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Cuyahoga County: After 200 Years a Turning Point… and a Stacked Deck. Thomas Bier Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs Cleveland State University t.bier@csuohio.edu 6/25/12 . Consider. Fundamental underlying dynamics. Long-term big picture. Response. . The Situation.
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Cuyahoga County: After 200 Years a Turning Point… and a Stacked Deck Thomas Bier Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs Cleveland State University t.bier@csuohio.edu 6/25/12
Consider • Fundamental underlying dynamics. • Long-term big picture. • Response.
The Situation • After 200 years of development, Cuyahoga County is close to being Ohio’s first built-out county. Few green fields remain.
As Cuyahoga’s Supply of Greenfield Land Has Shrunk, Development Has Shifted to Adjacent Counties* *Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Medina, Portage, Summit
Average Annual Percentage Change Residential Real Estate Value, 1985-2010
Average Annual Percentage Change in Value Commercial Real Estate, 1985-2010
Average Annual Percentage Change in ValueIndustrial Real Estate, 1985-2010
Cuyahoga County is Getting Old • Old → obsolete real estate, outdated schools, worn-out recreation facilities, abandoned buildings, leaking water lines, dying trees, broken curbs and sidewalks. • In 40 years half the homes in Cuyahoga County will be at least100 years old. • Lakewood will reach that point in six years.
Cuyahoga is Losing Middle- and Upper-Income Residents • 80% of suburban residents move outward to buy their next home, half to an adjacent county. Most moves are to new/newer. • Those who prefer inner locations have little choice . • More move out of county than in resulting in population loss and spreading decline.
Cuyahoga’s Losses to Adjacent Counties 2004-2009 36,000 equals a Westlake – in five years
Population Change 1985-2010 Cuyahoga County -175,000 Adjacent counties +258,000
If Adjacent Counties Add 258,000 Residents in Next 25 Years, It Will Mean • 100,000 more households • 200,000 more cars (+ service vehicles) • 175,000 new homes (7,000/year) • 350,000 acres used (550 sq miles)
If Cuyahoga County Loses 175,000 Residents In Next 25 Years, It Will Mean • 75,000 homes abandoned • $1.5 b property value lost ($20,000/unit) • $5 b income lost • Cleveland’s population below 300,000
The Wrong Road • Cuyahoga is on the road to shrinking tax base, higher taxes, reduced bond rating – while neighboring counties continue to grow. • The region is on the road to more disunity.
The Turning Point: From Building “Out” to Rebuilding “In” • Renewal and redevelopment of Cuyahoga’s old core – Cleveland and inner suburbs – must become a central priority. There’s no other way to build tax base. • Good things are happening but not enough.
Renewal and Redevelopment Have Been Slight – Why? • The economy. • Complications and costs that don’t occur in green field projects – such as demolition, site assembly, environmental cleanup.
Deal Closed on Multi-Million-Dollar Clifton Pointe Project in Lakewood Demolition of three Sloan Avenue homes, construction of 17 luxury townhomes set to begin this winter
Why Have Renewal and Redevelopment Been Slight? • Our current system of government is not oriented to promote it. • Policy is stacked in favor of green field development – that’s growth; redevelopment is “replacement.”
Why Have Renewal and Redevelopment Been Slight? • Home rule is taken to mean “It’s your problem, you fix it”-- fixobsolete real estate, outdated schools, worn-out recreation facilities, abandoned buildings, leaking water lines, dying trees, broken curbs and sidewalks.
Catch 22 • “You fix it” – Old places need tax revenues to drive renewal and redevelopment but their tax bases are inadequate because of lack of R&R. It’s a Catch 22 in home rule. • Raising taxes worsens the predicament.
DIY Won’t Work • Most places can’t “fix it”; the load is too much, even with the best of leadership. • They need partners, policies and plans that make R&R a central priority in the county, region, state.
Cuyahoga County • Main issue is “We’re built out” – use it as rationale for action. • We've reached a natural and inevitable point in our evolution where, for the sake of our tax base and the well-being of all our communities, we must focus on renewal and redevelopment of our inner suburbs and Cleveland.
Cuyahoga County • 59 jurisdictions and county government: consider the next 25 years, lock arms and do it. • Give people reason to think that domino-like decline is not inevitable.
Cuyahoga County • Reduce annual move-outs by 3,000 (would balance in and out). • Increase annual share of region’s new housing from 20% to 50% (3,000 more units). • Maximize land bank and site preparation. • Pool resources and target on R&R. • Establish incentives to locate in core. • Gain stability, attractiveness, growth.
The Region • Produce a multi-county plan to balance old and new, in and out across Northeast Ohio • Northeast Ohio Sustainable Communities Consortiumworking on 12-county plan. www.neoscc.org • Regional Prosperity Initiativeadvocating resource gain sharing to foster cooperative planning and development. www.neo-rpi.org
The State • Make investments according to county and regional plans. • Change system of local taxes (income and real estate) as it fuels decline and sprawl.
Cuyahoga County After 200 years a Turning Point, from Building Out to Rebuilding In • Major turning points are rare, but when one occurs the new direction opens new opportunity. There is opportunity. • It’s our problem, we’ll fix it.
Postscript: Cultural Comparison • Scottish government: “Regeneration is the holistic process of reversing the economic, physical and social decline of places where market forces alone won’t suffice.” “Achieving a Sustainable Future: Regeneration Strategy”, 2011.