San Antonio Weighs Annexation Plan
Proposed Land Grab Could Add 200,000 People, Making City
Fifth Biggest in U.S. by NATHAN KOPPEL Dec. 21, 2014 6:45 p.m. ET
San Antonio is moving ahead with plans to annex as much as
66 square miles around it, a land grab that would add as many as 200,000 people
to the city and potentially make it the nation¹s fifth-largest metropolis.
The San Antonio City Council this month voted in favor of
conducting a fiscal analysis of the proposed annexation. The process requires
further council approval and the annexation would take about four years to
complete. City leaders say the move would allow San Antonio, currently the
nation¹s
seventh-largest city with 1.4 million people, to better
manage growth and remain economically vibrant.
If the annexation occurs, San Antonio could break into the
ranks of the top five biggest U.S. cities, behind New York, Los Angeles,
Chicago and Houston and ahead of Philadelphia and Phoenix, now Nos. 5 and 6.
³Cities that do not grow run the risk of two things
happening: They will lose control over development outside their boundaries,
and they will lose control over their long-term finances,² said San Antonio
City Councilman Joe Krier.
But some residents of the unincorporated areas in line to be
annexed are opposed, fearing they will be forced to pay higher taxes and
receive little in return.
³No one ever wants to pay more taxes,² said Mamerto
Luzarraga, a 47-year-old real estate professional who lives in Alamo Ranch, a
large community that could be swallowed up by the city. ³One of the selling
points of this community is that you live close to city amenities, but you get
to pay reduced taxes.² Unlike many large U.S. cities ringed by smaller
incorporated towns, especially in the Northeast and Midwest, San Antonio has
room to expand, say urban planning experts. It is already one of the nation¹s
fastest-growing cities after steadily increasing its population and area during
the past decades. San Antonio expanded from 262 square miles and 786,000 people
in 1980 to 407 square
miles and 1.1 million people by 2000. Its current size is
486 square miles. San Antonio ³should consider itself lucky,² said Andrew
Reschovsky, an annexation expert with the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy in
Cambridge, Mass. He said many big cities have been weakened by losing affluent
residents and their taxes to suburbs, and noted that annexation can be a potent
tool for cities to effectively retain some of that population.
San Antonio¹s Department of Planning and Community
Development has recommended annexing five areas, which total 66 square miles
and are located to the north, east and west of the city limits. Most of the
areas are in Bexar County.
Within 20 years of being fully annexed, the communities
would cumulatively generate $77 million annually in added revenue for the city,
according to projections by San Antonio¹s planning agency. It estimated whether
tax
revenue from the new residents would exceed the cost of
providing them with services, such as police and fire protection. Bexar County
Judge Nelson Wolff, a former mayor of San Antonio, said he supports the
proposed annexation plan and wishes the city would take in even
more county land.
A majority of San Antonio¹s 10-member city council is
expected to vote in favor of annexing some or all of the targeted land, council
members and other city leaders said in interviews. The council is tentatively
scheduled to vote in December 2015 on whether to annex three of the five
targeted areas. It would vote in 2016 on the other two areas.
San Antonio¹s mayor also will get to cast a vote. Mayor Ivy
Taylor, who was appointed to fill the unexpired term of Julián Castro after he
left in July to become secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, favors annexing all the targeted land, a spokesman said. Ms.
Taylor hasn¹t said whether she plans to run in May¹s mayoral election.
City leaders who back the annexation plan say it is vital
for San Antonio to capture tax revenue from its high-growth suburbs and to
ensure those areas are developed in line with the city¹s building, zoning and water-conservation
regulations. Ron Nirenberg, another council member who supports annexation,
said it is imperative that San Antonio centrally manage growth given that the
metro area is expanding so rapidly and already faces challenges with traffic congestion
and potential water scarcity.
³We have a challenge in making sure we don¹t have unbridled
growth,² he said. Earlier this year, Mr. Nirenberg was among the majority of
city officials who voted 9 to 1 in favor of a separate annexation of 19 square miles.
The lone dissenting vote was cast by council member Shirley
Gonzales. She also opposes the current, proposed annexation, believing San
Antonio should focus instead on providing better services to inner-city
neighborhoods like
the ones she represents. ³There are a finite amount of
resources,² she said. Still, she conceded, ³most of the council is supportive²
of annexation.
Other council members note that the city could improve
inner-city services while absorbing new neighborhoods.
³I¹m a big believer in healthy downtowns but one of the ways
we have paid for that is with property taxes from developments far away from
downtown,² Mr. Krier said.
Stephen Klineberg, an urban planning expert at Rice
University, said many city planners view annexation as a means to advance their
inner-city goals. ³When rich people go out into the suburbs that is where the
money is,² he
said. ³You can use that tax revenue to develop the urban core.²
Write to Nathan Koppel at nathan.koppel@wsj.com
Source:http://www.wsj.com/articles/san-antonio-weighs-annexation-plan-1419205551?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLE
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