Stephan BurklinCascade Commentary

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Summary: Created nearly ten years ago, the Oregon Housing and Community Services Department’s “Vertical Housing Program” was designed to encourage mixed-use commercial/residential developments. But despite massive public subsidies invested in these projects, the program is not able to attract businesses to its retail spaces.

“The curious task of economics,” alleged the Austrian professor Friedrich Hayek, “is to teach men how little they know about that which they imagine they can design.”* Governments around the world agree; but if the Soviets themselves relented, why won’t Oregon admit its folly? Rejecting Hayek’s notion, state planning agencies from Portland to Medford have squandered hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars meddling in private industry. All the while, the economic truth is simple: trying to improve market efficiency with governmental directives is like trying to run your vegetable garden on double A batteries. It won’t work.

One such manifestation of a defective planning strategy is the Oregon Housing and Community Services Department’s “Vertical Housing Program.” Created nearly ten years ago, the program was designed to encourage mixed-use commercial/residential developments through a partial property tax exemption. Optimistic local and regional governments expected that a combination of low-income housing projects, multi-modal transportation solutions and enticing business tax abatements would trigger urban love-fests.

In contrast to such idealistic fantasies, however, the city of Milwaukie’s project, the “North Main Village,” stands sheepishly as an emblem of despair. In a heroic coordination effort, the city of Milwaukie took out loans to buy property and agreed to forgo property taxes. According to the Legislative Fiscal Office, the Oregon Housing and Community Services Department spent thousands of dollars to administer the program. Plus, Metro indulged Milwaukie with $450,000 in street renovations and $580,000 in transit-oriented development grant money to make sure that the project penciled out. Given these lavish investments, is the program paying dividends?
 
Commercially, the answer is a resounding “no”. The complex is architecturally intriguing, and the upper-level apartments are charming. But the 8,000 square feet of vacant retail space creates an unsightly juxtaposition, like an evening dress paired with muddy sneakers. Having burned through over one million dollars of taxpayer money, planners are now unable to get businesses to touch the project, generous tax exemptions notwithstanding. Why? Because businesses in the area recognize a lack of patrons, parking and profit. And the recession isn’t the culprit; the stores have been mostly vacant for years. Other Vertical Housing Program mixed-use projects in Central Point, Grants Pass, Medford and Eugene are in the same sinking boat.

From the residential standpoint, the project is equally lamentable. For although the apartments are fully occupied, the implausibility of commercial success is factored back into the price of rents, wasting additional taxpayer money. Can the Oregon Housing and Community Services Department justify subsidies to low-income families at $864 per month? Clearly, the government has a moral responsibility to help disadvantaged families, but there are smarter ways of going about it.

The goal of revitalizing downtown areas, however admirable, is foundering on the rocks of implementation. As Hayek observed, governments should not presume to know what’s best. The state’s profligate use of taxpayer money to provide life-support for fanciful developments is simply inexcusable.

*Hayek, Friedrich. (Chicago, WW Bartley, 1988), 76.

 

2 Responses to “The Fatal Conceit”

  1. Bill McKee July 28, 2009 at 10:10 pm #

    Well put. Government, quite simply, needs to let private enterprise find the highest and best use and quit squandering taxpayer money as if it was.. well, free. The idea that government knows best has been proven wrong time after time. Someone needs the political will to define what it is that government does best (aside from waste taxpayer money), and stick to it’s knitting! We are fools to allow this to go on and on and on…

  2. Bryan Schmidt July 30, 2009 at 10:47 pm #

    Overall, an excellent article. My only criticism is with your statement about “government has a moral responsibility to help disadvantaged families”. In a free society, government has no role to play in this regard since it can only “help” someone by taking resources from someone else (usually without permission). The concept of “helping” low income people is the driving force behind the program you describe. And as you correctly point out, the end result is far from what was expected. While the program could be theoretically terminated, the funds spent on it are gone and never to be recovered. This is a crime against taxpayers for which there doesn’t seem to be a penalty.

    Thank you for analyzing and reporting on another failed government program.

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