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TulsaGoldenHurriCAN
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« Reply #375 on: November 20, 2018, 10:32:06 am »

Yes! As has been noted by boosters on this forum for years, Tulsa has such great bones. Far better than OKC which is ostensibly "ahead" of us by most objective metrics. If nothing else OKC is an infuriating city to navigate.

What I believe we need to rally around is a 3 or 4 broad point plan for progressively improving upon our existing strengths while addressing one or two weaknesses. As I see it we need to continuously update our long-range comprehensive plans rather than spending millions and years developing plans then declaring victory and letting them sit on the shelf.

I think that needs to focus on:

1. Improving connections between the self-sufficient districts, namely Brady/Arts, Blue Dome, Cherry, and Brookside. Such actions will necessarily benefit the Deco, Cathedral, and Pearl districts and the Route 66 corridor. This can take the form of encouraging developments directly through incentives but should be primarily through improvements in placemaking (cheap and quick) and city infrastructure (expensive and slow.)

2. Coordinate State and city government, local business and non-profits in a 50 year plan to remake Tulsa Public Schools into the world's best. No shorter goal is worthy. The core misconception about education that most frustrates me is that the trajectory of the system can be changed on a short timescale. A student generally spends 12 to 14 years in primary education so a 50 year plan is ONLY 4 successive "student generations." Therefore, we must shortly establish the armature for success: inter-institutional coordination, research, and data gathering. Then have the boldness to incorporate the recommendations of such experts, the courage to see them through on an appropriate timeline, and the humility to admit mistakes and correct them.

3. Create and begin implementing a regional mass-transit plan. Our core city is at or near the density required to sustain a streetcar circulator. On the 5-15 year scale we should be looking to implement direct commuter rail connections to downtown: BA, Jenks, Bixby, and SS. Finally on the 10-30 year timescale a high-speed rail connection between OKC and Fayetteville through the downtowns and airports would help bring the region a significant competitive advantage and connect a region of almost 3 million people and a near $200 Billion GDP. I estimate all three would be a project in the range of $5-10 Billion with the Tulsa metro being on the hook for about half.

I don't agree OKC is better than Tulsa by most metrics... Public education there is worse. The core of the city was basically gutted as people flocked to the suburbs for many decades and OKC is far more suburban-centric than Tulsa. Tulsa has several good-to-great urban schools including Booker T Washington, Edison and Union.

Tulsa's core was better preserved with neighborhoods like Florence Park, Bryan-Mahr, Terwilliger and Maple Ridge (any many more) which were maintained from their founding days and never needed any kind of renaissance. Most all of the original neighborhoods in OKC went through some dark days and were left pretty patchy. They've corrected that in some areas but were far behind Tulsa to begin with in that regard.

East Tulsa is a lot nicer than the equivalent areas in OKC. East Tulsa actually feels like a busy well-utilized area in many parts whereas the similar areas in OKC just feel unsafe and rundown. I'm optimistic that the issues in East Tulsa can be corrected in time as populations stabilize and are able to buy in to the area.

I'm not a big fan of streetcars for low-density cities (esp. OKC with a measly 930 per square mile!). I get all the reasons they provide stability along the routes and boost areas and like that they provide mass transit options, but most everywhere I've gone in the US, they're used by tourists or virtually no one. Our entire infrastructure is car based and highly expensive permanent rail can't combat that. We need to be looking to electric buses and boosting transit times even faster than the BRTs will provide. Rail can work in a city with such atrocious commutes that people will park and ride (Dallas), but tough to see that working in Tulsa anytime soon. Not that we shouldn't be proactive, but people are willing to commute longer and longer commutes, easily up to an hour which includes anything from Bartlesville to Okmulgee. Tough for transit to compete when it turns a 5-10 minute drive into a 30 minute or more ride. Autonomous vehicles could potentially make people even more likely to live further out or in areas with poor highway access.

The main thing Tulsa could do to make public transportation a decent option for far more people is to eliminate most highways, especially the BA and IDL, but obviously that won't happen. Another thing is what is already happening: make the urban areas the best/coolest places to live so people want to move there for amenities within walking distance. No doubt Brookside, Cherry Street and downtown are far more interesting to live in than Owasso or south Tulsa. They are far more desirable for anyone wanting a place with charm or character and very competitive with school districts. It's a matter of boosting the schools even more to really boost the desirability. Obviously crime hotbeds like south of Brookside or near downtown need to be worked on also.
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TheArtist
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« Reply #376 on: November 20, 2018, 12:18:12 pm »

I don't agree OKC is better than Tulsa by most metrics... Public education there is worse. The core of the city was basically gutted as people flocked to the suburbs for many decades and OKC is far more suburban-centric than Tulsa. Tulsa has several good-to-great urban schools including Booker T Washington, Edison and Union.

Tulsa's core was better preserved with neighborhoods like Florence Park, Bryan-Mahr, Terwilliger and Maple Ridge (any many more) which were maintained from their founding days and never needed any kind of renaissance. Most all of the original neighborhoods in OKC went through some dark days and were left pretty patchy. They've corrected that in some areas but were far behind Tulsa to begin with in that regard.

East Tulsa is a lot nicer than the equivalent areas in OKC. East Tulsa actually feels like a busy well-utilized area in many parts whereas the similar areas in OKC just feel unsafe and rundown. I'm optimistic that the issues in East Tulsa can be corrected in time as populations stabilize and are able to buy in to the area.

I'm not a big fan of streetcars for low-density cities (esp. OKC with a measly 930 per square mile!). I get all the reasons they provide stability along the routes and boost areas and like that they provide mass transit options, but most everywhere I've gone in the US, they're used by tourists or virtually no one. Our entire infrastructure is car based and highly expensive permanent rail can't combat that. We need to be looking to electric buses and boosting transit times even faster than the BRTs will provide. Rail can work in a city with such atrocious commutes that people will park and ride (Dallas), but tough to see that working in Tulsa anytime soon. Not that we shouldn't be proactive, but people are willing to commute longer and longer commutes, easily up to an hour which includes anything from Bartlesville to Okmulgee. Tough for transit to compete when it turns a 5-10 minute drive into a 30 minute or more ride. Autonomous vehicles could potentially make people even more likely to live further out or in areas with poor highway access.

The main thing Tulsa could do to make public transportation a decent option for far more people is to eliminate most highways, especially the BA and IDL, but obviously that won't happen. Another thing is what is already happening: make the urban areas the best/coolest places to live so people want to move there for amenities within walking distance. No doubt Brookside, Cherry Street and downtown are far more interesting to live in than Owasso or south Tulsa. They are far more desirable for anyone wanting a place with charm or character and very competitive with school districts. It's a matter of boosting the schools even more to really boost the desirability. Obviously crime hotbeds like south of Brookside or near downtown need to be worked on also.


The main thing IMHO that we can do to help make public transit a realistic option is to change our zoning laws.  All the money in the world won't help if the zoning itself is for the auto and against transit.

Right now most of the city by far is zoned so that development will be auto centric not pedestrian/transit friendly.  We now have a few tiny islands that now "allow" for pedestrian/transit friendly development, but those tiny islands exist in an ocean of auto centric, anti-pedestrian/transit development zoning.  Any 8th grader could look at that and guess what kind of influence that ocean will have on those tiny islands. (Not very good for transit and pedestrians)

Again, those tiny islands that "allow" for transit and pedestrian development are NOT the same as having pedestrian/transit zoning.

We are getting development that is exactly what we are zoning for. Auto centric in most of the city (for we zone for that, and we get that ), and dysfunctional, little bit auto/almost kinda pedestrianish/sorta transity, crippled urbanism, in a few small areas.

We zone for auto centric development and get it.  If we want good pedestrian and transit centric development, we should do the same thing zone for it.  If it works for one, why shouldn't it work for the other? Not rocket science.  

The other option if your against "telling people what to do with their property" and "are for the free market to do its thing" is to get rid of the auto centric zoning city wide so that one isn't biased and favored over the other with unfair and unbalanced regulations.

I am fine either way.  Put transit and pedestrian zoning in those areas where we want it and auto centric zoning in areas where we want that.  Or, get rid of the auto biased zoning and make for a more level playing field city wide.  

Taking the half-arsed approach to pedestrian/transit development we are taking, is going to get us exactly that, half-arsed pedestrian/transit oriented development and half-arse used and overly expensive per use, transit.
« Last Edit: November 20, 2018, 12:24:10 pm by TheArtist » Logged

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« Reply #377 on: December 19, 2018, 02:58:01 pm »

Since this became our unofficial economic development thread here's an interesting article from Bloomberg, where we got mentioned.

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2018-12-19/superstar-cities-are-getting-richer-but-they-re-not-alone
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TulsaGoldenHurriCAN
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« Reply #378 on: December 19, 2018, 04:51:13 pm »

Since this became our unofficial economic development thread here's an interesting article from Bloomberg, where we got mentioned.

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2018-12-19/superstar-cities-are-getting-richer-but-they-re-not-alone

Interesting article. Thank you for posting it!

Quote
Tulsa, Des Moines, Provo, Pittsburgh, San Antonio and Buffalo (Buffalo!) really don’t fit the label of superstar cities, and their inhabitants aren’t rich, either. But they are getting richer, which is a hopeful sign that maybe other less-than-glamorous metropolitan areas can learn to do the same.


Tulsa was ranked #3 in the US top-100 metros in "per capita real GDP change 2001-2017" at 36.1%, below Silicon Valley and Portland. There are some other things going on like Tulsa's starting point in 2001 likely being lower than other places, but good to see that the numbers back up what I've been saying on this board and our city leaders have sold us, that Tulsa's GDP growth has been very impressive.


Quote
Population growth is of course usually taken as a sign that a region is succeeding, but in some of the growth hubs of the South and West, it has been accompanied by falling incomes, which isn’t good.

This seems like a key takeaway from this data, especially with many on here talking about Tulsa's low population growth. That only goes back to 2010 and has Tulsa near the bottom-third of these cities at 5.4% since 2010, but it would be higher if you went back to 2000 (Around 9-10% since then which is slightly above average for the US). Still, Tulsa's economy has grown much faster relative to population growth. So we aren't booming in population, but we are booming in income, especially considering our low cost of living.



« Last Edit: December 19, 2018, 04:52:59 pm by TulsaGoldenHurriCAN » Logged
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« Reply #379 on: December 20, 2018, 01:12:44 pm »

Interesting article. Thank you for posting it!


Tulsa was ranked #3 in the US top-100 metros in "per capita real GDP change 2001-2017" at 36.1%, below Silicon Valley and Portland. There are some other things going on like Tulsa's starting point in 2001 likely being lower than other places, but good to see that the numbers back up what I've been saying on this board and our city leaders have sold us, that Tulsa's GDP growth has been very impressive.


This seems like a key takeaway from this data, especially with many on here talking about Tulsa's low population growth. That only goes back to 2010 and has Tulsa near the bottom-third of these cities at 5.4% since 2010, but it would be higher if you went back to 2000 (Around 9-10% since then which is slightly above average for the US). Still, Tulsa's economy has grown much faster relative to population growth. So we aren't booming in population, but we are booming in income, especially considering our low cost of living.

Excellent GDP performance for Tulsa.  I wonder what the source of that growth was?

Tulsa's slow population growth does not only go back to 2010. Between 2000 and 2010, Tulsa metro grew only 9.1%, in the bottom half of all metros. In that time period, US population grew 9.7%, and total population in metro areas grew 10.8%
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TulsaGoldenHurriCAN
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« Reply #380 on: December 20, 2018, 01:44:53 pm »

Excellent GDP performance for Tulsa.  I wonder what the source of that growth was?

Tulsa's slow population growth does not only go back to 2010. Between 2000 and 2010, Tulsa metro grew only 9.1%, in the bottom half of all metros. In that time period, US population grew 9.7%, and total population in metro areas grew 10.8%

Somewhere on here I posted a link of metro growths from 2000 til most recent and Tulsa's growth is right in line, actually a bit higher than most metros (Average and median aren't the same). While the population average growth for all metros might've been 10.8%, as has been the trend this millennium, a few places had tremendous double-digit growth while most had meager gains. Tulsa's growth was higher than most metros, even if below the total average.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/most-us-21st-century-population-growth-came-in-just-27-metro-areas
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« Reply #381 on: December 20, 2018, 02:35:06 pm »

Somewhere on here I posted a link of metro growths from 2000 til most recent and Tulsa's growth is right in line, actually a bit higher than most metros (Average and median aren't the same). While the population average growth for all metros might've been 10.8%, as has been the trend this millennium, a few places had tremendous double-digit growth while most had meager gains. Tulsa's growth was higher than most metros, even if below the total average.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/most-us-21st-century-population-growth-came-in-just-27-metro-areas

I would love to see that link.  I thought you were saying Tulsa's slow population growth only goes back to 2010. Sorry for the misunderstanding.  Interestingly, it appears that, while Tulsa's metro growth (2010-2017) has slowed a bit compared to 2000-2010, relative to the other metro areas, we are doing better. As I said, I'd love to see the numbers compiled for the full 2000-2017 period.
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« Reply #382 on: February 14, 2019, 12:04:33 pm »

Amazon announced it is pulling the plug on HQ2 in New York City.  It would seem there is more going on behind the scene than is being reported.

https://nypost.com/2019/02/14/amazon-pulls-out-of-3-billion-deal-to-bring-hq2-to-queens/


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« Reply #383 on: February 14, 2019, 12:31:31 pm »

Amazon announced it is pulling the plug on HQ2 in New York City.  It would seem there is more going on behind the scene than is being reported.

https://nypost.com/2019/02/14/amazon-pulls-out-of-3-billion-deal-to-bring-hq2-to-queens/




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« Reply #384 on: February 15, 2019, 09:45:28 am »

Looks like they'll just shift more of the planned workers to the HQ2 outside Washington DC, as well as their other offices.

Quote
Spokesman Adam Sedo confirmed in an email to the Business Journals that the 25,000 jobs planned for New York will be spread among these cities or metropolitan areas: Atlanta, Austin, Boston, California's Bay Area, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Portland, San Diego, Toronto and Vancouver.

https://www.bizjournals.com/austin/news/2019/02/14/amazon-cancels-plans-to-put-part-of-hq2-in-new.html?ana=e_ae_set1&s=article_du&ed=2019-02-14&u=a%2FUXHJBqHDDWLb4YgPCvlA0dac0c51&t=1550180967&j=86683471
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« Reply #385 on: February 15, 2019, 11:30:40 am »

It is probably safe to say it is much worse to have won the Amazon HQ2 bidding war only to lose it, than to have never won at all!
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TulsaGoldenHurriCAN
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« Reply #386 on: February 15, 2019, 02:33:37 pm »

It is probably safe to say it is much worse to have won the Amazon HQ2 bidding war only to lose it, than to have never won at all!


The latest article I had read about it mentioned that Amazon picked the spot in Long Island City because it was in one of the new "Opportunity Zones" where investors can defer taxes to invest capital gains into those areas and eventually pay no tax on the resale of a property. After the outlash, Amazon said it wouldn't take advantage of that but maybe that was part of what made it not worth it to go there.

Just look at the map of the Opportunity zone sliver on the edge between the river and a large "regular" neighborhood. It's no coincidence how all of the HQ2 blocks were going to lie perfectly in that zone:

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-02-08/how-amazon-s-booming-nyc-neighborhood-got-tax-perks-meant-for-the-poor

It is interesting that they plan to just to the Virginia one and not expand beyond that at this point. What a racket!
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« Reply #387 on: February 15, 2019, 06:50:08 pm »


The latest article I had read about it mentioned that Amazon picked the spot in Long Island City because it was in one of the new "Opportunity Zones" where investors can defer taxes to invest capital gains into those areas and eventually pay no tax on the resale of a property. After the outlash, Amazon said it wouldn't take advantage of that but maybe that was part of what made it not worth it to go there.

Just look at the map of the Opportunity zone sliver on the edge between the river and a large "regular" neighborhood. It's no coincidence how all of the HQ2 blocks were going to lie perfectly in that zone:

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-02-08/how-amazon-s-booming-nyc-neighborhood-got-tax-perks-meant-for-the-poor

It is interesting that they plan to just to the Virginia one and not expand beyond that at this point. What a racket!



Not a racket.  It's Capitalism.   Or more accurately, Capitalistic Monopolism.

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TulsaGoldenHurriCAN
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« Reply #388 on: February 19, 2019, 03:54:20 pm »



Not a racket.  It's Capitalism.   Or more accurately, Capitalistic Monopolism.



Giving corporations special handouts is called corporate welfare. That is not capitalism. "Crony-capitalism" maybe. Besides the HQ2 offers, the massive tax breaks and rebates that Amazon gets are corporate welfare and are often so complicated that the average small business doesn't have the time or resources to pursue (or they don't make financial sense for small businesses). The system is set up very well for mega corporations because they're the ones lobbying for those rules and incentives to be put into place. Amazon paid zero income tax last year on ~$11 billion in profit.

The "Opportunity Zones" are a bit of both. While they're technically free to anyone, we all know that the elite and mega corporations are the ones who will take advantage and end up getting the vast majority of the tax breaks.
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« Reply #389 on: February 19, 2019, 05:03:36 pm »

Giving corporations special handouts is called corporate welfare. That is not capitalism. "Crony-capitalism" maybe. Besides the HQ2 offers, the massive tax breaks and rebates that Amazon gets are corporate welfare and are often so complicated that the average small business doesn't have the time or resources to pursue (or they don't make financial sense for small businesses). The system is set up very well for mega corporations because they're the ones lobbying for those rules and incentives to be put into place. Amazon paid zero income tax last year on ~$11 billion in profit.

The "Opportunity Zones" are a bit of both. While they're technically free to anyone, we all know that the elite and mega corporations are the ones who will take advantage and end up getting the vast majority of the tax breaks.


It's what we have today in lieu of capitalism...
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"So he brandished a gun, never shot anyone or anything right?"  --TeeDub, 17 Feb 2018.

I don’t share my thoughts because I think it will change the minds of people who think differently.  I share my thoughts to show the people who already think like me that they are not alone.
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