In the
late 1930s, my wife Marlene’s parents bought a 2 acre lot on Highway 21 in
Mehlville, an exurb in South St. Louis County.
They built a home on one end of the property and a small strip-mall on
the other end. It had a barber shop, shoe repair, farm implement sharpening and
gasoline station. My father-in-law was the barber in the daytime and did the
shoe repair and implement work at night. He hired two neighbor boys to pump
gas. My mother-in-law filled in as needed. He walked to work every day The property bordered a wheat field.
Zoning in
the US in the exurbs in the 1930s allowed property owners to have agricultural,
housing and light commercial retail on their property. It was also common for retail owners to live
over their stores on commercial streets in cities within St. Louis County.
Across the US, family businesses like restaurants were operated by family
members who owned the property and lived on the property. They were able to
deliver “value”, because these businesses didn’t have to pay rent and once the
mortgages were paid off, they had lower operating costs.
The cost
of commercial property today is inflated and the space rental costs retail
businesses pay is too high for many of them to operate. Consequently, we see fewer high quality retail
and restaurants being operated by families. Franchise chains dominate the
marketplace, but drops in demand result in store closures. Business owners are
plagued with high city taxes, fees, inspections and regulations.
The
family business organism has been infected with cash-grabbing parasites that
include city governments, county governments, commercial property landlords,
property developers, bankers, insurance companies, and regulatory compliance
services.
The
stealthy tightening of zoning rules concocted by big business is at the heart
of the decline of family businesses. If
you want to eliminate the competition, you just make rules to make it too
expensive and squeeze them out. The
start-up cost for a small retail business is around $200,000, unless you own
the land and are allowed to use it.
When I
opened my private consulting practice in 1993, I put my office in the basement
to avoid unnecessary office rental costs. I was able to work day and night and
deducted the use of my basement from my taxes. My start-up cost was $5000 for a
PC, printer and office equipment. I held out another $10,000 as a cash-flow
hedge, but didn’t end up needing it. I did most of my work in my office and
drove to customer sites for meetings and applicant interviews.
The same
“squeeze out” is being used to decrease home ownership and increase apartment
rentals. It’s the same crowd is at work
trying to make home ownership tough for families with lower incomes and sloppy
spending habits.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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