Title: Rehabbing Urban Redevelopment
1Rehabbing Urban Redevelopment
- What Can the State Do to Address Loss of Function
in Our Middle Cities? - Jim Stergios, Executive Director
2Defining Middle Cities
- Brockton
- Chicopee
- Fall River
- Fitchburg
- Holyoke
- Lawrence
- Leominster
- Lowell
- Lynn
- New Bedford
- Pittsfield
- Springfield
- Taunton
- Worcester
- Three objective factors
- Population gt 40,000
- Per capita income lt 20,000
- Equalized valuation per capita lt 80,000
- EQV is a measure of property value
- Two subjective factors
- Geographical distribution across the state
- Separation from Boston economy
- Other similarities
- Past industrial prowess
- Significant influx of immigrant populations
- Persistent difficulties creating, attracting, or
retaining businesses.
3Why Care?
- An increasing number of cities feel fiscal
pressures due to employment costs and weak growth
in municipal tax revenues (from weak economic
growth) - Possible new and expensive receiverships
- Huge expenditures in Middle Cities are
opportunity costs - How can we not care about the limited
opportunities for social mobility for nearly 20
percent of the population? - Huge opportunity cost in terms of what these
cities could be an arrow in the quiver of the
states aim to compete
4The Context
- An increasing number of cities feel fiscal
pressures due to employment costs and weak growth
in municipal tax revenues (from weak economic
growth) - Nationally, the trend toward increasing fiscal
pressure is most profoundly felt in older
industrialized urban areas. - Receiverships represent failures in state and
local policy - The number of receiverships over the past 13
years in MA is not a blip on the screen
5Significant Local Aid Resources
Additional Assistance
Lottery
Ch. 70 - Education
- 2000-07 38 of total state aid went to the
Middle Cities (18 of the states population)
6Grant Funding for MC Redevelopment, 00-06
- Grant programs 45 million each year,
uncoordinated across agencies - Ribbon Cuttings/Earmarks
- ANNUAL AVE. 67 million in state grant and
redevelopment resources
7Current Conditions Economic Climate
- Per capita income (see above)
- Unemployment rates
- EQV
- Tax title properties
- Building permits
8Current Conditions Public Order
- Violent Crime (see above)
- Murder Rate
- Property Crime
- Fire/Arson
- Community Survey
9Current Conditions Education
- MCAS (see above 10th grade ELA)
- ELA 1132 Warning/Fail Math 1647
Warning/Fail - Dropout Rates 9 cities over 23 4 cities 3440
10Current Conditions Fiscal Management
- Bond Rating (see above/Moodys) 8 of 14 under
A range - Debt management Debt/EQV
- Sustainability of commitments Municipal
Sustainability FactorÂ
11How Did We Get Here?
- Multiple causes for problems in the Middle Cities
- Federal, state and local policy
- Changes in the national and global economy
- Changes in social mores
- Thesis Middle Cities are not performing well
because - They have lost the economic function/purpose
that their infrastructure was designed around,
and - The numerous constituencies and host of problems
make it difficult for any responsive leader to
remain focused on growing the pie and increasing
opportunities for social mobility
12So is the Solution Top-Down or Bottom-Up?
- Top-down approaches to economic growth rarely
work - Companies can locate anywhere
- Require basic quality of life and match-up on
workforce - Starts at end of the process, not at the
beginning - Remember What can work in Boston may not
translate - Panel 2 presentation demonstrates that
- Growing Middle Cities grow across business type
and size - Overall, economic development efforts targeted
at specific industries do not show any
significant effect - Middle Cities should learn from Middle Cities
that are showing progress
13Lessons from Chelsea and Springfield
- Bolster local leadership, to get past gridlock,
by an objective outside force. - Enhanced state involvement can help provide
financial tools, standardized procedures and
goals. - State coordination speeds action and impact.
Lack of state coordination and focus allows for
receiverships to happen. - Economic development is an integral function of
city government, not an after-thought. - Beacon Hill needs a better grasp of Middle City
issues. - A multi-year state focus getting past budget
cycle is needed. - The state needs Middle City-specific tools.
- Public Order is king.
- Prevention Need a state-local partnership to
gain positive attributes of state involvement
without outright intervention.
14Blueprint for Focused Leadership Collaboration
- Set goals and incentives to lay the foundation
for growth - Benchmarking a city against its past performance
on quality of life and business predictability
measures - Pay for performance
- Establish a GC (designee) within the Governors
office to coordinate state, local and federal
resources - Single point of contact to agencies
- Benchmarking, technical assistance, grant money
- Encourage strong leadership by offering
significant support - Offer the development of a state-regional-local
investment plan - Offer multi-year investments in anchor
neighborhoods, using a portion of the 67
million in grant aid (fungible to local needs) - But only to leaders and cities committing to
bold change
15Trust but Verify Benchmarking
- Get out of business of micromanaging local use of
state money instead, set goals and incentives - Focus on measures that are outputs, macro
measures, trackable, and related to Commonwealth
interests - Suggested measures were put up earlier
- Taken together, the four areas outlined (public
order, education, fiscal management, and economic
climate), if done well, allow for local business
growth and external business relocation equally - Focus on improvements current city performance
vs. previous years performance - Benchmarking cities against themselves - for
incentives - Benchmarking across cities - for policy
adjustment
16Trust but Verify Benchmarking
17Trust/Verify and Assist Technical Assistance
- Some cities already do well on some key measures
- Governors Middle Cities designees should develop
with mayors/city managers a Middle Cities
Coalition - Share practices that have been shown to lead to
improvement - Develop public safety community perception
survey, uniform data tracking and department
command recommendations. - Discuss state mandates increasing the cost of
government - Identify ways to improve state technical
assistance - Offer revisions to state programs for Middle
Cities - Governors Middle Cities designees should
coordinate agency technical assistance in
education, public safety, business development
and fiscal management. - E.g., 43D outreach, DOR assistance to establish
best practices, or Land Court streamlining tax
lien-foreclosure-disposition process
18Trust/Verify and Encourage Leadership
Thresholds for Participation in the Partnership
- State needs to secure broad support to turn
around cities not just officials, but also
businesses and neighborhoods - State should offer development of a plan and
focused investments to cities that demonstrate
sufficient improvement or a commitment to change
e.g., - Economic climate adoption of Ch. 43D
streamlining - Public safety Participation in Middle Cities
working group on public safety - Education Broad array of reform (pilots, METCO,
charters) - Fiscal management Outperform the state pension
system (PRIT) over 10 years, or inclusion of
local pension system into PRIT
19Partnership Plan and Anchor Investments
- State-Regional-Local Plan
- The state would convene regional and local
officials to develop a plan that would result in
small-bore investments (not ribbon cuttings) in
key residential neighborhoods and retail spines
around city centers - In addition, the partnership would be looking to
ensure that specific sites are pad-ready for
business relocations or development - State Investments in Anchor Neighborhoods
- The Governors designees would apply the 67
million in average state resources dedicated to
Middle Cities according to city plan (not agency
ownership) - Also, bring to bear soft resources to anchor
neighborhoods
20Policy Recommendations
- The state should get the most for its dollars and
should support bold local leadership - Tie municipal benchmarks to new local aid
- Seek commitments from local leaders for bold
action - The state should help re-create a new economic
function - State coordinator within the Governors office
- Middle Cities Coalition to define reforms
- 8 reform ideas to state programs
- Focus resources on the basis of a partnership
plan - The goal is not to assume that this prescription
is to begin a dialogue on these ideas and the
measures that might be appropriate