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BIG BOX STORES DRAIN CITY REVENUE, STUDY FINDS
The Home Town Advantage Bulletin - February 2003
BIG BOX STORES DRAIN CITY REVENUE,
STUDY FINDS
Big box retail, shopping centers, and
fast-food restaurants cost taxpayers
more than they produce in revenue,
according to a fiscal impact analysis in
Barnstable, Massachusetts.
The study, conducted by Tischler
& Associates, compares the tax
revenue generated by different kinds of
residential and commercial development
with the actual cost of providing public
services for each land use. Barnstable
is a community of 48,000 people on Cape
Cod.
The study found that big box retail
generates a net annual deficit of $468
per 1,000 square feet. Shopping centers
likewise produce an annual drain of $314
per 1,000 square feet. By far the most
costly type of development, according to
the study, are fast-food restaurants,
which have a net annual cost of $5,168
per 1,000 square feet.
In contrast, specialty retail, a
category that includes small-scale Main
Street businesses, has a positive impact
on pubic revenue (i.e., it generates
more tax revenue than it costs to
service). Specialty retail produces a
net annual return of $326 per 1,000
square feet. Other commercial land uses
that are revenue winners include
business parks, offices, and hotels.
"This study shatters the common
misperception that any sort of growth
creates revenue," says Christopher
Cullinan of Tischler & Associates, a
fiscal, economic, and planning
consulting firm. "Communities often
talk about development in terms of the
new revenue it will bring, but they
rarely give serious considerations to
the on-going costs of servicing that
development."
The two main factors behind the
higher costs for big box stores,
shopping centers, and fast-food outlets,
compared to specialty retail shops, are
higher road maintenance costs (due to a
much greater number of car trips per
1,000 square feet) and greater demand
for public safety services.
Copyright 2003 by the Institute for
Local Self-Reliance.
More:
[http://www.newrules.org/hta/hta0203.htm]
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