said, don't shop in their own neighborhoods
anymore, they shop in communities," he said.
"The farther east you drive, the more house per square foot you
will get for the price," Neal said.
Windsor, an area planning for 6 percent growth in the next few
years, is banking on a new regional mall at the interchange of
Colorado Highway 392 and Interstate 25 to help boost its sales tax
revenue, like Loveland has done through its I-25/U.S. Highway 34
developments.
"One key element of development in Windsor is balancing growth
with high quality development," said Town Administrator Ron Wensing.
"We have high standards which yields high property values and
high quality development," he said.
The Northern Colorado Economic Development Corp. also is working
with local communities to establish common goals, said Chief
Executive Officer J.J. Johnston.
The process begins "with government actively working with the
business community to talk about common goals in the community.
Right at the top of the list is a sustainable economy and protecting
the environment," he said.
Originally published Monday, February 10, 2003