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feia-final-deer-cree..
FISCAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACT ANALYSIS FOR PROPOSED DEER CREEK VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER IN PETALUMA, CA Prepared for: City of Petaluma Prepared by: Bay Area Economics January, 2009 Table of Contents Executive Summary .............................................................................................. i Background and Study Purpose ........................................................................................ i Key Findings ..................................................................................................................... i Introduction .......................................................................................................... 1 Background and Study Purpose ....................................................................................... 1 Project Description........................................................................................................... 1 Approach .......................................................................................................................... 2 Population and Employment Overview .............................................................. 3 Definition of the Trade Area ............................................................................................ 3 Population Trends ............................................................................................................ 5 Household Trends ............................................................................................................ 6 Employment Trends ......................................................................................................... 7 Summary of Demographic and Economic Overview ...................................................... 7 Retail Sales Analysis ........................................................................................... 9 Overall Retail Sales .......................................................................................................... 9 Per Capita Taxable Retail Sales ..................................................................................... 12 Building Materials Stores............................................................................................... 13 General Merchandise Store Sales .................................................................................. 14 Home Furnishings and Appliances ................................................................................ 15 Restaurant Sales ............................................................................................................. 18 Apparel Stores ................................................................................................................ 18 Food Stores .................................................................................................................... 19 Other Retail Outlets ....................................................................................................... 20 Retail Sales Elsewhere in the Trade Area ...................................................................... 21 Leakage Analysis ........................................................................................................... 23 Major Competing Retail Stores and Nodes in Petaluma ................................................ 26 Summary of Retail Sales Analysis ................................................................................. 31 Retail Impacts Analysis ..................................................................................... 33 Estimated Sales in Proposed Project .............................................................................. 33 Capture of Leakage by Proposed Project ....................................................................... 34 Capture of Sales from Outside the Trade Area .............................................................. 36 Capture of Sales from Other Outlets in the Trade Area ................................................. 36 Impacts of Proposed Project on Petaluma’s Retail Environment .................................. 40 Opportunities for Renewal and Growth ......................................................................... 40 Potential Negative Impacts of the Proposed Project on Existing Retailers.................... 40 Potential Cumulative Impacts ........................................................................................ 44 Summary of Impacts on Existing Retailers .................................................................... 44 Employment Impacts ......................................................................................... 47 Employment ................................................................................................................... 47 Wages and Benefits ........................................................................................................ 50 Summary of Employment Impacts................................................................................. 52 Fiscal Impact Analysis....................................................................................... 53 Overview ........................................................................................................................ 53 Projected General Fund Revenues ................................................................................. 54 Projected General Fund Costs ........................................................................................ 60 Projected Net Fiscal General Fund Balance................................................................... 65 Non-General Fund Revenues and Costs ......................................................... 66 Development Impact Fees .............................................................................................. 66 Other Public Revenue Benefits ...................................................................................... 68 Public Contributions to Proposed Project ...................................................................... 69 Summary of Non-General Fund Revenues and Costs.................................................... 69 Appendices ......................................................................................................... 70 Executive Summary Background and Study Purpose The City of Petaluma has received a proposal for the Deer Creek Village development, an approximately 315,000 square-foot mixed-use center comprising retail, a health club, and office uses on the west side of North McDowell Boulevard to the south of Rainier Avenue. The retail in the project as currently proposed includes a large Lowe’s home improvement center, and other tenants in space ranging up to approximately 50,000 square feet. Concerned about the size and scope of potential large-scale commercial developments in the City, Council passed Resolution No. 2008-189 N.C.S. requesting the preparation of a Fiscal and Economic Impact Analysis (FEIA) for projects such as Deer Creek Village, to address issues of concern to the City and its citizens. These concerns fall into three areas: (1) impacts on the retail market and other retailers in Petaluma; (2) types of employment generated, including likely wages and benefits relative to a living wage; and (3) fiscal impacts, comparing revenues generated with costs of services required by the new development. Key Findings The leakage analysis indicates that Petaluma and the Trade Area are significantly under-retailed in many major retail categories. Deer Creek Village has the potential to capture a sizable portion of these sales, which are resident expenditures currently going elsewhere. While there is the possibility of some disruption for existing retail outlets, growing overall retail demand linked to the area’s gradual population growth should allow for eventual re-tenanting of any short-term vacancies. Deer Creek Village should result in a net gain in retail employment estimated at 361 retail jobs in 2011. Within the project, there are projected to be 510 permanent jobs, with 409 of those in the retail sector. Sales losses at current retailers are estimated to lead to a loss of 48 retail jobs in existing retail outlets in 2011. By 2016, however, overall retail sales at existing outlets as a group would be above 2008 baseline levels, leading to overall retail employment also above baseline levels, although in some retail sectors existing stores would still have lower employment than in 2008. The permanent jobs in the project will be a mix of full and part-time typical of retail employment. The Proposed Project is also estimated to generate 331 temporary construction jobs, Lowe’s reportedly pays competitive wages that are set at or above the market average, and offers a range of benefit packages. Starting wages for some new hires in some components of the project could be below the City’s official Living Wage levels, but Deer Creek Village’s employment structure would not necessarily provide lower wages or benefits than are normally found for retail workers in the area. Average wages in Sonoma County for most of the typical occupations in the project are above Living Wage levels. i Taking into account local tax and fee revenues generated by Deer Creek Village and city costs to provide services, the project will generate an estimated net fiscal surplus of approximately $681,000 annually to the City of Petaluma General Fund, owing largely to the sales taxes generated. This surplus could have a relatively significant positive impact on the City’s overall fiscal position. The City has no plans to make any public contributions to assist in project development, and development impact fees estimated at $9.2 million should cover public costs associated with the project. Because of its location in a redevelopment area, Deer Creek Village will also generate property tax increment revenues estimated at $311,000 annually which the redevelopment agency can use for improvements in the area and to provide affordable housing. In more detail, the findings are as follows: • Based on the location of competitors and the distance from which the anchor tenant Lowe’s can be expected to draw the majority of its customers, the Trade Area is assumed to include the City of Petaluma and surrounding areas in southern Sonoma County extending east and including the City of Sonoma. The store may also draw some customers from northern Marin County, which is lacking in a warehouse-style major chain home improvement outlet. • The Trade Area is characterized by gradual population, employment, and income growth over the long term. While the economy is currently in recession and extremely unsettled, the Bay Area continues to see high housing demand, and Sonoma County has not been as impacted as some other areas of the state by the crisis in the housing market. The moderate population, household, and income growth all indicate that upon recovery, retail sales are likely to grow over the long term, with increases in purchasing power in Petaluma, the Trade Area, and Sonoma County. • Petaluma and the Trade Area are losing retail sales to other communities for the categories of General Merchandise Stores, Food Stores, Home Furnishings and Appliances, Building Materials (the category encompassing the anchor tenant Lowe’s), and Other Retail Outlets. • Overall, “on the ground” retail conditions in Petaluma appear relatively healthy; there are few vacancies, although the recent closures of Mervyns and Shoe Pavilion and the impending closure of Yardbirds Home Depot will cause a rise in vacancy rates. Limited new retail development in Petaluma in recent years has constrained the retail market and kept vacancies low. • At stabilized performance levels, the Proposed Project will achieve estimated total annual retail sales of approximately $82.7 million. Sales at Lowe’s will constitute the largest share, at slightly above 40 percent of this total. ii • Much of the new retail space in Deer Creek Village would be supported by recapturing Trade Area resident sales currently going to other communities, especially in the building materials store category. Some shoppers from outside the Trade Area will also shop at the Proposed Project, for example, Novato residents wishing to frequent a large home improvement center who might otherwise go to the Home Depot in San Rafael. • Deer Creek Village will also capture some sales from existing local retail stores. For all retail sectors, this capture will lead to a net loss of $2.7 million, or less than one percent of the 2008 baseline for overall retail sales at the existing outlets. Over time, these losses will be offset by sales by generated through the overall gradual growth in population in the Trade Area. • Existing apparel stores and home furnishings/appliance stores may continue to have lower than baseline sales, but overall demand increases in the Trade Area indicate the potential for re-tenanting by other retail types of any vacated space. • Yardbirds Home Depot, which was the closest equivalent to Lowe’s in Petaluma, was slated for closure subsequent to BAE’s analysis, as this report was already under review. Orchard Supply Hardware, Tomasini’s Rex Ace Hardware, and M. Masselli & Sons, the remaining major competitive stores do not carry same the broad mix of products as Lowe’s, and they operate in a slightly different niche, especially with respect to conveniences and service. The analysis indicates that the sales losses would not lead to the closure of additional building materials outlets in Petaluma. • Based on their anchor tenants, East Washington Place (the other large project currently under consideration by the City) and Deer Creek Village are targeted toward somewhat different and complementary retail niches, and even slightly different geographic areas. This will lessen any cumulative impacts in Petaluma, as the two projects recapture resident retail expenditures in different market segments. While individual outlets might be impacted, the overall capture of existing market share is limited such that the overall retail market should be able to absorb these projects without the prospect of long-term closures for existing retail outlets. • While some sales may be captured from existing outlets, the project should result in a net increase in the number of stores and in overall retail sales in Petaluma. • Deer Creek Village is estimated to result in a net gain of 361 retail jobs in the Trade Area in 2011. The Proposed Project is estimated to generate 331 temporary construction jobs, and 510 permanent jobs, with 409 of these in the retail sector. The project is expected to capture some sales from existing outlets, and those sales losses could result in reduced employment, estimated at a loss of 48 retail jobs in existing retail outlets in 2011. By 2016, however, overall retail sales in these outlets would be above 2008 baseline levels, leading to overall retail employment also above baseline levels, although some sectors for existing stores would still have lower employment iii than in 2008. Retail employment created by the Proposed Project alone would nearly match the City of Petaluma’s retail job growth for 2010 to 2015 as previously projected by the Association of Bay Area Governments. • Of the permanent jobs, slightly more than two-thirds are projected to be full-time jobs; an estimated 175 of the total permanent jobs are associated with the Lowe’s anchor store. Retail employment in general is typified by a large component of part-time workers; the Proposed Project is not extraordinary in its mix of full and part-time retail jobs. While full-time work is often sought, and some part-time workers would choose full-time work given the option, part-time work is more suitable for certain types of workers such as youths still in school, parents balancing child rearing and careers, and retirees seeking supplemental income. • Lowe’s reportedly pays competitive wages that are set at or above the market average for jobs with similar skills and responsibilities. Employee earnings at Lowe’s and other tenants at Deer Creek Village would likely be comparable to the prevailing market wages in the area for similar types of employment. The average wages for most occupations likely to be found at Deer Creek Village exceed the City’s Living Wage standard for employees without medical benefits. Food preparation and serving-related occupations have average wages below the Living Wage, but food servers often earn tips that supplement their wage income; many workers in the medical offices would be in occupations with relatively high wages. Starting wages for new retail hires could be below the living wage levels, but the Proposed Project’s employment structure would not necessarily provide lower wages than are normally found for retail workers in the area. • Lowe’s provides a range of benefits for employees, with the proportion of coverage provided by Lowe’s varying depending on the plans selected and employee status (full vs. part-time). Benefit packages for other tenants in the Proposed Project would vary by outlet and owner, and could vary from extremely limited or no benefits up to or beyond the level provided by Lowe’s. • Taking into account revenues generated and city costs to provide services, the proposed project will generate an estimated net fiscal surplus of approximately $681,000 annually to the City of Petaluma General Fund, owing largely to the sales taxes generated. This surplus represents 1.8 percent of the City’s current General Fund budget, indicating that the proposed project would have a relatively significant positive impact on the City’s overall fiscal position. • The City’s development impact fees have been recently updated, so estimated fees of approximately $9.2 million should mitigate and cover public costs associated with the Proposed Project. Since the project is in the Petaluma Community Development Area, the Petaluma Community Development Commission should also benefit substantially iv from the estimated $311,000 in annual property tax increment, which can be used for improvements in the area as well as for affordable housing. The City will also benefit from the developer’s land dedication for the eventual completion of a new highway interchange. Currently, the City has no plans to make any public contributions such as land write-downs, tax rebates or refunds, below-market or contingent loans to the project, or to pay for any other costs associated with the development of the project. v Introduction Background and Study Purpose The City of Petaluma has received a proposal for the Deer Creek Village development, an approximately 315,000 square-foot mixed-use center comprising retail, a health club, and office uses on the southwest side of North McDowell Boulevard to the east of Rainier Avenue. Concerned about the size and scope of this project and other potential large-scale commercial developments in the City, Petaluma City Council passed Resolution No. 2008-189 N.C.S. requesting the preparation of a Fiscal and Economic Impact Analysis (FEIA) for projects such as Deer Creek Village, to address issues of concern to the City and its citizens. These concerns fall into three areas: (1) impacts on the retail market and other retailers in Petaluma; (2) types of employment generated, including likely wages and benefits relative to a living wage; and (3) fiscal impacts, comparing revenues generated with costs of services required by the new development. The City of Petaluma has retained Bay Area Economics (BAE) to undertake an FEIA for this project. It should be noted that BAE’s analysis uses the most recently available information at the time of analysis (December 2008). This represents a reasonable effort to establish baseline conditions. BAE recognizes that over the course of the FEIA process, conditions may change rapidly, especially in the current economic environment; BAE attempts to take that into consideration, but future economic conditions may vary from those assumed here. Project Description Deer Creek Village (also referred to in this report as the “Proposed Project”) is a mixed-use center of approximately 315,000 square feet located on the southwest side of North McDowell Boulevard to the east of Rainier Avenue, between North McDowell and Highway 101. The site is currently vacant. The Proposed Project includes a mix of retail in several large spaces, with a major anchor of 122,256 square feet. Other major tenant spaces range from 5,000 to 50,300 square feet; there are also several additional spaces in the project subdividable for smaller shops. In addition, the project contains 11,800 square feet of medical/office space, and a 44,450 square foot health club. At this time, the likely tenants are reported to be Lowe’s as the major anchor tenant, and the relocation of Petaluma’s existing 24-Hour Fitness Club. The project sponsors also report as other potential tenants an apparel/home goods store, an electronics store, a pharmacy, a bank, and a small grocery store; however, specific retailers have not been confirmed. Based on its leakage analysis (see Retail Sales Analysis chapter of this report) and a mix typical of centers of this type, BAE has assumed that the other retail spaces will be occupied by specialty stores in the other retail stores category (as classified by the California State Board of Equalization). It should be noted that the actual tenant mix may vary somewhat from what is assumed here, but this mix provides a reasonable basis to assess the potential impacts of this project for this FEIA. For the purposes of this analysis, the Proposed Project is configured as shown in Table 1. 1 Table 1: Deer Creek Village Proposed Tenant Configuration Type Home Improvement/Lowe's Apparel/Home Goods Electronics Fitness/Health Club Pharmacy Bank Restaurant A Restaurant B Grocery Shops A Shops B Shops C Shops D Shops E Medical/Office 1 Medical/Office 2 Square Feet 122,256 50,300 18,000 44,450 14,820 5,000 6,000 6,000 13,969 4,500 5,000 4,000 4,000 5,000 6,800 5,000 Total 315,095 Note: Site plan and tenant mix still conceptual and may be subject to change as project moves forward and a formal application is submitted. Sources: Merlone Geier Management, December 2008; Bay Area Economics. Approach This analysis assumes that the project will be fully developed and occupied by the beginning of 2011. The analysis also assumes that this will be a fully functioning center, with the project’s outlets achieving a level of revenue reflective of state and national averages or benchmarks for each sector represented in the project. This is considered a reasonable and defensible basis upon which to evaluate the potential economic, employment, and fiscal impacts of the proposed project. 2 Population and Employment Overview This section presents background information on current and projected demographic and economic conditions in Petaluma and the Deer Creek Village Trade Area. Developing an economic and demographic profile of Petaluma and the Trade Area will provide background information that will assist in estimating future retail sales and in assessing the potential impacts of the Proposed Project on other retail outlets and centers, as well as the employment and fiscal impacts of the project. Data sources include the U.S. Census Bureau, the California Employment Development Department (EDD), the California Department of Finance, and the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG). Definition of the Trade Area The Trade Area has been defined based on the area from which the potential Lowe’s anchor store is likely to draw the large majority of its customers. This area has been bounded based in part on the location of other nearby Lowe’s stores and similar competitive outlets, on the assumption that shoppers would tend to go to the large chain home improvement center closest to their residence (see Figure 1), and in part based on a reasonable travel time and distance as an outer boundary limit. The Trade Area consists of Petaluma and surrounding areas, extending east through the City of Sonoma, south to the border with Marin County, and a very limited distance to the north and west due to the location of Lowe’s in Cotati and Home Depot in Rohnert Park and Santa Rosa. While Novato is not included in this Trade Area, there is no such large major chain home improvement center in that city; the closest such store currently is the larger Home Depot in San Rafael. If Lowe’s opens a store in Petaluma, some Novato shoppers will venture to Petaluma; this is taken into account in the analysis. The City of Sonoma does have a relatively large home improvement center in Friedman’s, a small chain with three stores in the North Bay, in Santa Rosa, Sonoma, and Ukiah. While these stores have large yard areas with a greater inventory of building materials than either Lowe’s or Home Depot, they also carry a cross-section of hardware, plumbing and electrical, garden supplies, tools, appliances, and home remodeling items similar to the two national chains. Residents in and near the City of Sonoma also have access to a Home Depot in the City of Napa at a distance similar to Deer Creek Village. The analysis will take into account the ability of the proposed Deer Creek Village Lowe’s to capture Trade Area sales in estimating an appropriate capture from leakage and/or existing stores in the Trade Area. This Trade Area is used for all the retail uses in the center; because of nearby retail nodes in surrounding cities, this is the area that would be served by most region-serving retailers based in Petaluma in a center of this type. Some of the tenants, e.g., the drug store, may be more local serving; leakage capture rate estimates take this into account. The Trade Area is defined using Census Tracts, and a listing of the Tracts can be found in Appendix A. This represents the level of geography providing the “best fit” within the constraints of available demographic data. 3 *************s 4 Population Trends Short-Term Trends. The Trade Area is undergoing gradual population growth, as shown in Table 2. Based on estimates from the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), the Trade Area gained 5,865 persons from 2000 to 2008, with additional growth of 2,605 persons expected by 2011 (the assumed first full year of project operation), and growth of an additional 2,428 persons five years after the first year of project operation (2016). Slightly over half of the Trade Area population lives within the City of Petaluma. Table 2: Population Trends, 2000-2016 2000 2008 (b) Average Annual Change 2000-2008 2011 (b) 2016 (b) Average Annual Change 2008-16 Petaluma 54,548 58,925 1.0% 61,034 63,136 0.9% Trade Area (a) 94,835 100,700 0.8% 103,305 105,733 0.9% 458,614 496,756 1.0% 511,713 524,855 1.0% 33,871,648 38,049,462 1.5% 39,609,709 42,079,010 1.3% Sonoma County (b) California (c) (a) Trade Area is 17 Census Tracts as shown in Figure 1 and Appendix A. (b) Data point for this year is interpolated from ABAG data for 5-year intervals assuming a constant annual compound growth rate, with the exception of California, where data points are directly from DOF, Report E-5 for current year, and Race/Ethnic Population with Age and Sex Detail, 2000–2050, July 2007 for future years. 2000 data from U.S. Census. Sources: 2000 U.S. Census; Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) Projections 2007 ; California State Department of Finance (DOF), 2007 & 2008; BAE, 2008. Long-Term Trends. ABAG projections estimate that Petaluma and the Trade Area will continue to show gradual population growth, as will Sonoma County (see Table 3). Nearby Novato in Marin County is projected to show the same pattern. Petaluma’s population is projected to reach 67,500 in 2030 and the Trade Area’s population is projected to reach 111,279 that same year. Table 3: Long-Term Population Projections 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2030 Annual % Change 2010-2030 Petaluma 54,548 56,500 60,600 62,800 64,500 67,500 0.9% Novato 47,630 50,700 52,500 54,300 55,800 58,000 0.7% Trade Area (a) 94,835 97,607 102,816 105,286 107,538 111,279 0.7% 458,614 478,800 509,100 522,300 535,200 558,900 0.8% Sonoma County (a) Trade Area is 17 Census Tracts as shown in Figure 1 and Appendix A. Source: Association of Bay Area Governments Projections 2007 . 5 Household Trends Household Growth. As shown in Table 4, the rates of household growth in Petaluma and the Trade Area mirror the respective population growth rates. The Trade Area contains an estimated 38,925 households as of 2008, with an increase to 40,041 households projected by 2011 and 41,461 households by 2016. Table 4: Household Trends, 1990-2010 2000 Average Annual Change 2008 (b) 2000-08 2011 (b) Average Annual Change 2008-11 2016 (b) Average Annual Change 2011-16 Petaluma 19,932 21,739 1.1% 22,582 1.3% 23,665 0.9% Trade Area (a) 36,232 38,925 0.9% 40,041 0.9% 41,461 0.7% 172,403 188,240 1.1% 194,054 1.0% 201,132 0.7% Sonoma County (a) Target Trade Area is 17 Census Tracts as shown in Figure 1 and Appendix A. (b) Data point for this year is interpolated from ABAG data for 5-year intervals assuming a constant annual compound growth rate. 2000 data from U.S. Census. Sources: 2000 U.S. Census; Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) Projections 2007 ; BAE, 2008. Household Income. Household incomes and resulting consumer buying power are key factors in assessing the potential for additional retail development. The Trade Area shows slightly lower 1 income levels than the Bay Area, with a mean household income of $93,366 in 2008, in comparison to $100,193 for the nine-county ABAG region (see Table 5). Petaluma’s mean household income is only slightly lower than the Trade Area’s while Sonoma County as a whole has a 2008 mean household income of $85,036. ABAG projects very gradual increases in household income over the next several years. Table 5: Mean Household Income Households 2000 2008 2011 Petaluma (a) $90,700 $95,844 $98,126 $102,462 2016 Trade Area (b) $89,644 $93,366 $95,257 $99,140 Sonoma County $82,800 $85,036 $87,639 $92,479 ABAG Region (c) $104,000 $100,193 $103,177 $108,755 In constant 2005 dollars (a) Sphere of influence, which is a slightly larger area than the incorporated City. (b) Trade Area is 17 Census Tracts as shown in Figure 1 and Appendix A. (c) Nine-county ABAG region includes Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano, and Sonoma Counties. Sources: Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) Projections 2007; BAE, 2008. 1 All income estimates in constant 2005 dollars. Estimates for 2008, 20011, and 2016 based on interpolation of ABAG five-year interval data. 6 Employment Trends Employed Residents and Unemployment. Employment can be an indicator of regional buying power; employed workers and their households will have higher incomes and expenditures than unemployed workers and their households. Growth in the employed labor force of an area can indicate increased buying power. As shown in Figure 2 and Appendix B, long-term trends show an increase in the number of employed residents in Sonoma County, with the number of employed residents ranging from 244,600 in 2000, declining to 240,900 in 2003, and then increasing to 250,500 in 2007. Unemployment was at only 3.4 percent in 2000, and then peaked at 5.5 percent in 2003, with a subsequent decline to 4.4 percent for 2007. Petaluma has tracked at slightly lower unemployment percentages, with between 29,800 and 31,000 employed persons in the years from 2000 through 2007. The most recent data from 2007 and the most recent month, November 2008, reflect the economic downturn, with an increase in unemployment as the economy tightens, although the estimated size of the employed labor force continues to grow. Unemployment in November 2008 was measured at 5.9 percent in Petaluma and 6.5 percent in Sonoma County, and recent trends indicate that the number of unemployed in Sonoma County is likely to continue increasing in the near term. Over the long term, the trend has been toward an increased number of residents in the labor force and employed, with unemployment trending along with national cycles of the economy. Employment by Sector. Most of Deer Creek Village will consist of retail outlets. Retail employment in Sonoma County, at 24,100 jobs, makes up 12.3 percent of the County’s overall employment (see Appendix F for details). This is a slightly higher proportion than statewide, where 10.9 percent of workers are in the retail sector. The Proposed Project will also have workers in the leisure and hospitality sector (restaurant workers), as well as employment in professional, medical, and business services or other office-related sectors. Summary of Demographic and Economic Overview The Trade Area, which includes the cities of Petaluma and Sonoma and surrounding unincorporated areas, is undergoing gradual population and household growth. It is estimated the Trade Area will have 103,305 persons and 40,041 households by 2011. Long term growth is expected to slow, with the Trade Area projected to have a population of 111,279 in 2030. The Trade Area exhibits a 2008 estimated mean household income of $93,366 (incomes in constant 2005 dollars), with modest growth to $95,257 by 2011. Sonoma County over the long term has shown an increase in the number of employed residents, with declines and increases following national and regional economic trends. The most recent data from November 2008 reflect the increasing unemployment as the economy stalls, with unemployment at 5.9 percent, although the estimated size of the employed labor force continues to grow. While currently the economy is in recession and extremely unsettled, the Bay Area continues to see high housing demand, and Sonoma County has not been as impacted as some other areas of 7 the state by the crisis in the housing market. The gradual population, household, and income growth all indicate that upon recovery, retail sales are likely to grow over the long term, with increases in purchasing power in Petaluma, the Trade Area, and Sonoma County. Figure 2: Employed Residents and Unemployment Rate 35,000 7.0% 30,000 6.0% 25,000 5.0% 20,000 4.0% 15,000 3.0% 10,000 2.0% 5,000 1.0% - 0.0% Employment Resident Unemployment Rate Employed Residents City of Petaluma Unemployment Rate 350,000 7.0% 300,000 6.0% 250,000 5.0% 200,000 4.0% 150,000 3.0% 100,000 2.0% 50,000 1.0% - 0.0% Employment Resident Unemployment Rate Employed Residents Sonoma County Unemployment Rate Data presented are for residents of the area by place of residence, not workers by place of work. Annual data are annual averages. For detailed data, see Appendix B. Sources: California Employment Development Department; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 8 Retail Sales Analysis This section examines retail trends in Petaluma, the Trade Area, and Sonoma County. For comparative purposes, data from other nearby cities and the State of California are also presented. The analysis covers the major tenant types considered for the Proposed Project, as well as generally considering other categories of likely tenants. Overall retail sales trends in Petaluma, the Trade Area, and Sonoma County are examined, as are trends for general merchandise stores and other major store categories assumed as potential tenants for the Proposed Project. Comparative data for Novato, Rohnert Park, and California are also presented. Summing up the overall retail analysis is a leakage calculation for the Trade Area, focusing on the store categories assumed as potential tenants in the Proposed Project. Finally, this section concludes with an inventory of key competitive existing retail outlets in Petaluma and the Trade Area, by store type and center location. Overall Retail Sales 2 As shown in Figure 3 and Table 6, over the last decade, Petaluma’s taxable retail sales have grown at a faster rate than population. Taxable retail sales in 1997 were approximately $505 million (all sales here presented in constant 2007 dollars unless otherwise noted), and grew to Building Materials Stores The major anchor tenant and largest store in the Proposed Project is likely to be a Lowe’s home improvement center, which is in the building materials store category. Petaluma and Novato both lag well behind Rohnert Park in this category. In Petaluma and Novato, 2007 sales were $46.2 million and $25.4 million, respectively, compared to $76.2 million in Rohnert Park. Petaluma and Novato saw a gradual upward trend through 2004-2005; Novato’s sales have been declining gradually since then, while Petaluma’s sales have fluctuated, reaching their highest level of the 3 decade in 2007. Rohnert Park, though, has seen a sharp decline since 2004, when building materials store sales peaked at nearly $123 million. This dropoff is almost certainly related to the opening of the Lowe’s in Cotati in the same period, as well as the closure of the Yardbirds store in Rohnert Park. Taxable Building Materials Store Sales Figure 5: Taxable Sales Trends for Building Materials Stores in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Petaluma Novato Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales are presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. On a per capita basis, Petaluma and Novato have sales below Sonoma County, while Rohnert Park is well above the countywide figure. Petaluma’s 2007 annual per capita sales in this category were $815, compared to $1,275 for all of Sonoma County. Novato had even lower per 3 The slight decline during 2006 might be related to the closure of Yardbirds in June of that year, with the store reopening as a Yardbirds Home Depot in April 2007. The Ace Hardware in downtown Petaluma also closed due to fire in June 2006, reopening in early 2008. Table 7: Detail for Selected Other Retail Store Categories Period Covered is 4th Quarter 06 through 3rd Quarter 07 Total Taxable Sales in 2007 $000 Household and Home Furnishings Household Appliance Dealers Total from Home Furnishings/Appliances Group Gifts, Art, Novelties Sporting Goods Florists Stationery and Books Jewelry Office Supplies, Computer Stores Packaged Liquor Stores Second Hand Merchandise Total from Selected Other Retail Per Capita Taxable Sales in 2007 $ Household and Home Furnishings Household Appliance Dealers Total from Home Furnishings/Appliances Group Gifts, Art, Novelties Sporting Goods Florists Stationery and Books Jewelry Office Supplies, Computer Stores Packaged Liquor Stores Second Hand Merchandise Total from Selected Other Retail Population Petaluma $11,464 $2,460 $13,924 Sonoma County $177,176 $55,872 $233,048 $3,522 $7,990 $4,585 $7,184 $1,293 $10,857 $1,745 $1,924 $39,100 $25,554 $78,320 $16,792 $52,295 $23,543 $173,497 $56,789 $14,113 $440,903 Petaluma $202 $43 $245 Sonoma County $369 $116 $486 $62 $141 $81 $127 $23 $191 $31 $34 $689 $53 $163 $35 $109 $49 $362 $118 $29 $919 56,743 479,668 Includes store subcategories for Other Retail where detail is available for Petaluma. Store categories not listed are unavailable due to disclosure issues. Sources: State Board of Equalization; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Additional detail for electronics and appliance stores only is also available from the 2002 Economic Census, and is shown in Appendix D. This confirms that Rohnert Park is outperforming Petaluma and Novato and Sonoma County overall for the home furnishing and appliances category. For appliance and electronics stores, this pattern also holds, with Rohnert Park annual per capita sales at $527, compared with $306 in Petaluma, only $148 in Novato, and $450 for Sonoma County. Thus, for this subcategory Petaluma likely is losing sales to other nearby communities, particularly Rohnert Park, and also to the destination retail concentrations in Santa Rosa and San Rafael. The lack of a major store in this category in Novato indicates that this is one store type where shoppers from that city might be attracted to such an outlet in Petaluma. 17 Restaurant Sales Deer Creek Village as proposed includes 12,000 square feet of restaurant space. The current development plan for the center makes it likely that these would be sit-down restaurants rather than fast food outlets. As shown in Figure 8 and Table 6, Petaluma has shown slightly higher sales than Novato and Rohnert Park in this category. In 2007, Petaluma had inflation-adjusted taxable sales in the eating and drinking places category of $85 million, compared to $70 million in Novato and $75 million in Rohnert Park. On a per capita basis, Petaluma is performing above the level of Sonoma County; Petaluma’s 2007 taxable restaurant sales are $1,492 per capita, compared with $1,236 countywide. Rohnert Park shows sales above Petaluma, while Novato lags. Figure 8: Taxable Sales Trends for Eating & Drinking Places in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato $90,000 Taxable Restaurant Sales $80,000 $70,000 $60,000 $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 2000 Petaluma 2001 2002 Novato 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Apparel Stores The Proposed Project is assumed to have a mid-size apparel/home goods store; as with eating and drinking places, Petaluma has outperformed Novato and Rohnert Park in this retail category, as shown in Figure 9. Petaluma has 2007 per capita apparel store taxable sales of $1,148, compared with only $540 for Sonoma County overall. The gap between Petaluma and Novato has widened 6 in recent years due to the opening of Kohl’s, which caused a considerable jump in apparel store sales in Petaluma. However, per capita apparel store sales in Petaluma were higher than the other 6 Apparel store sales are no longer reported separately for Rohnert Park due to BOE disclosure rules, but it is unlikely they have increased substantially since the Other Retail category (with which apparel sales have been combined) has not shown a significant increase in sales since 2003. 18 Building Materials Stores The major anchor tenant and largest store in the Proposed Project is likely to be a Lowe’s home improvement center, which is in the building materials store category. Petaluma and Novato both lag well behind Rohnert Park in this category. In Petaluma and Novato, 2007 sales were $46.2 million and $25.4 million, respectively, compared to $76.2 million in Rohnert Park. Petaluma and Novato saw a gradual upward trend through 2004-2005; Novato’s sales have been declining gradually since then, while Petaluma’s sales have fluctuated, reaching their highest level of the 3 decade in 2007. Rohnert Park, though, has seen a sharp decline since 2004, when building materials store sales peaked at nearly $123 million. This dropoff is almost certainly related to the opening of the Lowe’s in Cotati in the same period, as well as the closure of the Yardbirds store in Rohnert Park. Taxable Building Materials Store Sales Figure 5: Taxable Sales Trends for Building Materials Stores in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Petaluma Novato Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales are presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. On a per capita basis, Petaluma and Novato have sales below Sonoma County, while Rohnert Park is well above the countywide figure. Petaluma’s 2007 annual per capita sales in this category were $815, compared to $1,275 for all of Sonoma County. Novato had even lower per 3 The slight decline during 2006 might be related to the closure of Yardbirds in June of that year, with the store reopening as a Yardbirds Home Depot in April 2007. The Ace Hardware in downtown Petaluma also closed due to fire in June 2006, reopening in early 2008. Figure 10: Taxable Sales Trends for Food Stores in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato $70,000 Taxable Food Store Sales $60,000 $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 Petaluma 2000 2001 Novato 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Other Retail Outlets The Proposed Project includes 22,500 square feet of shop space without specified types of tenants; much of this space is likely to be occupied by specialty retail stores falling in the state’s 7 Other Retail outlets category. Figure 11 shows trends in sales for this category in Petaluma, 8 Rohnert Park, and Novato. In 1997, Petaluma and Rohnert Park lagged Novato in this catch-all category; by 2002, Petaluma led in this category, only to fall slightly behind Novato again in 2007. Since this category is so broad, and includes outlets not suitable for Deer Creek Village (e.g., fuel and ice dealers), further analysis was completed on the subcategories for Other Retail, as shown 9 above in Table 7. Overall, Petaluma’s per capita taxable sales for the selected subcategories in 7 This total includes stores in a variety of subcategories, as follows: historically this has included Gifts, Art, Novelties; Sporting Goods; Florists; Photo Equipment; Musical Equipment; Stationery and Books; Jewelry; Office, Store, and School Supplies; Other Specialties; Packaged Liquor Stores; Second Hand Merchandise; Farm & Garden; Fuel & Ice; Mobile Home, Campers, and Trailers; Boat, Motorcycle and Plane; and All Other Stores. Some additional small categories (e.g., farm implements) were added at the beginning of 2007, and the categories related to vehicles were removed. 8 Because of the combination of apparel with other retail beginning in 2004, sales for this category for Rohnert Park are no longer comparable and are not presented here. 9 Because of disclosure rules and changes in the classification scheme beginning in 2007, detail was only available for the subcategories shown in the table. Data for this table from 4th Quarter 2006 through 3rd Quarter 2007 rather than calendar year 2007. 20 Other Retail lag the County considerably, at $689 as compared with $919 countywide. This varies widely by category, however. For instance, in the category of stationery and books Petaluma actually shows stronger sales than the County ($127 vs. $109). Sporting Goods shows levels only slightly below the county, at $141 vs. $163. For Office Supplies and Computer Stores, however, Petaluma trails far behind the County ($191 vs. $362). Figure 11: Taxable Sales Trends for Other Retail Stores in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato Taxable Other Retail Sores Sales $120,000 $100,000 $80,000 $60,000 $40,000 $20,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 Petaluma 2000 2001 Novato 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Data for Rohnert Park from 2004-2007 not included because apparel sales have been combined with Other Retail group. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Retail Sales Elsewhere in the Trade Area The Trade Area includes retail outlets that are located outside Petaluma, and these outlets need to be considered in evaluating overall retail sales and demand. The only other incorporated place in the Trade Area is the City of Sonoma, and the taxable sales data from the City of Sonoma have been added to Petaluma’s to get taxable retail sales for the incorporated portions of the Trade Area, as shown in Table 8. Unfortunately, the published taxable sales and Economic Census data do not separate out unincorporated subareas of a County. To estimate these sales, BAE has relied on a number of sources, using county data as a baseline for sales per employee by store type, retail employment data available for the unincorporated Trade Area, and estimating sales by major store category. This analysis can be found in Appendix E. The results of this analysis, including total estimated taxable sales by category for the Trade Area, are shown in Table 8. While the per capita analysis comparing Petaluma to the County and other nearby cities is instructive, the numbers shown here, when compared to Sonoma County overall 21 and the state, give a better sense of retail sales in the Trade area vis-à-vis Sonoma County. The per capita sales comparison with the County here provides the starting point for the leakage analysis which assesses the retail potential for Deer Creek Village and its Trade Area. Table 8: Trade Area Taxable Sales Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) (c) (d) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials (e) Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores Petaluma $65,163 $51,054 $58,100 $84,687 $13,324 $46,226 $268,358 $87,978 $83,053 Sonoma City $8,612 $18,049 $29,835 $41,311 $6,174 $17,875 $22,954 $20,844 $21,417 Trade Area Incorporated $73,775 $69,103 $87,935 $125,998 $19,498 $64,101 $291,312 $108,822 $104,470 Retail Stores Total $757,943 $187,071 Deer Creek Retail Types Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (c) (f) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials (e) Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total (b) Deer Creek Retail Types Population Sonoma County $258,991 $845,947 $398,084 $592,801 $222,132 $611,581 $1,033,898 $582,426 $858,737 California $20,855,890 $59,897,350 $22,461,059 $51,658,575 $16,720,852 $32,656,324 $70,779,978 $47,084,940 $64,910,134 $945,014 $91,989 $1,037,003 $5,404,597 $387,025,102 $401,607 $143,273 $544,880 $73,529 $618,409 $3,788,273 $269,160,184 Petaluma $1,148 $900 $1,024 $1,492 $235 $815 $4,729 $1,550 $1,464 Sonoma City $870 $1,823 $3,014 $4,174 $624 $1,806 $2,319 $2,106 $2,164 Trade Area Incorporated $1,107 $1,037 $1,320 $1,891 $293 $962 $4,371 $1,633 $1,568 Trade Area Remainder $145 $8 $336 $552 $78 $665 $365 $194 $443 Trade Area $788 $696 $994 $1,447 $221 $864 $3,044 $1,156 $1,195 Sonoma County $540 $1,764 $830 $1,236 $463 $1,275 $2,155 $1,214 $1,790 California $555 $1,595 $598 $1,375 $445 $869 $1,884 $1,254 $1,728 $13,357 $18,900 $14,181 $2,786 $10,406 $11,267 $10,304 $7,078 $14,475 $8,176 $2,227 $6,205 $7,898 $7,166 56,743 9,898 66,641 Trade Area Remainder $4,791 $251 $11,079 $18,233 $2,569 $21,963 $12,058 $6,402 $14,643 33,017 Trade Area $78,566 $69,354 $99,014 $144,231 $22,067 $86,064 $303,370 $115,224 $119,113 99,658 479,668 37,559,440 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) A "#" sign indicates data supressed to preserve confidentiality due to four or fewer outlets or sales of more than 80% of the category in one store. Suppressed sales have been combined with Other Retail Stores, so evaluation of changes in the Other Retail category should take this into consideration. (d) Incorporated Trade Area consists of Petaluma and Sonoma cities. Unincorporated area sales are estimated as shown in Appendix E. (e) For City of Sonoma, building materials group sales have been estimated based on last year of available data (2002). Examination of the shift to "other retail," historic trends, and employment estimates for the sector from the Economic Census indicate that the sales levels have likely remained relatively constant. This estimate has then been subtracted from the estimate for other retail sales for the City of Sonoma. Beginning in 2007, farm implements are no longer included in this category, but instead have been moved to other retail. Other changes in some smaller categories have also been made. None of these changes should materially affect the analysis. (f) With the exception of the Trade Area, per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Trade Area population in 2007 has been estimated using the ABAG Census Tract Projections, assuming a constant annual growth rate from 2005-2010. The populations of Petaluma and Sonoma (city) have been subtracted out to obtain a population estimate for the unincorporated portion of the Trade Area. The ABAG estimates for Petaluma and Sonoma are not significantly different from those from DOF. Sources: State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; ABAG Projections 2007 ; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 22 Table 7: Detail for Selected Other Retail Store Categories Period Covered is 4th Quarter 06 through 3rd Quarter 07 Total Taxable Sales in 2007 $000 Household and Home Furnishings Household Appliance Dealers Total from Home Furnishings/Appliances Group Gifts, Art, Novelties Sporting Goods Florists Stationery and Books Jewelry Office Supplies, Computer Stores Packaged Liquor Stores Second Hand Merchandise Total from Selected Other Retail Per Capita Taxable Sales in 2007 $ Household and Home Furnishings Household Appliance Dealers Total from Home Furnishings/Appliances Group Gifts, Art, Novelties Sporting Goods Florists Stationery and Books Jewelry Office Supplies, Computer Stores Packaged Liquor Stores Second Hand Merchandise Total from Selected Other Retail Population Petaluma $11,464 $2,460 $13,924 Sonoma County $177,176 $55,872 $233,048 $3,522 $7,990 $4,585 $7,184 $1,293 $10,857 $1,745 $1,924 $39,100 $25,554 $78,320 $16,792 $52,295 $23,543 $173,497 $56,789 $14,113 $440,903 Petaluma $202 $43 $245 Sonoma County $369 $116 $486 $62 $141 $81 $127 $23 $191 $31 $34 $689 $53 $163 $35 $109 $49 $362 $118 $29 $919 56,743 479,668 Includes store subcategories for Other Retail where detail is available for Petaluma. Store categories not listed are unavailable due to disclosure issues. Sources: State Board of Equalization; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Additional detail for electronics and appliance stores only is also available from the 2002 Economic Census, and is shown in Appendix D. This confirms that Rohnert Park is outperforming Petaluma and Novato and Sonoma County overall for the home furnishing and appliances category. For appliance and electronics stores, this pattern also holds, with Rohnert Park annual per capita sales at $527, compared with $306 in Petaluma, only $148 in Novato, and $450 for Sonoma County. Thus, for this subcategory Petaluma likely is losing sales to other nearby communities, particularly Rohnert Park, and also to the destination retail concentrations in Santa Rosa and San Rafael. The lack of a major store in this category in Novato indicates that this is one store type where shoppers from that city might be attracted to such an outlet in Petaluma. 17 Restaurant Sales Deer Creek Village as proposed includes 12,000 square feet of restaurant space. The current development plan for the center makes it likely that these would be sit-down restaurants rather than fast food outlets. As shown in Figure 8 and Table 6, Petaluma has shown slightly higher sales than Novato and Rohnert Park in this category. In 2007, Petaluma had inflation-adjusted taxable sales in the eating and drinking places category of $85 million, compared to $70 million in Novato and $75 million in Rohnert Park. On a per capita basis, Petaluma is performing above the level of Sonoma County; Petaluma’s 2007 taxable restaurant sales are $1,492 per capita, compared with $1,236 countywide. Rohnert Park shows sales above Petaluma, while Novato lags. Figure 8: Taxable Sales Trends for Eating & Drinking Places in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato $90,000 Taxable Restaurant Sales $80,000 $70,000 $60,000 $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 2000 Petaluma 2001 2002 Novato 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Apparel Stores The Proposed Project is assumed to have a mid-size apparel/home goods store; as with eating and drinking places, Petaluma has outperformed Novato and Rohnert Park in this retail category, as shown in Figure 9. Petaluma has 2007 per capita apparel store taxable sales of $1,148, compared with only $540 for Sonoma County overall. The gap between Petaluma and Novato has widened 6 in recent years due to the opening of Kohl’s, which caused a considerable jump in apparel store sales in Petaluma. However, per capita apparel store sales in Petaluma were higher than the other 6 Apparel store sales are no longer reported separately for Rohnert Park due to BOE disclosure rules, but it is unlikely they have increased substantially since the Other Retail category (with which apparel sales have been combined) has not shown a significant increase in sales since 2003. 18 two cities even before Kohl’s opened, probably due to the presence of the outlet mall in Petaluma, which occupies a specialized retail niche and serves a larger area than just the City of Petaluma or the assumed Deer Creek Village Trade Area. Figure 9: Taxable Sales Trends for Apparel Stores in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato $70,000 Taxable Apparel Store Sales $60,000 $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 Petaluma 2000 2001 Novato 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Data for Rohnert Park not available for 2004-2007 due to disclosure rules. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Food Stores Current plans call for a small-format grocery store in the Proposed Project; this is a newer format being rolled out in California and other states based on carrying a more limited selection than full-size supermarkets, with an emphasis on convenience items (e.g., more prepared foods). In California, the Fresh & Easy stores being rolled out by Tesco represent this format; elsewhere, Wal-Mart and Safeway are testing similar concepts. Petaluma’s taxable food store sales are well above those in Novato and Rohnert Park, as shown in Figure 10, with 2007 sales of $58.1 million, in contrast to only $33.4 million in Novato and $37.2 million in Rohnert Park. These figures, however, include only taxable items, while the majority of sales in these stores are non-taxable items. Data from the Economic Census used in the leakage analysis indicates that Petaluma food stores have a high proportion of non-taxable sales. This may be related to the lack of general merchandise outlets in the City; shoppers are buying more everyday housewares (e.g., paper products, small housewares) in supermarkets. 19 Figure 10: Taxable Sales Trends for Food Stores in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato $70,000 Taxable Food Store Sales $60,000 $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 Petaluma 2000 2001 Novato 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Other Retail Outlets The Proposed Project includes 22,500 square feet of shop space without specified types of tenants; much of this space is likely to be occupied by specialty retail stores falling in the state’s 7 Other Retail outlets category. Figure 11 shows trends in sales for this category in Petaluma, 8 Rohnert Park, and Novato. In 1997, Petaluma and Rohnert Park lagged Novato in this catch-all category; by 2002, Petaluma led in this category, only to fall slightly behind Novato again in 2007. Since this category is so broad, and includes outlets not suitable for Deer Creek Village (e.g., fuel and ice dealers), further analysis was completed on the subcategories for Other Retail, as shown 9 above in Table 7. Overall, Petaluma’s per capita taxable sales for the selected subcategories in 7 This total includes stores in a variety of subcategories, as follows: historically this has included Gifts, Art, Novelties; Sporting Goods; Florists; Photo Equipment; Musical Equipment; Stationery and Books; Jewelry; Office, Store, and School Supplies; Other Specialties; Packaged Liquor Stores; Second Hand Merchandise; Farm & Garden; Fuel & Ice; Mobile Home, Campers, and Trailers; Boat, Motorcycle and Plane; and All Other Stores. Some additional small categories (e.g., farm implements) were added at the beginning of 2007, and the categories related to vehicles were removed. 8 Because of the combination of apparel with other retail beginning in 2004, sales for this category for Rohnert Park are no longer comparable and are not presented here. 9 Because of disclosure rules and changes in the classification scheme beginning in 2007, detail was only available for the subcategories shown in the table. Data for this table from 4th Quarter 2006 through 3rd Quarter 2007 rather than calendar year 2007. 20 Other Retail lag the County considerably, at $689 as compared with $919 countywide. This varies widely by category, however. For instance, in the category of stationery and books Petaluma actually shows stronger sales than the County ($127 vs. $109). Sporting Goods shows levels only slightly below the county, at $141 vs. $163. For Office Supplies and Computer Stores, however, Petaluma trails far behind the County ($191 vs. $362). Figure 11: Taxable Sales Trends for Other Retail Stores in Petaluma, Rohnert Park, and Novato Taxable Other Retail Sores Sales $120,000 $100,000 $80,000 $60,000 $40,000 $20,000 $0 1997 1998 1999 Petaluma 2000 2001 Novato 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Rohnert Park Notes: Sales here are taxable sales only, and exclude most grocery sales as well as prescription drugs and certain other items. Sales presented in 2007 dollars. For details, see Appendix C. Data for Rohnert Park from 2004-2007 not included because apparel sales have been combined with Other Retail group. Sources: State Board of Equalization; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. Retail Sales Elsewhere in the Trade Area The Trade Area includes retail outlets that are located outside Petaluma, and these outlets need to be considered in evaluating overall retail sales and demand. The only other incorporated place in the Trade Area is the City of Sonoma, and the taxable sales data from the City of Sonoma have been added to Petaluma’s to get taxable retail sales for the incorporated portions of the Trade Area, as shown in Table 8. Unfortunately, the published taxable sales and Economic Census data do not separate out unincorporated subareas of a County. To estimate these sales, BAE has relied on a number of sources, using county data as a baseline for sales per employee by store type, retail employment data available for the unincorporated Trade Area, and estimating sales by major store category. This analysis can be found in Appendix E. The results of this analysis, including total estimated taxable sales by category for the Trade Area, are shown in Table 8. While the per capita analysis comparing Petaluma to the County and other nearby cities is instructive, the numbers shown here, when compared to Sonoma County overall 21 and the state, give a better sense of retail sales in the Trade area vis-à-vis Sonoma County. The per capita sales comparison with the County here provides the starting point for the leakage analysis which assesses the retail potential for Deer Creek Village and its Trade Area. Table 8: Trade Area Taxable Sales Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) (c) (d) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials (e) Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores Petaluma $65,163 $51,054 $58,100 $84,687 $13,324 $46,226 $268,358 $87,978 $83,053 Sonoma City $8,612 $18,049 $29,835 $41,311 $6,174 $17,875 $22,954 $20,844 $21,417 Trade Area Incorporated $73,775 $69,103 $87,935 $125,998 $19,498 $64,101 $291,312 $108,822 $104,470 Retail Stores Total $757,943 $187,071 Deer Creek Retail Types Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (c) (f) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials (e) Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total (b) Deer Creek Retail Types Population Sonoma County $258,991 $845,947 $398,084 $592,801 $222,132 $611,581 $1,033,898 $582,426 $858,737 California $20,855,890 $59,897,350 $22,461,059 $51,658,575 $16,720,852 $32,656,324 $70,779,978 $47,084,940 $64,910,134 $945,014 $91,989 $1,037,003 $5,404,597 $387,025,102 $401,607 $143,273 $544,880 $73,529 $618,409 $3,788,273 $269,160,184 Petaluma $1,148 $900 $1,024 $1,492 $235 $815 $4,729 $1,550 $1,464 Sonoma City $870 $1,823 $3,014 $4,174 $624 $1,806 $2,319 $2,106 $2,164 Trade Area Incorporated $1,107 $1,037 $1,320 $1,891 $293 $962 $4,371 $1,633 $1,568 Trade Area Remainder $145 $8 $336 $552 $78 $665 $365 $194 $443 Trade Area $788 $696 $994 $1,447 $221 $864 $3,044 $1,156 $1,195 Sonoma County $540 $1,764 $830 $1,236 $463 $1,275 $2,155 $1,214 $1,790 California $555 $1,595 $598 $1,375 $445 $869 $1,884 $1,254 $1,728 $13,357 $18,900 $14,181 $2,786 $10,406 $11,267 $10,304 $7,078 $14,475 $8,176 $2,227 $6,205 $7,898 $7,166 56,743 9,898 66,641 Trade Area Remainder $4,791 $251 $11,079 $18,233 $2,569 $21,963 $12,058 $6,402 $14,643 33,017 Trade Area $78,566 $69,354 $99,014 $144,231 $22,067 $86,064 $303,370 $115,224 $119,113 99,658 479,668 37,559,440 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) A "#" sign indicates data supressed to preserve confidentiality due to four or fewer outlets or sales of more than 80% of the category in one store. Suppressed sales have been combined with Other Retail Stores, so evaluation of changes in the Other Retail category should take this into consideration. (d) Incorporated Trade Area consists of Petaluma and Sonoma cities. Unincorporated area sales are estimated as shown in Appendix E. (e) For City of Sonoma, building materials group sales have been estimated based on last year of available data (2002). Examination of the shift to "other retail," historic trends, and employment estimates for the sector from the Economic Census indicate that the sales levels have likely remained relatively constant. This estimate has then been subtracted from the estimate for other retail sales for the City of Sonoma. Beginning in 2007, farm implements are no longer included in this category, but instead have been moved to other retail. Other changes in some smaller categories have also been made. None of these changes should materially affect the analysis. (f) With the exception of the Trade Area, per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Trade Area population in 2007 has been estimated using the ABAG Census Tract Projections, assuming a constant annual growth rate from 2005-2010. The populations of Petaluma and Sonoma (city) have been subtracted out to obtain a population estimate for the unincorporated portion of the Trade Area. The ABAG estimates for Petaluma and Sonoma are not significantly different from those from DOF. Sources: State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; ABAG Projections 2007 ; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 22 Leakage Analysis Retail leakage analysis compares actual retail sales in an area with some benchmark that provides a measure of the potential sales generated by that area's residents. If sales levels are below the predicted level, the area may be able to support increased sales. This increase in sales could take the form of increased sales in existing outlets or in new outlets. A lower-than-predicted sales volume implies that consumers are traveling outside the area to shop; thus, sales would be “leaking” out of the study area. Conversely, if the area shows more sales than would be expected from the area's characteristics, there would be sales “injections” into the study area. Often, an injection of sales indicates that the study area is serving as the regional shopping destination for a broader area. On the other hand, if an area shows substantial leakage, it may be due to the presence of a region-serving retail node outside the study area capturing those “leaked” sales. In such a case, the study area itself may not have sufficient population to support region-serving retail, so those sales cannot expect to be captured within the study area. There are a number of factors that can be used to predict sales levels, with the two most important factors being the number of persons in the area and the disposable income available to that population. Additional factors influencing retail spending in an area include household type, age of population, number of workers in the area (i.e., daytime population), tourism expenditures, tenure patterns (owner vs. renter), and cultural factors. To develop a benchmark for Petaluma, BAE has assumed that Sonoma County as a whole represents an appropriate conservative benchmark for sales potential for the Trade Area. Income levels are similar (albeit slightly higher in the Trade Area), and Sonoma County has a broad range of retail for its residents such that overall leakage from the county should be minimal. In fact, the stores in Marin County may attract some shoppers, particularly from the Trade Area at the south end of Sonoma County, but Sonoma County also acts as a shopping destination for the more rural counties to the north. Because county income levels are slightly below the Trade Area, this analysis is inherently conservative. Also making the analysis conservative is that no adjustment has been made for projected increases in household income leading to future additional retail expenditures. 10 Using 2007 taxable sales data as a baseline, BAE has estimated the additional amount of leakage of retail sales from the Trade Area in 2008. The results of this analysis are shown in Table 9. The Trade Area shows significant leakage for General Merchandise Stores, Food Stores, Home Furnishings and Appliances, Building Materials, and Other Retail Stores. In the key category of building materials stores, where Lowe’s could capture a significant share of the leakage, there is an estimated 2008 leakage of $41.4 million; this leakage is very large relative to the estimated 11 sales of $87.0 million in estimated 2008 sales in this category in the Trade Area. For general 10 From the State Board of Equalization. Data have been adjusted to take into account non-taxable sales, and adjusted to 2008 levels assuming constant sales per capita. 11 It should be noted that this calculation is based on data prior to the closure of the Yardbirds Home Depot store. That closure may increase the leakage of sales in this category. 23 merchandise stores, there is an estimated 2008 leakage of $88.8 million, which is also large relative to the estimated Trade Area sales of $115.8 million. A home electronics store is assumed for one of the spaces at Deer Creek Village; leakage in the home furnishings/appliance store category that includes these stores is also substantial, at $24.3 million annually. Food store leakages are estimated at $56.2 million, suggesting that even subsequent to the completion of the new Raley’s store (see discussion below), there might be additional sales to be captured by the Proposed Project. In the last category suitable for the Proposed Project which shows leakages, other retail stores show leakages of $59.9 million annually. Apparel stores and eating and drinking places, also part of the tenant mix proposed for Deer Creek Village, show attractions of sales from outside the Trade Area. The leakages indicate that Petaluma and the Trade Area are significantly under-retailed in many major retail categories; Deer Creek Village has the potential to capture a sizable portion of these sales. 24 Table 9: Leakage Analysis 2007 Per Capita Taxable Retail Sales 2007 $ (a) Store Category Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores Trade Area $788 $696 $994 $1,447 $221 $864 $3,044 $1,156 $1,195 Sonoma County $540 $1,764 $830 $1,236 $463 $1,275 $2,155 $1,214 $1,790 Store Category Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores 2008 Per Capita Retail Sales 2007 $ Trade Sonoma Area County $788 $540 $1,150 $2,031 $2,208 $2,766 $1,447 $1,236 $221 $463 $864 $1,275 $3,044 $2,155 $1,156 $1,214 $1,195 $1,790 Estimated 2008 Taxable Retail Sales 2007 $000 (b) Trade Area $79,387 $70,079 $100,049 $145,739 $22,298 $86,964 $306,542 $116,429 $120,358 Sonoma County $268,217 $876,084 $412,266 $613,919 $230,045 $633,368 $1,070,730 $603,175 $889,329 Per Capita Injection/ (Leakage) 2007 $ $248 ($882) ($559) $211 ($242) ($411) $889 ($58) ($595) Total 2008 Injection/ (Leakage) 2007 $ 000 $25,000 ($88,800) ($56,200) $21,300 ($24,300) ($41,400) $89,500 ($5,800) ($59,900) Total Adjusted Retail Sales 2008 $000 (c) Trade Area $79,387 $115,774 $222,332 $145,739 $22,298 $86,964 $306,542 $116,429 $120,358 SC County $268,217 $1,009,123 $1,374,219 $613,919 $230,045 $633,368 $1,070,730 $603,175 $889,329 Notes: The Trade Area includes the Cities of Petaluma and Sonoma as well as surrounding unincorporated areas, as descibed in Figure 1 and Appendix A. (a) From Table 8. (b) 2007 per capita taxable sales times 2008 population. 2008 population from Table 2, and shown below. Numbers are generally consistent with DOF estimates used elsewhere. (c) Sales have been adjusted to take into account non-taxable items for food and drug stores. Adjustments have been made as follows: Trade Sonoma Percent of Total Sales that are Taxable Area County Drug Stores 30% 38% Food Stores 45% 30% Taxable Sales in 2007 $000 General Merchandise Taxable Total Incl Drug Drug Store Baseline Taxable $000 Baseline Population Durg Store Baseline Per Capita Taxable Sales Adjusted to 2007 $ Drug Store Est 2008 Taxable $000 $70,079 $17,500 (2002) 95,934 (2002) $182 $194 $19,583 $876,084 $80,546 (2007) 490,697 (2007) $164 $164 $81,541 Adjustment for Non-Taxable Drug Store $45,695 $133,040 $115,774 $222,332 $1,009,123 $1,374,219 100,700 496,756 Total Adjusted General Merchandise Total Adjusted Food 2008 Population County per capita sales have been assumed as baseline against which to compare the Trade Area. Sales assumed to be "leaking" from the Trade Area if that area has per capita sales below county benchmark. Sales injections and capture amounts rounded to nearest hundred thousand dollars. Sources: Bay Area Economics 2008, based on information from the CA State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census, 2002 Census of Retail Trade, and Association of Bay Area Governments. 25 Major Competing Retail Stores and Nodes in Petaluma The largest likely tenant in the Proposed Project is the Lowe’s home improvement warehouse. Other assumed retail tenants include an apparel store, a consumer electronics store, a food store, a pharmacy, and other retail outlets in some smaller spaces. BAE has identified and inventoried major Trade Area competitors for the Proposed Project in the building materials store category which includes Lowe’s, and located other key retail nodes in Petaluma that might include stores competitive with the Proposed Project’s retail mix. Figure 12 shows the competing retail nodes and major building materials outlets in the Trade Area. Because of the City of Sonoma’s small population base and more isolated location, most of the retail there is either local-serving or tourism oriented, but the City of Sonoma is home to the largest building materials outlet in the Trade Area, a Friedman’s home improvement center. Competitive Building Materials Outlets. Petaluma and the Trade Area have various outlets that may compete with the Lowe’s. Following is a discussion of the most directly competitive outlets. Orchard Supply Hardware. This 41,000 square-foot outlet is located at the north end of Petaluma at 1390 North McDowell Boulevard. Orchard Supply is a San Jose-headquartered hardware chain of 86 outlets, all in California. The chain is owned by the Sears Holding Company, which also owns Sears and Kmart. This store opened in 1994, and provides a broad range of items typical of hardware stores, including tools, small home appliances, a garden department, home repair and maintenance items, and a limited selection of lumber. This store is the anchor space in its shopping center, which includes a number of other small businesses, most of them independent outlets, as well as fast-food outlets (e.g., Burger King). Tomasini’s Rex Ace Hardware & Country Store. This store is located in downtown Petaluma at 313 B Street. This small (7,000 square foot) store is best described as a convenience-oriented hardware store focused on service, with tools, small home appliances, and home maintenance and repair items. This store, which opened originally in 1907, closed in June 2006 following a major fire, but rebuilt at the same site and reopened in early 2008. M. Masselli & Sons. Opened in 1960, this store at 519 Lakeville Street carries a mix of hardware, tools, and new and used building supplies and materials in a 15,000 square-foot store and fiveacre yard. The store is largely oriented toward contractors and does not carry lumber. Friedman’s Home Improvement. This store is located in the City of Sonoma, at 1360 Broadway. Friedman’s is a three-store home improvement chain with stores in Santa Rosa, Ukiah, and the City of Sonoma. The product mix is very similar to a Lowe’s or Home Depot, but Friedman’s outlets also have large outdoor lumber and building materials yards unlike either of the national chains. This location, previously under different ownership, was acquired by Friedman’s in the 1990s and an indoor area expansion from 35,000 to 45,000 square feet was completed in June 2008. 26 Parsons Lumber and Hardware. Located to the north of the City of Sonoma at 17800 Sonoma Highway in Boyes Hot Springs, Parsons is a small hardware store and lumber yard. The indoor store portion of the business is estimated at approximately 4,500 square feet. Yardbirds Home Depot. At the time of BAE’s analysis, Home Depot was still operating this small-format home improvement center in Petaluma. On January 26, 2009, as BAE’s analysis was under initial review, Home Depot announced the impending closure of all five Yardbirds Home Depot locations as part of a larger restructuring that includes closure of their Expo Design Centers, thus refocusing on their core business of large-format home improvement warehouse stores. The Petaluma store, located at 2000 Lakeville Highway at the south end of Petaluma, is a 38,000 square-foot outlet. Yardbirds was a regional chain of home improvement stores focused in the North Bay (and headquartered in Petaluma) that was purchased by Home Depot in late 2005. Most of the outlets, such as this one, were well below the size of a regular Home Depot, but following a period of closure and remodeling, several stores (including this one, which opened in April 2007, and a store in San Rafael) were reopened as a smaller “infill retail format” focused more specifically on local needs than the standard larger Home Depot stores, and with a more limited selection of merchandise. Most notably lacking from this store is the indoor lumber yard found in full-size Home Depots and in Lowe’s. Evidently, Home Depot has determined that this store concept does not fit with their future plans. This store is in a very small center and occupies most of the space in the center. This is a stand-alone center with little additional retail nearby. Major Retail Nodes in Petaluma. Overall, retail conditions in Petaluma appear relatively healthy; there are few vacancies, with the largest being the recently closed Mervyns, and while in some cases the key retail nodes are somewhat dated in appearance and function, none currently exhibit signs of urban decay or physical deterioration. Brokers interviewed indicated that the lack of new retail development in Petaluma has constrained the retail market and kept vacancies low. Keegan & Coppin, a real estate brokerage firm with a strong presence in Sonoma County, reports a third quarter 2008 vacancy rate in Petaluma of 3.8 percent, up from 3.2 percent the previous 12 quarter and 3.3 percent in third quarter 2007. By comparison, the rate reported for Sonoma County overall for third quarter 2008 was 4.7 percent, up from 3.6 percent a year earlier. Rohnert Park has a particularly high vacancy rate, reported at 9.3 percent in third quarter 2008. It should be noted that the additional vacancy of Mervyns, as well as Shoe Pavilion, will add substantially to the 93,121 square feet Keegan & Coppin lists as vacant, raising rates above five percent. Petaluma Plaza. Petaluma Plaza is to the south of the Proposed Project, at the northwest corner of McDowell Boulevard and East Washington Street. This center includes Petco, Ross, Trader Joe's, Big 5 Sporting Goods and a number and variety of smaller stores. This center is undergoing a major upgrade, with a former JC Penney being replaced by a Raley’s supermarket, 12 Discussion based on various reports available at http://www.keegancoppin.com. Other brokers directly interviewed reported higher rates, but did not provide the same level of quantitative support. BAE’s field survey indicated very limited retail vacancies in Petaluma, with the exception of the Theater Square project, where initial absorption is underway at a somewhat slow rate. 27 which is currently under construction. The imminent opening of this additional supermarket will absorb much of the leakage for food store sales in the Trade Area, and both the Raley’s and the Trader Joe’s will compete with a small grocery store in Deer Creek Village. Petaluma Plaza North. This center is directly to the north of Petaluma Plaza on McDowell and 13 includes a Kmart, Longs Drugs, and a mix of other smaller retailers. While Petaluma Plaza next door has undergone a major facelift, this center’s appearance is somewhat dated, but the center appears to be well-maintained. The Longs in this center would be directly competitive with a new pharmacy in the Proposed Project. Washington Square. This 219,000 square-foot center is located diagonally across from Petaluma Plaza, on the southeast corner of McDowell and East Washington. The major anchor retailers were Mervyns and Safeway, but in October 2008, the Mervyns chain, already in bankruptcy, announced that they would be closing all their remaining outlets by the end of 2008, including their 66,916 square-foot space in this center. This is now the largest vacant retail space in the Trade Area. The Safeway in this center would compete with the food store at Deer Creek Village. Redwood Gateway Center. This center is located on the southwest corner of North McDowell Boulevard and Old Redwood Highway, at the north end of Petaluma. At buildout, the center will have a total of 166,713 square feet of space. Major tenants in this center include Kohl’s, Michaels Arts and Crafts, and Pier 1. This 95,900 square-foot Kohl’s is classified as an apparel store by the State Board of Equalization, but also carries housewares and other household items, in a product mix very similar to Mervyns, and would compete with an apparel/home goods outlet in the Proposed Project. One large space in this center currently vacant was occupied by Shoe Pavilion, which recently closed all of its outlets. This Kohl’s accounts for a substantial portion of apparel store sales in the City, and is the largest apparel outlet in Petaluma. An examination of historic trends (as shown in Appendix C) shows that prior to Kohl’s opening, apparel stores sales peaked at approximately $30 million in 2000; subsequent to the opening of Kohl’s, sales climbed to $65 million in 2007. Some of this has been at the expense of general merchandise stores, where annual sales have declined by $16.5 million since 2001. JC Penney also closed their Petaluma store in this same time frame. Assuming that the increase is largely due to Kohl’s, sales performance in that store is in the range of $300 per 14 gross square foot, well above the Kohl’s national average. Downtown Petaluma. Downtown Petaluma has the small Ace Hardware as discussed above. In addition, the fitness club assumed for Deer Creek Village will be relocating from Downtown, leaving their current space vacant. Other smaller specialty stores may also be affected by the Proposed Project. As of 2004, Downtown and surrounding areas had an estimated 362,000 13 The Longs Drugs company recently announced its acquisition by CVS, a major national pharmacy chain. Based on Kohl’s Fact Book for Quarter Ended November 1, 2008, sales and store size data from FY 2007. Kohl’s national average is $249 per selling square foot, and $212 per gross square foot. 14 28 15 square feet of retail space, largely configured as small storefronts on Petaluma Boulevard and nearby streets. Recently, the Theatre District Project has added approximately 86,000 square feet of additional retail space to the Downtown area. Also, the largest single-user space Downtown, the 18,000 square-foot former Carrithers department store, which had been occupied by a furniture store for several years, is currently vacant. The broker representing this space reports that it is available both for lease and for sale. Petaluma Village Premium Outlets. This factory outlet center consists of specialized off-price outlets that operate in a specialized niche not directly competitive with the Proposed Project. This center may account in part for the high apparel sales in Petaluma, attracting visitors from beyond the Deer Creek Village Trade Area with stores such as the Saks Fifth Avenue Outlet. At the time of BAE’s most recent visit, the Food Court was closed and undergoing remodeling. Other Retail Nodes. Other retail centers of note in Petaluma include the Orchard Supply Hardware center on North McDowell near the new Redwood Gateway Center and discussed above: Petaluma Gateway, anchored by a Lucky Supermarket; the Golden Eagle Center on the edge of Downtown, anchored by Grocery Outlet; the Town and Country center on Petaluma Boulevard North, anchored by another Lucky; the center anchored by the G&G Market supermarket on Sonoma Mountain Parkway; and the center on East Washington Street anchored by another Longs Drugs. In the City of Sonoma, there are additional centers, but these are either local-serving, with stores such as Safeway, Rite-Aid, and Longs, or tourism-oriented. While the Trade Area for Deer Creek Village encompasses this area, this is primarily with respect to the anchor store, not the more local-serving pharmacy and food store assumed as tenants, which will largely compete with outlets in Petaluma itself. 15 Petaluma Leakage & Sustainable Retail Strategy Study, June 2004, Thomas Consultants, Inc. 29 30 Summary of Retail Sales Analysis Over the last decade, Petaluma’s taxable retail sales have grown at a higher rate than population. On an inflation-adjusted basis, sales peaked at $794 million in 2005, and as of 2007 had declined to $758 million. However, while overall Petaluma is showing long-term increases in retail sales, nearly half of its growth has been in the motor vehicle sector, where Petaluma shows proportionally strong sales, even as sales in this sector have declined since 2005. Limiting the analysis to the major categories assumed for tenancy at Deer Creek Village by excluding the motor vehicle-related sectors presents a different comparative picture. For the suitable sectors, Petaluma shows 2007 sales of only $402 million, compared to $430 million in Novato and $507 million in Rohnert Park. Per capita retail sales are an indicator of the relative strength of a city as a retail destination; other factors being equal, higher per capita sales relative to the region and other cities point toward attraction of shoppers from outside the city. Petaluma’s per capita sales in the key retail categories likely to be tenants in Deer Creek Village are another indicator of the city’s weakness as a retail destination, with key category per capita sales in recent years at or below Countywide levels, while surrounding cities outperform the County and Petaluma. This is especially the case for Rohnert Park, which saw a sharp increase in per capita sales in the earlier part of this decade that indicated increasing capture from outside the city, enlarging its share of regional sales. Petaluma has relatively low sales in the building materials store category in comparison to 16 Rohnert Park, but sales are still above Novato’s. On a per capita basis, Petaluma lags behind the County in this category. Petaluma lags behind Rohnert Park, Novato, and Sonoma County in general merchandise sales. Both Petaluma and Novato have lower sales than Rohnert Park in the home furnishings and appliances store category. For apparel stores, food stores, and other retail outlets Petaluma actually has stronger per capita taxable sales than either Rohnert Park or Novato. Apparel store sales are enhanced by the outlet mall and Kohl’s. Key components of the demand for new retail space in the Trade Area are capture of sales to Trade Area residents that are currently occurring elsewhere (leakage), and population and income growth. BAE has conservatively assumed no increase in sales from income growth, so the estimates here for retail sales potential will be based on leakage and population growth only. Using 2007 taxable sales data as a baseline and adjusting for nontaxable items, the Trade Area shows significant leakage for General Merchandise Stores, Food Stores, Home Furnishings and Appliances, Building Materials, and Other Retail. There are three major building materials store competitors to Lowe’s in Petaluma, and two elsewhere in the Trade Area: Orchard Supply Hardware, Tomasini’s Rex Ace Hardware & Country Store, and M. Masselli & Sons in Petaluma in Petaluma, and Friedman’s Home Improvement in the City of Sonoma and Parsons Lumber and Hardware in Boyes Hot Springs. 16 Once again, it should be noted that analysis uses sales data predating the announced closure of Yardbirds Home Depot. 31 Major retail nodes in Petaluma include Petaluma Plaza, Petaluma Plaza North, Washington Square, Redwood Gateway Center, Downtown Petaluma, and Petaluma Village Premium Outlets. Other retail centers of note in Petaluma include the Orchard Supply Hardware center, Petaluma Gateway, the Golden Eagle Center, the Town and Country center, the center anchored by the G&G, and the center on East Washington Street anchored by another Longs Drugs. Overall, “on the ground” retail conditions in Petaluma appear relatively healthy; there are few vacancies, with the largest being the recently vacated Mervyns, and although in some cases the key retail nodes are somewhat dated in appearance and function, none currently exhibit substantial signs of urban decay and physical deterioration. The limited new retail development in Petaluma in recent years has constrained the retail market and kept vacancies low. 32 Retail Impacts Analysis This chapter provides estimates of the impacts on sales at existing retail outlets with the Proposed Project in place. This section begins by estimating sales in Deer Creek Village, and then makes assumptions regarding the capture from leakage, capture from residents living outside the Trade Area, and capture from existing retailers in the Trade Area. The inventory of competing retail nodes is discussed and the impacts are then analyzed. Estimated Sales in Proposed Project BAE has estimated baseline retail sales levels of Deer Creek Village upon completion in 2011, assuming stabilized performance and a full year of operations. As shown in Table 10, the Proposed Project is projected to achieve total annual sales of approximately $82.7 million. Sales in the building materials anchor store of the project constitute the largest share, and are estimated at $35.5 million, followed by the apparel store at $12.1 million. The pharmacy (general merchandise store), the food store, the restaurants, and the other retail store segments each are estimated to generate sales in the range between $5 million and $7.5 million. Table 10: Estimated Annual Sales in Project Store Component Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Non Retail Total Square Feet (a) 50,300 14,820 13,969 12,000 18,000 122,256 22,500 61,250 315,095 $280 $0 Estimated Sales in Proposed Project $12,072,000 $7,410,000 $6,426,000 $5,280,000 $9,774,000 $35,454,000 $0 $0 $6,300,000 $0 $263 $82,716,000 Potential Sales per SF (b) $240 $500 $460 $440 $543 $290 All sales estimates in 2007 dollars. Estimated sales rounded to nearest thousand. (a) Derived from Table 1 per latest site plan available. (b) Sales per square foot in relevant categories has been derived as follows. Apparel Stores Apparel sales per square foot based on averaging the estimated sales per square foot for TJX Corp (TJ Maxx, Marshall's) and Ross Stores. General Merchandise Stores Average of averages of sales per square foot for Walgreens, CVS, Longs, and Rite Aid from most recent Annual Reports and 10-Ks. Food Stores Based on reported Fresh & Easy sales per square foot, adjusted for total vs. sales square footage. While tenant is unconfirmed, this would be a likely type of tenant for this space. Eating and Drinking Places Restaurant sales per square foot based on averaging the lowest and highest estimates from HdL for each subcategory. Home Furnishings and Appliances Average sales per square foot for Circuit City Superstores, from most recent Circuit City Annual Report. Building Materials Building Materials sales per square foot based on average of most recent Lowe's and Home Depot Annual Reports, adjusted for selling vs. total square footage. While Lowe's has sales per square foot below Home Depot on average, this location will not be competing with a large warehouse-style Home Depot in Petaluma. Other Retail Stores Other Retail sales per square foot based on averaging the lowest and highest estimates from HdL for each subcategory. Sources: Bay Area Economics 2008, based on information from the CA State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census, 2002 Census of Retail Trade, Association of Bay Area Governments, Urban Land Institute/ICSC, Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Longs, Lowe's, Home Depot, Ross Stores, TJX Companies, and Circuit City Annual Reports, Tesco, Merlone Geier, and Hinderliter de Lamas 2007 (HdL). 33 Capture of Leakage by Proposed Project In Table 11, BAE estimates the Proposed Project’s potential capture of leakage by major store category for the assumed first full year of project operation, 2011, and for five years later, in 2016. The analysis indicates substantial leakage of Trade Area resident retail expenditures in several major store categories, including general merchandise, food, home furnishings/appliances, building materials, and other retail. However, it would be speculative to conclude that any given project could capture all of the leakage in any particular major store category, since that project would not cover all the specific store types within each major category, and even for a particular market niche, some shoppers would have preferences for certain stores or items not available in the project. Because of Lowe’s, Deer Creek Village should capture a significant percentage of the leakage occurring in the building materials store category. The analysis here assumes a two-thirds capture of the estimated $42.5 million annual sales leakage in 2011. Because some local residents will still prefer to shop at other stores not found in the Trade Area (e.g., shoppers who prefer Home Depot over Lowe’s), some leakage will still not be captured by Lowe’s even with its broad range of merchandise. Capture of leakage in the general merchandise store and food store categories is assumed to be minimal, since the store types proposed (pharmacy and small grocery store) are smaller convenience-oriented stores similar to existing outlets and more likely to cannibalize sales from those outlets. Because of the lack of a similar outlet in Petaluma, the assumed home electronics store is assumed to capture 25 percent of leakage; this is limited in large part by the size of the store and thus its ability to compete with larger outlets in San Rafael, Santa Rosa, and beyond. In the Other Retail stores category, because of the limited size of the store space available, potential capture has been estimated at 7.5 percent of leakage. It should be noted that the actual capture of leakage in this category will depend in large part on the specific store types that locate in the project. By 2016, an increasing dollar amount of leakage would occur with if the project were not built and one assumes the same retail mix as in baseline 2008 conditions, and the dollar amount of sales capture would increase also. 34 Table 11: Capture of Leakage in Deer Creek Village 2011 Trade Area Leakage Analysis Store Category Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores 2016 Trade Area Leakage Analysis Store Category Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Stores Per Capita Injection/ (Leakage) 2007 $ $248 ($882) ($559) $211 ($242) ($411) $889 ($58) ($595) Total Capture, Injection/ Proposed (Leakage) Project 2007 $ 000 $25,700 0% 2.5% ($91,100) 2.5% ($57,700) $21,800 0% 25% ($25,000) 67% ($42,500) $91,800 ($6,000) 7.5% ($61,500) Per Capita Injection/ (Leakage) 2007 $ $248 ($882) ($559) $211 ($242) ($411) $889 ($58) ($595) Total Capture, Injection/ Proposed (Leakage) Project 2007 $ 000 $26,300 0% ($93,200) 2.5% ($59,100) 2.5% $22,400 0% ($25,600) 25% ($43,500) 67% $94,000 ($6,100) ($62,900) 7.5% Additional Sales 2007 $ 000 $0 $2,278 $1,443 $0 $6,250 $28,333 $4,613 Additional Sales 2007 $ 000 $0 $2,330 $1,478 $0 $6,400 $29,000 $4,718 Notes: Per capita leakage/injection from Table 9. See Table 9 for details on methodology. Sales leakages and injections rounded to nearest hundred thousand dollars. Population from Table 2 2011: 2016: 103,305 105,733 Assumptions have been made regarding possible capture by the proposed project of leakage in each category; for instance, the Trade Area is unlikely to achieve 100 percent capture of general merchandise sales, because some general merchandise shopping is mall-based, and and shoppers seeking mall stores are likely to go to Santa Rosa or elsewhere. The project is assumed not to capture any sales in categories such as service stations and automotive retail. Sources: Bay Area Economics 2008, based on information from the CA State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census, 2002 Census of Retail Trade, Association of Bay Area Governments, Urban Land Institute/ICSC, Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Longs, Lowe's, Home Depot, Ross Stores, TJX Companies, and Circuit City Annual Reports, Tesco, and Hinderliter de Lamas 2007 (HdL). 35 Capture of Sales from Outside the Trade Area Although the majority of shoppers for Deer Creek Village should reside in the Trade Area, market area boundaries are not absolute, and some shoppers from outside the Trade Area will shop at the Proposed Project. For example, the lack of a large home improvement center in Novato might lead to the attraction of shoppers from northern Marin County to a Lowe’s in Petaluma. Commuters and others passing through on Highway 101 might also stop at the center. However, the presence of similar region-serving retail nodes in surrounding or nearby cities including Rohnert Park, Santa Rosa, San Rafael, and Napa should limit this attraction for most store types. Out of a total of $87.2 million in sales in the Proposed Project, $5.6 million is assumed to be captured from outside the Trade Area (see Table 12). Capture is assumed at 10 percent for Lowe’s (or $3.5 million), because the lack of a comparable store in Novato should lead to the attraction of customers from that city and elsewhere in northern Marin County. For the apparel, home furnishing/appliances, and other retail category, the assumed capture rate is lower at five percent; the apparel capture is limited by the presence of many outlets in nearby cities, and the capture for the other categories is limited in part due to the smaller footprint of the stores and the corresponding limits on the ability to carry a broad range of items likely to attract from a greater region. For the food store and pharmacy, captured is estimated at only three percent, since these stores will be convenience-oriented toward local shoppers; however, the presence of a strong regional draw such as Lowe’s may serve to attract some non-residents of the Trade Area who are already at the center to do some convenience shopping in the Proposed Project. Capture of Sales from Other Outlets in the Trade Area While a new retail center may capture sales leakages and bring in shoppers from outside the Trade Area, it will also capture some proportion of its sales from existing outlets in the Trade Area. Table 12 also shows estimates of the level of capture by major store category necessary to achieve benchmark levels of sales performance at the Proposed Project. The total capture from sales that would otherwise go to existing outlets in 2011 is estimated at $34.2 million, declining to $33.2 million in 2016 as modest population growth creates additional retail demand. 36 Table 12: Capture from Leakage, Outside Trade Area, and Existing Outlets 2011 Estimated Sales in Proposed Project (a) $12,072,000 $7,410,000 $6,426,000 $5,280,000 $9,774,000 $35,454,000 $0 $0 $6,300,000 $ Capture from Leakage (b) $0 $2,278,000 $1,443,000 $0 $6,250,000 $28,333,000 $0 $0 $4,613,000 Total $82,716,000 $42,917,000 2016 Estimated Sales in Proposed Project (a) $12,072,000 $7,410,000 $6,426,000 $5,280,000 $9,774,000 $35,454,000 $0 $0 $6,300,000 $ Capture from Leakage (b) $0 $2,330,000 $1,478,000 $0 $6,400,000 $29,000,000 $0 $0 $4,718,000 $82,716,000 $43,926,000 Type of Store Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Type of Store Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Total % Capture from Outside Area 5% 3% 3% 5% 5% 10% 0% 0% 5% $ Capture from Outside Trade Area (c) $603,600 $222,300 $192,780 $264,000 $488,700 $3,545,400 $0 $0 $315,000 $5,631,780 % Capture from Outside Area 5% 3% 3% 5% 5% 10% 0% 0% 5% $ Capture from Outside Trade Area (c) $603,600 $222,300 $192,780 $264,000 $488,700 $3,545,400 $0 $0 $315,000 $5,631,780 $ Capture from 2011 Existing Outlets (d) $11,468,400 $4,909,700 $4,790,220 $5,016,000 $3,035,300 $3,575,600 $0 $0 $1,372,000 $34,167,220 $ Capture from 2011 Existing Outlets (d) $11,468,400 $4,857,700 $4,755,220 $5,016,000 $2,885,300 $2,908,600 $0 $0 $1,267,000 $33,158,220 (a) From Table 10. (b) From Table 11. (c) Percent capture from outside area times estimated sales in Proposed Project. (d) Estimated capture from existing outlets in Trade Area equals estimated sales in project less sales captured from leakage and sales captured from outside the Trade Area. Sources: Bay Area Economics 2008, based on information from the CA State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census, 2002 Census of Retail Trade, Association of Bay Area Governments, Urban Land Institute/ICSC, W algreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Longs, Lowe's, Home Depot, Ross Stores, TJX Companies, and Circuit City Annual Reports, Tesco, and Hinderliter de Lamas 2007 (HdL). 37 However, these represent sales that would be captured in each category that year, but sales at existing outlets (in the absence of the Proposed Project) would have grown from current baseline levels due to population growth; changes from baseline sales, representing impacts on current conditions, are shown below in Table 13. Overall, in 2011 there would be a net decline for all retail sectors of only $2.7 million, or less than one percent of the baseline 2008 total for overall retail sales. This includes categories not in the project which gain sales that offset losses in some of the sectors represented in Deer Creek Village, and in two categories, food stores and other retail stores, the losses due to capture from existing outlets are estimated to be offset by gains due to Trade Area population growth. In 2007 dollars, the declines in 2011 by major store category range from $1.3 million in building materials stores to $9.4 million in apparel stores. As a percentage of total sales by category, losses range from only one percent or two percent for general merchandise stores, eating and drinking places, and building materials stores to 11 percent for home furnishings/appliances 17 stores and 12 percent for apparel stores. By 2016, increases in overall retail demand due to population growth are projected to decrease the capture from existing outlets. Including all retail categories including those not assumed to be represented in Deer Creek Village, total retail sales in existing outlets are projected to increase two percent from current estimated levels. By 2016, the only two store categories where existing outlets are estimated to still be showing losses from 2008 levels are home furnishings/appliances stores with a loss of $1.8 million or eight percent of baseline sales and apparel stores with a loss of $7.5 million or nine percent of baseline sales. 17 This analysis was completed based on data not reflecting the closure of Yardbirds Home Depot. Thus it may overstate the impacts on retailers in Petaluma, since it is possible that some of the sales at that store will not be captured in the Trade Area, but instead will “leak” to other communities. 38 Table 13: Net Change in Sales at Existing Outlets in Trade Area from Baseline 2008 2011 Sales in Existing Outlets, 2011 (a) w/o Project $81,441,000 $118,769,000 $228,083,000 $149,509,000 $22,875,000 $89,214,000 $314,472,000 $119,441,000 $123,472,000 $ Capture from 2011 Existing Outlets (b) $11,468,000 $4,910,000 $4,790,000 $5,016,000 $3,035,000 $3,576,000 $0 $0 $1,372,000 Total $1,247,276,000 $34,167,000 2016 Sales in Existing Outlets, 2016 (a) w/o Project $83,355,000 $121,560,000 $233,444,000 $153,023,000 $23,412,000 $91,310,000 $321,863,000 $122,248,000 $126,374,000 $ Capture from 2016 Existing Outlets (b) $11,468,400 $4,857,700 $4,755,220 $5,016,000 $2,885,300 $2,908,600 $0 $0 $1,267,000 $1,276,589,000 $33,158,220 Type of Store Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Type of Store Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Total % Capture from Existing, 2011 (c) 14% 4% 2% 3% 13% 4% 0% 0% 1% 3% % Capture from Existing, 2016 (c) 14% 4% 2% 3% 12% 3% 0% 0% 1% 3% Sales in Existing Outlets, 2011 (d) w Project $69,973,000 $113,859,000 $223,293,000 $144,493,000 $19,840,000 $85,638,000 $314,472,000 $119,441,000 $122,100,000 Baseline Sales in Existing Outlets, 2008 (e) $79,387,000 $115,774,000 $222,332,000 $145,739,000 $22,298,000 $86,964,000 $306,542,000 $116,429,000 $120,358,000 Change in Sales, 20082011 (f) w Project ($9,414,000) ($1,915,000) $961,000 ($1,246,000) ($2,458,000) ($1,326,000) $7,930,000 $3,012,000 $1,742,000 $1,213,109,000 $1,215,823,000 ($2,714,000) Sales in Existing Outlets, 2016 (d) w Project $71,886,600 $116,702,300 $228,688,780 $148,007,000 $20,526,700 $88,401,400 $321,863,000 $122,248,000 $125,107,000 Baseline Sales in Existing Outlets, 2008 (e) $79,387,000 $115,774,000 $222,332,000 $145,739,000 $22,298,000 $86,964,000 $306,542,000 $116,429,000 $120,358,000 Change in Sales, 20082016 (f) w Project ($7,500,400) $928,300 $6,356,780 $2,268,000 ($1,771,300) $1,437,400 $15,321,000 $5,819,000 $4,749,000 $1,243,430,780 $1,215,823,000 % Change in Sales, 20082011 -12% -2% 0% -1% -11% -2% 3% 3% 1% -0.2% % Change in Sales, 20082016 -9% 1% 3% 2% -8% 2% 5% 5% 4% $27,607,780 2% (a) From Table 9. Represents sales without Proposed Project in place, based on current per capita spending levels. (b) From Table 12. (c) Capture in 2009 divided by sales in 2009 (sales as assumed without Proposed Project). (d) Represents estimated sales in existing outlets in Trade Areas with Proposed Project open and operating at stabilized levels. (e) Estimated sales in existing outlets in given year with project in place. From Table 9, derived from most recent taxable sales data with adjustments for nontaxable items (f) Estimated change in baseline sales, subtracting baseline sales from 2008 from adjusted sales of existing outlets with project in place. Sources: Bay Area Economics 2008, based on information from the CA State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census, 2002 Census of Retail Trade, Association of Bay Area Governments, Urban Land Institute/ICSC, Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Longs, Lowe's, Home Depot, Ross Stores, TJX Companies, and Circuit City Annual Reports, Tesco, and Hinderliter de Lamas 2007 (HdL). 39 Impacts of Proposed Project on Petaluma’s Retail Environment Overview. Driven by the above analysis, this section assesses how the Proposed Project might affect the overall retail environment in Petaluma. Per Resolution No. 2008-189 N.C.S., the FEIA should consider [t]he estimated impacts of the proposed project on existing retail businesses, including the potential for opportunities for business renewal and growth due to new businesses locating in the Petaluma community, as well as the potential for negative impacts such as reduced sales or closures. Thus this FEIA needs to look at both positive and negative potential impacts of the proposed Deer Creek Village project on the City’s retail environment. The above retail sales, leakage, and capture analysis lays the groundwork for this discussion. Opportunities for Renewal and Growth The Proposed Project will bring new retail outlets to the City. The likely anchor tenant, Lowe’s, represents a retail store type not currently represented in the City. Petaluma residents wishing to shop at a large home improvement warehouse store must journey at least as far as Cotati or Rohnert Park. There are other gaps in the City’s retail fabric that might be filled by some of the other outlets in Deer Creek Village, e.g., a mid-size home electronics outlet. The leakage analysis demonstrates that local residents are probably venturing to other nearby cities to shop because of the lack of preferred stores within the City. While some sales may be captured from existing outlets (see discussion below regarding these potential negative impacts), the project should result in a net increase in the number of stores and in overall retail sales in Petaluma. Table 13 above shows the overall dollar change from estimated 2008 baseline sales; in 2011 with the Proposed Project in place, retail sales in existing stores in the Trade Area are projected to decline $2.7 million from 2008 levels, with an overall net increase in existing stores in 2016. It is important to note that some of this net change is due to population increases in the Trade Area, and that certain sectors directly competitive with the Proposed Project show losses for existing outlets even in 2016. Thus there is a potential mix of disruption and closure for some retail types with backfilling of space due to growing demand in all sectors, including those not assumed for Deer Creek Village. The potential negative and disruptive impacts are discussed in more detail in the following section. Potential Negative Impacts of the Proposed Project on Existing Retailers Estimated Impacts of Proposed Project on Building Materials Outlets. As noted above, Lowe’s fills a large gap in the retail mix in Petaluma, and as such should capture a large portion of its sales from leakages to other cities. Factoring in population growth, it is estimated that the decline in sales in existing stores in the building materials store sector would be minimal, at $1.3 million in 2011. By 2016, Trade Area population growth would “fill” this gap, with sales in existing outlets recovering to above current levels. It is important to note that this analysis is 40 based on data not reflecting the closure of Yardbirds Home Depot, thus the impacts may be overstated somewhat. The stores with the most potential to be impacted include three outlets: Orchard Supply Hardware, Tomasini’s Rex Ace Hardware, and M. Masselli & Sons. The Ace Hardware store downtown is convenience and service-oriented and does not carry larger items such as appliances or lumber; Orchard Supply is also more convenience-oriented than Lowe’s; and M. Masselli & Sons carries a somewhat different range of building material products and caters to contractors rather than to the general public. As discussed previously, closure of the Yardbirds Home Depot store was announced in late January 2009. The closure of this store eliminates Petaluma’s competitor most like the proposed Lowe’s, and while indicating current weakness in the market, the closure may also show that smaller format stores with this profile are not able to compete successfully with large-scale warehouse stores even when those stores are not located nearby (i.e., shoppers would rather drive to a large store with more selection that shop at a local store with limited items). Some of the loss of sales in existing stores attributed to the Lowe’s, as shown in Table 13 above, would have come from this store. For the remaining three stores, the level of estimated losses is not such that any store should be at risk of closure. As part of its research, BAE contacted representatives of these stores, as well as stores in the City of Sonoma and Novato to get their impressions of the potential impacts of Lowe’s on their businesses. Orchard Supply Hardware, the downtown Ace Hardware, and M. Masselli & Sons responded to BAE’s queries. The Orchard Supply store manager stated that while they expected a drop in sales, they catered to a different market niche, with the customers often being “do it yourselfers” looking for smaller items rather than large appliances or lumber. Their store also differentiates itself by a higher level of service and by carrying specialty parts that are not found in the large warehouse stores. While business has slowed due to current economic conditions, and the manager would prefer not to have Lowe’s in Petaluma, he did not foresee that this store would close due to the Lowe’s opening. Tomasini’s Rex Ace Hardware’s store manager expressed similar sentiments, saying that the current economy has affected business and that Lowe’s would cause the loss of some sales but not closure, since they had a loyal customer base that preferred not to shop in “big boxes” and relied on strong service to differentiate their small store in the market. The representative of M. Masselli & Sons indicated that their store was more reliant on contractors, and as a supplier of materials both new and used not found elsewhere, they would survive even with some loss of sales to Lowe’s. BAE also elicited responses from Parson’s Lumber and Hardware in Boyes Hot Springs. The owner of this store emphasized that his business was based on providing a high level of service, and because of that and the distance to Lowe’s, he felt that his store would be minimally impacted; they already face competition similar to that of Lowe’s from the much closer Friedman’s in the City of Sonoma, and they already compete with large-format stores in Napa, Santa Rosa, and elsewhere. In summary, while the competing stores may face some loss of business, the leakage analysis and interviews with store representatives indicate that overall losses in Petaluma and the Trade Area would not be large enough to force the closure of any remaining additional existing stores. The 41 Yardbirds Home Depot closure cannot be attributed to Deer Creek Village, a project which is at best a few years in the future and still not through the approvals process. Estimated Impacts of Proposed Project on Existing General Merchandise Outlets. Deer Creek Village is slated to contain a pharmacy; while no committed tenant has been indicated to BAE, at this time there are three major drug chains that would be likely as the tenant: Walgreens, Rite-Aid, and CVS (which recently purchased the Longs chain). With only two large drug stores (both Longs) currently operating in Petaluma, the City appears under-retailed in this sector. The leakage analysis estimates that existing general merchandise stores would lose approximately $1.9 million in sales from current levels in 2011, or two percent of overall sales. While this loss might be focused on the two drug stores, some of the loss would likely be at other general merchandise stores and other stores (e.g., Safeway) which have a pharmacy counter. These losses are not of such magnitude as to indicate a likelihood of closure of any existing retail outlets. Estimated Impacts on Existing Apparel Stores. Based on information provided by the developer, BAE assumes the presence of a 50,300 square foot apparel/home goods store in Deer Creek Village. Because of Kohl’s and the outlet mall, Petaluma is not assumed to be leaking sales in this store category, thus any additional apparel outlets would capture sales in large part from existing stores. In 2011, such a store is estimated to capture approximately 12 percent, or $9.4 million in sales from baseline 2008 levels for existing stores; this estimated loss would decline in 2016 to nine percent, or $7.5 million. This sizable loss might indicate a risk of closure for existing outlets, but the level of that risk depends in part of the particular market niche of the new store. If Kohl’s alone sustained all of this loss, the store sales would drop slightly below the chain’s national average sales per square foot, recovering to slightly above average by 2016. While no leakage is indicated from the analysis above, sales in the outlet mall, because of its specialized focus, likely come in considerable part from beyond the Trade Area, and may mask gaps in the more local-serving market for certain types of apparel stores. In any case, overall demand increases in the Trade Area indicate the potential for re-tenanting of vacated space due to impacts in this particular sector. Estimated Impacts on Existing Food Stores. BAE’s analysis assumes a small convenienceoriented grocery store. Even though this store will capture sales from existing outlets, the small size of the store relative to demand makes impacts minimal. By 2011, the leakage analysis indicates that sales in existing food stores would be above current levels. It should be noted that this does not directly take into account the entry of Raley’s into the market, but the leakages of sales in this category overall in the Trade Area mean that there should be space in the Petaluma retail mix for both of these stores. Estimated Impacts on Existing Restaurants. The Trade Area shows attraction of sales in the Eating and Drinking Places category (see Table 9 above), much of it due to strong tourism-related sales in the City of Sonoma. As a result, there is no leakage to be captured, and additional support for restaurant uses due to population growth is extremely limited. Thus, a restaurant at the Proposed Project would likely capture sales from existing outlets. However, this capture is very limited as a proportion of total eating and drinking places sales and the impacts on any 42 particular restaurant are unknown. One portion of the restaurant market that is under-represented in Petaluma is national chain full-service restaurants. The Petaluma Leakage & Sustainable Retail Strategy Study cites this as a market niche showing significant leakage of sales, despite the 18 overall attraction of sales in the Eating and Drinking Places category. Estimated Impacts in Home Furnishings and Appliances Sector. The Proposed Project assumes one 18,000 square-foot retailer in this category, more specifically a home electronics store. However, Petaluma is very under-retailed in this overall category and specifically for home appliances/electronics stores, as indicated by the analysis above. This size of home electronics store could capture some of the leakage in this category, and with population growth, there is strong demand for a store of this type in the Trade Area. The Petaluma Leakage & Sustainable Retail Strategy Study cites electronics/computers as well as home furnishings, appliances, and 19 accessories as additional sectors with significant leakage of sales. The analysis shows a capture of 11 percent of baseline sales from existing stores in this category, declining to eight percent by 2016. This level of sales decline could potentially imperil other competitors in the category, but the lack of specificity regarding the particular retailer and its product mix makes it impossible to point to a particular existing store being at risk. As with the potential for closure of apparel stores, overall demand increases in the Trade Area indicate that vacated spaces could be retenanted with other retail uses within a relatively short period of time. Estimated Impacts on Other Retail Sectors in Petaluma and the Trade Area. In the Other Retail Stores category, 2008 baseline sales are estimated at approximately $126.4 million. Because of the sizable leakage in this broad category, Deer Creek Village is assumed to capture most of its sales from leakage rather than existing outlets, and any sales losses would be mitigated by increases in population between now and 2011. The ultimate level of impact will depend in large part on the particular retail types that end up as tenants in the project, and since the specific retail mix for these stores is unknown at this time, it would be speculative to assume impacts on particular stores or store types. Impacts on Overall Retail Environment. Because of the limited impacts by retail type, and the scattered locations of those outlets potentially impacted, the impacts of Deer Creek Village are not focused on particular nodes, but may be spread throughout the City. As noted in the retail inventory discussion, retail vacancy rates in Petaluma have generally trended low, due in part to the limited retail development in recent years in contrast to other nearby cities. However, the recent vacancies of the large spaces occupied by Mervyns and Shoe Pavilion and the impending closure of Yardbirds Home Depot, as well as some other vacancies as the retail market has slumped, have increased vacancy rates somewhat. Petaluma Plaza is undergoing a substantial renewal with the addition of Raley’s which should serve to attract shoppers to both that center and the adjoining Petaluma Plaza North. Downtown Petaluma has evolved into a different market niche as other shopping centers have developed in the City, offering an option for a different kind of shopping/dining/entertainment 18 19 Petaluma Leakage & Sustainable Retail Strategy Study, June 2004, Thomas Consultants, Inc. Ibid 43 experience, along with providing a place for small local start-up businesses serving this unique market niche. With its historic structures and ambience, the stores here cater to a larger area than the Trade Area, attracting residents of nearby cities and day-trip tourists. Many of the stores are in the apparel or other retail category, along with many restaurants. Whatever the impact on particular stores, the existing Downtown as a whole will probably be minimally impacted, as it provides a different shopping experience than the chain retail that will be largely occupy Deer Creek Village. Potential Cumulative Impacts East Washington Place, located at the East Washington Street exit from U.S. Highway 101, is another large proposed mixed-use project under development in Petaluma on a tentative schedule similar to Deer Creek Village. As currently planned, the center will total approximately 380,000 square feet, largely in retail but with some office space. The anchor tenant, a Target discount store, would not be directly competitive with the retail mix for Deer Creek Village. Some of the other uses could overlap, in the categories of apparel, food, home furnishings/appliances, restaurants, and for tenants in the small shops. The pharmacy, while in the general merchandise category, would be more local-serving and not directly competitive with the Target. Based on their anchor tenants, East Washington Place and Deer Creek Village are targeted in large part toward somewhat different and complementary retail niches, and even slightly different geographic areas. This will lessen any cumulative impacts in Petaluma. While individual outlets might be impacted, the total capture of existing market share is limited such that the overall retail market should be able to absorb these projects without the prospect of long-term vacancies in existing retail spaces. Summary of Impacts on Existing Retailers BAE estimates that at stabilized performance levels, the Proposed Project will achieve total annual sales of approximately $82.7 million. Sales at Lowe’s will constitute the largest share, and are estimated at $35.5 million, followed by the home electronics store at $9.8 million, the apparel store at $12.1 million, the pharmacy at $7.4 million, the food store at $6.4 million, the other retail stores in the small shop spaces at $6.3 million, and restaurants at $5.3 million. The Trade Area is estimated to be leaking sales in several major store categories, including general merchandise, food, home furnishings/appliances, building materials, and other retail. In the food store category and general merchandise store categories there is limited capture due to the local-serving nature of the stores. There is a lack of significant competition in the appliances/electronics sector in Petaluma but the small size of the store potentially in this center would limit its ability to capture sales from large competitors in the region. In the Other Retail stores category, there is also some potential capture of leakages, depending in part on the particular stores that end up in the Proposed Project. By 2016, a modest increase in the dollar amount of leakage available for capture would occur with no change in the retail mix from baseline 2008 conditions, leading to a modest increase in estimated sales capture from leakage. 44 Although the Trade Area should account for the large majority of shoppers for Deer Creek Village, some shoppers from outside the Trade Area will also shop at the Proposed Project. For example, the lack of a large home improvement center in Novato might lead to the attraction of shoppers from northern Marin County to a Lowe’s in Petaluma. However, the presence of similar region-serving retail nodes in surrounding or nearby cities including Rohnert Park, Santa Rosa, San Rafael, and Napa should limit this attraction. Out of a total of $87.2 million in sales in the Proposed Project, only $5.6 million is assumed to be captured from outside the Trade Area. While a new retail center may capture sales leakages and bring in shoppers from outside the Trade Area, it will also capture some proportion of its sales from existing outlets in the Trade Area. Overall, in 2011 there would be a net decline for all retail sectors of only $2.7 million, or less than one percent of the baseline 2008 total for overall retail sales. Net sales captures are assumed for building materials, apparel, general merchandise stores, eating and drinking places, and home furnishings/appliances. In two categories, food stores and other retail stores, the losses due to capture from existing outlets are estimated to be offset by gains due to Trade Area population growth. By 2016, increases in overall retail demand due to population growth are projected to decrease the capture from existing outlets. Including all retail categories including those not assumed to be represented in Deer Creek Village, total retail sales in existing outlets are projected to increase two percent from current estimated levels. By 2016, the only two store categories where existing outlets are estimated to still be showing losses from 2008 levels are home furnishings/appliances stores and apparel stores. Lowe’s fills a large gap in the retail mix in Petaluma, and as such should capture a substantial portion of its sales from leakages to other cities. Factoring in population growth, it is estimated that the decline in sales in existing stores in the building materials store sector would be minimal, at $1.3 million in 2011; since this calculation assumes Yardbirds Home Depot as part of its baseline, the actual capture from existing stores may be less. By 2016, Trade Area population growth would “fill” this gap, with sales in existing outlets recovering to above current levels. Given that the closure of Yardbirds Home Depot will have already occurred, the specific stores with the most potential to be impacted include three remaining outlets: Orchard Supply Hardware, Tomasini’s Rex Ace Hardware, and M. Masselli & Sons. However, none of these stores carries the broad mix of products as Lowe’s, and each of them operates in a slightly different niche, especially with respect to conveniences and service. The two stores in or near the City of Sonoma are distant enough that they should not face a severe loss of sales. In summary, while the competing stores may face some loss of business, the leakage analysis and interviews with store representatives indicate that overall losses in Petaluma and the Trade Area would not be large enough to force the closure of additional stores. For general merchandise stores, food stores, restaurants, and other retail outlets, the level of capture from existing outlets is limited and the losses are not of a magnitude as to indicate a likelihood of closure of any existing retail outlets. For apparel and home furnishings/appliance stores, the losses are greater. However, the sales attraction for the outlet mall from beyond the Trade Area may mask gaps in the more local-serving market for certain types of apparel stores. 45 A home electronics store may attract additional sales from the Novato area due to the lack of such an outlet in that city. In any case, overall demand increases in the Trade Area indicate the potential for re-tenanting of vacated space due to impacts for these two sectors, or for the other sectors. Because of the limited impacts by retail type, and the scattered locations of those outlets potentially impacted, the impacts of Deer Creek Village are not focused on particular nodes, but may be spread throughout the City. While retail vacancies have been low in recent years, the closure of Mervyns and Shoe Pavilion will cause a jump in vacancy rates. Downtown Petaluma has evolved into a different market niche as other shopping centers have developed in the City, offering an option for a different kind of shopping/dining/entertainment experience, along with providing a place for small local start-up businesses serving this unique market niche. With its historic structures and ambience, the stores here cater to a larger area than the Trade Area, attracting residents of nearby cities and day-trip tourists. Many of the stores are in the apparel or other retail category, along with many restaurants. Whatever the impact on particular stores, the existing Downtown as a whole will probably be minimally impacted, as it provides a different shopping experience than the chain retail that will be largely occupy Deer Creek Village. The Proposed Project will bring new retail outlets to the City. The anchor tenant, Lowe’s, represents a retailer not currently present in the City. Petaluma residents wishing to shop at a large home improvement warehouse store must journey at least as far as Cotati or Rohnert Park. There are other gaps in the City’s retail fabric that might be filled by some of the other outlets in Deer Creek Village, e.g., a home electronics outlet. The leakage analysis demonstrates that local residents are probably venturing to other nearby cities to shop because of the lack of preferred stores within the City. While some sales may be captured from existing outlets, the project should result in a net increase in the number of stores and in overall retail sales in Petaluma. In summary, there is a potential mix of disruption and closure for some retail types with backfilling of space due to growing demand in all sectors, including those not assumed for Deer Creek Village. 46 Employment Impacts The second major component of an FEIA as requested per the Council Resolution is an analysis of potential employment impacts in the City of Petaluma, including types of employment generated, likely wages and benefits relative to industry standards and/or the City’s Living Wage. This chapter assesses those impacts to the extent possible with available data. Employment Job Creation. Deer Creek Village will create both temporary and permanent jobs in Petaluma. Assuming the project has a one year construction period, the Proposed Project will create an 20 estimated 331 temporary jobs in construction-related fields. A majority of the permanent jobs created will be in retail and related sectors, but the medical/office component will provide jobs in office or medical occupations. The project sponsor indicated that Lowes expects to employ between 175 and 200 individuals at Deer Creek Village. Between 70 and 75 percent of these jobs would be full-time positions. Because specific likely tenants for the remaining retail spaces have not been confirmed, BAE estimated new employment levels for these spaces based on the projected tenant mix and frequently used employee density figures which indicate the square footage of floor space per employee. According to a 2001 Employment Density Study prepared for the Southern California Association of Governments, regional retail stores average approximately 900 square feet per employee. Other commercial uses such as restaurants and offices have higher employment densities. As shown in Table 14, the Proposed Project is expected to generate 510 new jobs, including 343 full-time positions and 167 part-time positions. An estimated 409 jobs would be in retail and related sectors. With the exception of Lowe’s, the ratio of part-time and full-time workers here is estimated based on an analysis of retail workers throughout California from the 2000 Census Public Use Microdata Sample, which provides a breakdown of this ratio by detailed industry sector not available elsewhere. Because the ratio is derived this way, comparison of the mix in the Proposed Project to “norms” would effectively be circular. It is important to note also that part-time employment is more suitable for certain workers and is thus not necessarily involuntary or inherently an indicator of underemployment or underutilization of the labor force. For instance, part-time work can be more appropriate for younger persons still attending school, parents attempting to balance child care needs and careers, or retired persons seeking some supplemental income. National data from the Current Population 20 This estimate was arrived at using IMPLAN, an input-output model. IMPLAN assumes a certain value of construction per employee-year in a given area such as Sonoma County. Since construction has been assumed to take 12 months, employee-years in this case are equivalent to the number of employees. The cost of the construction is derived from the fiscal impact analysis below (see Table 20). 47 Survey indicate that for the combined retail and wholesale sectors, out of a total of approximately 5.1 million workers in part-time positions, only 13 percent were working part time for economic reasons (e.g., slowing of business in the workplace, could only find part-time work); the remainder were working part time due to a desire to work part-time, vacations, illness, or other 21 reasons. Table 14: Estimated Permanent Employment Square Feet Home Improvement (Lowe's) (b) Apparel/Home Goods Electronics Pharmacy Restaurants Grocery Small Shop Tenants 122,256 50,300 18,000 14,820 12,000 13,969 22,500 Total Retail and Food Services 253,845 Bank Fitness/Health Club Medical/Office Total 5,000 44,450 11,800 315,095 Employee Density (Sq. Ft./Emp) n/a 900 900 400 400 400 400 400 900 300 Employment Part-Time (a) Full-Time Total 53 24 3 11 13 12 22 122 32 17 26 17 23 34 175 56 20 37 30 35 56 138 271 409 3 19 8 10 30 31 13 49 39 167 343 510 Notes: Some totals may not sum from parts due to independent rounding. (a) Estimated percentage of employees who are part-time (less than 35 hours per week) based on an analysis of ratio of full and part-time employment by key industry sectors derived from the 2000 Census Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS). See Appendix G. (b) Lowe's employment figures provided by Lowe's. Approximately 30 percent of employees will be part-time. Sources: SCAG Employment Density Summary Report, 2001; U.S. Census 2000 Public Use Microdata Sample; Lowe's ; BAE, 2009. Net Employment Impacts. The entrance of new retail, including a Lowe’s, into Petaluma would increase overall employment in the City, but nevertheless could result in a loss of sales at existing retail outlets as they adjust to lower sales levels due to the capture of some sales in the Proposed Project. Using average sales per employee, changes in sales can be translated into estimated changes in employment levels. As shown in Table 15 below, if the Proposed Project opened in 2011, it would result in a loss of 48 retail jobs in existing retail outlets in the City of Petaluma 22 from baseline 2008 levels. By 2016, however, expected gains in population would lead to 21 2007 Current Population Survey, Characteristics of the Employed, Table 21, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Some of these losses could conceivably occur outside Petaluma but within the Trade Area, but to be conservative, it is assumed here that all job losses will occur within the City. Additionally, this figure is based on conditions at the assumed date of project opening in 2011, after sales levels have increased due to project population increases. If Deer Creek Village opened in 2008, the loss of jobs from baseline levels would be higher. 22 48 overall estimated retail employment in Petaluma in existing outlets being greater than current baseline levels, although existing retailers in some sectors (e.g., apparel, home furnishings/appliances) could still see losses. Table 15: Change in Employment at Existing Retail Outlets in the Trade Area 2011 Type of Store Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Change in Sales, 20082011 (a) w Project ($9,414,000) ($1,915,000) $961,000 ($1,246,000) ($2,458,000) ($1,326,000) $7,930,000 $3,012,000 $1,742,000 Total ($2,714,000) 2016 Type of Store Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service Stations Other Retail Change in Sales, 20082016 (a) w Project ($7,500,400) $928,300 $6,356,780 $2,268,000 ($1,771,300) $1,437,400 $15,321,000 $5,819,000 $4,749,000 Total $27,607,780 Sales per Employee (b) $129,000 $266,000 $213,000 $216,000 $235,000 $401,000 $370,000 $164,000 $234,000 Change in Employment, Existing Retail Outlets -73 -7 5 -6 -10 -3 21 18 7 -48 Sales per Employee (b) $129,000 $266,000 $213,000 $216,000 $235,000 $401,000 $370,000 $164,000 $234,000 Change in Employment, Existing Retail Outlets -58 3 30 11 -8 4 41 35 20 79 (a) Estimated change in baseline sales, subtracting baseline sales from 2008 from adjusted sales of existing outlets with project in place. From Table 13. (b) Based on Appendix E. County sales and employee totals have been re-aggregated into BOE categories, inflated to 2007 dollars, to derive sales per employee. Rounded to nearest thousand. Sources: Bay Area Economics 2008, based on information from the CA State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census, 2002 Census of Retail Trade, Sources: Bay Area Economics 2008, based on information from the CA State Board of Equalization, 2000 U.S. Census, 2002 Census of Retail Trade, Association of Bay Area Governments, Urban Land Institute/ICSC, Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid, Longs, Lowe's, Home Depot, Ross Stores, TJX Companies, and Circuit City Annual Reports, Tesco, and Hinderliter de Lamas 2007 (HdL). While the Proposed Project is anticipated to create an initial reduction of employment at existing retail outlets, the losses would be offset by the 409 retail jobs created by Lowes and other tenants. This would result in a net job creation of 361 new retail positions. As shown in Table 16, net 49 retail employment created by the Proposed Project alone would amount to over three-quarters of the City of Petaluma’s retail job growth as projected by the Association of Bay Area Governments for the 2010 to 2015 period. Table 16: Net Retail Employment, 2011 Job Creation, Proposed Project Job Losses, Existing Retail Outlets (a) 409 (48) Net Job Creation 361 Projected Retail Job Growth, 2010-2015 (b) 440 Notes: (a) Estimated job losses at exiting retail outlets in 2011. (b) ABAG projected growth for Petaluma. Sources: ABAG, 2007; BAE, 2009 Wages and Benefits Wages. While a large proportion of employment opportunities at Deer Creek Village would be in retail sales and related occupations, the Proposed Project can also be expected to generate jobs in other areas such as food preparation and serving, building and grounds cleaning and maintenance, medical-related, and office and administrative support. Estimated employee wages will vary depending on the particular occupation. Table 17 provides wage data for relevant occupations in the Santa Rosa-Petaluma region. Table 17: Estimated Wages for Likely Occupations in Proposed Project Average Annual Wage Sales & Related Occupations Food Preparation & Serving-Related Occupations Building & Grounds Cleaning & Maintenance Occupations Office & Administrative Support Occupations Construction & Extraction Occupations Healthcare Practitioners & Technical Occupations Healthcare Support Occupations $39,801 $21,775 $27,482 $36,367 $52,804 $74,449 $32,309 Average $19.14 $10.47 $13.21 $17.48 $25.39 $35.79 $15.53 Hourly Wage 25th Percentile Median $9.52 $8.19 $9.53 $12.70 $18.99 $22.03 $11.53 $14.00 $9.17 $11.88 $16.73 $24.92 $31.71 $14.83 75th Percentile $21.94 $11.42 $15.42 $21.40 $30.52 $44.94 $18.84 Wage data reported for Santa Rosa-Petaluma MSA for 1st quarter 2008. Sources: CA Employment Development Department, 2008; BAE, 2009. As do many employers, Lowe’s considers their wage information proprietary, so BAE did not obtain typical wages for various positions at the store. Nevertheless, wages for employees at Lowe’s and other tenants at Deer Creek would likely be comparable to the prevailing market wages in the area. 50 The City of Petaluma adopted a Living Wage Policy in January 2007, which is intended to ensure that City employees and employees of City contractors earn an hourly wage that is sufficient to live with dignity and to achieve self-sufficiency. Although the Living Wage Policy does not apply to private sector employers who do not do business with the City, it serves as a standard against which to compare average wages for relevant occupations. The current living wage, which was updated on January 1, 2008, is $13.64 per hour without an employee medical benefit plan and $12.14 per hour with an employee medical plan. The average wage data presented in Table 17 above does not provide information on the level of medical and other benefits offered to employees in conjunction with their wage. Nevertheless, the average wages for sales and related occupations, office and administrative support occupations, construction and extraction occupations, and the two healthcare occupational sectors shown exceed the $13.64 living wage hourly standard for employees without medical benefits. Food preparation and serving-related occupations have the lowest average wage at $10.47 per hour, but food servers often earn tips that supplement their wage income. The 25th percentile wages, however, are below the living wage levels for all but the office and construction occupational categories, indicating that starting wages for new hires could be below the living wage levels. It is important to note, though, that the wage data shown here are based on typical Sonoma County retail wages; the Proposed Project’s employment structure would not necessarily provide lower wages than are normally found for retail workers in the area. At the other end of the pay scale, medical office tenants would employ workers in higher-skill and higher-paying occupations, including doctors, nurses, and technical workers. Benefits. Benefit packages associated with different positions will vary by tenant for part-time and full-time employees. The Lowe’s Corporation offers full-time employees medical, vision, and dental plans, disability and life insurance, flexible spending accounts, a 401(k) plan, and an employee stock purchase plan. Part-time employee benefits include a part-time health and dental plan, a vision plan, part-time disability and life insurance, as well as a 401(k) and employee stock purchasing plan. Employees select the benefit options that meet their needs. Each year, Lowe’s decides how much the company will contribute toward employee benefits costs. Employees may be required to pay for all or a portion of the benefits they select. The cost of benefits is determined by the options and coverage levels selected by each employee. Benefit packages for other tenants in the Proposed Project would vary by outlet and owner, and could vary from extremely limited or no benefits up to or beyond the level provided by Lowe’s. 51 Summary of Employment Impacts Deer Creek Village is estimated to result in a net gain of 361 retail jobs in the Trade Area in 2011. The project is projected to generate 331 construction jobs, and 510 permanent jobs, with 409 of these in the retail sector. Of the permanent jobs, slightly more than two-thirds are projected to be full-time jobs; an estimated 175 of the total permanent jobs are associated with the Lowe’s anchor store. Retail employment in general is typified by a large component of part-time workers; the Proposed Project is not extraordinary in its mix of full and part-time retail jobs. While full-time work is often sought, and some part-time workers would choose full-time work given the option, part-time work is more suitable for certain types of workers such as youths still in school, parents balancing child rearing and careers, and retirees seeking supplemental income. The project is expected to capture some sales from existing outlets, and those sales losses could result in reduced employment, estimated at a loss of 48 retail jobs in existing retail outlets in 2011. By 2016, however, overall retail sales in the universe of existing outlets would be above 2008 baseline levels, leading to overall retail employment also above baseline levels, although for some sectors existing stores would still have lower employment than in 2008. Retail employment created by the Proposed Project alone would nearly match the City of Petaluma’s projected retail job growth for 2010 to 2015. Most of the permanent jobs at Deer Creek Village would be in retail occupations, but there would also be additional jobs in other areas such as food preparation and serving, building and grounds cleaning and maintenance, and office and administrative support, as well as medical-related occupations if there are medical uses in the office portion of the project. Estimated employee wages will vary depending on the particular occupation. Lowe’s reportedly pays competitive wages that are set at or above the market average for jobs with similar skills and responsibilities, but because wage information is proprietary, BAE did not obtain information on Lowe’s wages in Sonoma County. Nevertheless, employee earnings at Lowe’s and other tenants at Deer Creek Village would likely be comparable to the prevailing market wages in the area for similar types of employment. The average wages for sales and related occupations, office and administrative support occupations, medical occupations, and construction and extraction occupations exceed the City’s Living Wage standard for employees without medical benefits. Food preparation and servingrelated occupations have wages below the Living Wage, but food servers often earn tips that supplement their wage income. While these averages are generally above the Living Wage, starting wages for new hires could be below the living wage levels. However, the Proposed Project’s employment structure would not necessarily provide lower wages than are normally found for retail workers in the area. Lowe’s provides a range of benefits for employees, including medical, vision, and dental plans, disability and life insurance, flexible spending accounts, a 401(k) plan, and an employee stock purchase plan, with the proportion of coverage provided by Lowe’s varying depending on the plans selected and employee status (full vs. part-time). Benefit packages for other tenants in the Proposed Project would vary by outlet and owner, and could vary from extremely limited or no benefits up to or beyond the level provided by Lowe’s. 52 Fiscal Impact Analysis Overview The fiscal impact analysis focuses on projecting the balance of municipal revenues and municipal service costs associated with the proposed Deer Creek Village commercial development at buildout. Although development would not be completed by the end of 2009, all cost and revenue estimates are in current, 2009, dollars. The primary focus of the fiscal impact analysis is on the City of Petaluma General Fund, which receives the City’s revenues for discretionary expenditures and funds the City’s primary public municipal services. This analysis uses a combination of techniques to estimate the increases in costs and revenues. Where possible, the increases in revenues are modeled following the manner in which they are collected and allocated to the City. For example, increases in property tax revenues are based on an estimate of the increase in assessed valuation associated with a given project component. In other cases, where this type of detailed modeling is not possible due to lack of adequate data, BAE utilized revenue multipliers that represent the City’s current average revenue per service 23 population . The same general approach applies to the service cost portions of the model. Generally, this methodology presents a reasonably conservative analysis of the potential fiscal impacts of the proposed project. Table 18 presents the development plan summary, including estimates of the number of employees as derived above, as well as an estimate of the total number of businesses for each use category Table 18: Proposed Deer Creek Development Plan Use Category Home Improvement Apparel/Home Goods Electronics Fitness/Health Club Pharmacy Bank Restaurants Grocery Small Shop Tenants Medical/Office Total Additional Service Population (a) Square Feet 122,256 50,300 18,000 44,450 14,820 5,000 12,000 13,969 22,500 11,800 Sq. Ft. Per Employee n/a 900 900 900 400 400 400 400 400 300 315,095 New Employees 175 56 20 49 37 13 30 35 56 39 510 255 # of New Businesses 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 11 4 24 (a) Service population equals resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: SCAG Employment Density Summary Report, 2001; Lowe's; BAE, 2009 23 Service population equals the resident population plus one half of the number of employees. This scaling of employees represents the lower service demand of employees relative to residents. 53 Projected General Fund Revenues This portion of the analysis projects the anticipated increase in the City of Petaluma General Fund revenues from the proposed commercial development. The main focus of this analysis includes Property Tax Revenues, Property Tax In-Lieu of Vehicle License Fees (ILVLF), and Sales Tax revenues. Sales Tax Revenues. According to the retail impacts section of this report, the proposed project should generate sales of approximately $82.7 million, of which 97 percent will be taxable based on the proposed development program. The City receives 0.975 percent of all taxable sales as Sales Tax revenues. Thus, the proposed project should generate approximately $714,000 in sales tax revenues for the City General Fund. Table 19 shows the projected sales tax revenues from the proposed project. It should be noted that some portion of the development’s sales could come from existing retail within the City, at least in the short run. Thus, the short-term projected sales tax revenues are likely overstated to some extent. However, as the retail impacts section of the analysis shows that overall citywide sales should grow over time, and all existing retail space should be absorbed in the long run, these sales tax revenue projections represent a reasonable estimate for ongoing fiscal impacts. Table 19: Projected Sales Tax Revenues Development Summ ary Home Improvement Apparel/Home Goods Electronics Pharmacy Restaurants Grocery Small Shop Tenants Square Feet 122,256 50,300 18,000 14,820 12,000 13,969 22,500 Sales Tax Revenues New Taxable Sales (a) City's Share of Taxable Sales 2009 Dollars $73,253,100 0.975% Total Sales Tax Revenues Total Sales $35,454,000 $12,072,000 $9,774,000 $7,410,000 $5,280,000 $6,426,000 $6,300,000 Percent Taxable 100% 100% 100% 33% 100% 30% 100% Taxable Sales $35,454,000 $12,072,000 $9,774,000 $2,445,300 $5,280,000 $1,927,800 $6,300,000 $714,218 (a) Based on Table 10 with an adjustment for non-taxable sales. Adjustments are more conservative than ratios shown per Appendix D. Sources: City of Petaluma; BAE, 2008. 54 Property Tax Revenues. Basic Table 20: Projected Property Tax Revenues property taxes are equal to one percent 24 2009 of total assessed value. Since the Property Tax Revenues Dollars project site is located within the Property Tax Increment Petaluma Community Development New Assessed Value (a) $62,881,107 1.0% (PCD) area, the redevelopment agency Basic Property Tax as % of Assessed Value (b) Other Taxing Entities Share 20.0% receives the majority of the property City's Share of Increment (c) 13.6% tax increment from increased assessed Total Property Tax Revenues $17,041 value. However, according to the City’s redevelopment consultant, (a) Assessed values based on construction costs and portion Seifel Consulting, the City will of overall land value. See Appendix H for details. (b) Property tax increment goes to redevelopment agency with receive some portion of the tax some pass through back to City General Fund. increment. Starting in FY 09/10, (c) Based on City's base allocation, 13.55 percent. other taxing entities will receive a Sources: City of Petaluma; Sonoma County Auditor-Controller; statutory pass through equal to 20 Sonoma County Assessor's Office; Seifel Consulting, BAE, 2008. percent of the property tax increment, 25 to be allocated in proportion to each entity’s share of the basic property tax. Since the City of Petaluma General Fund’s Pre-ERAF allocation is 13.55 percent, the City will receive 13.55 26 percent of the 20 percent allocated to other taxing entities. As redevelopment allocation agreements were written before ERAF legislation, and the redevelopment agency passes the increment through to the City, the City’s share is based on its pre-ERAF allocation. However, it 27 should be noted that the State has begun asking redevelopment agencies to contribute to ERAF. Should the State amend redevelopment law to require ERAF payments, the City could receive less property tax revenues than this analysis projects. To estimate the value of improvements, this analysis uses a construction cost method for determining the assessed value of the improvements, as shown in Appendix H. Using the new development costs as a proxy for value, the proposed project would generate approximately $17,000 in annual property tax revenues for the City. Table 20 shows the projected property tax revenues from the proposed project. 24 Although many properties are assessed taxes greater than one percent of assessed valuation, these additional taxes are for specific voter-approved purposes and are not available to the General Fund. 25 Seifel Consulting, 2009. 26 Ibid. 27 Ibid. 55 Property Transfer Tax Revenues. When a property changes ownership, the City collects property transfer taxes. These taxes total $3.10 per $1,000 of assessed value, of which the City collects $2.00. The County collects the remaining $1.10. This analysis assumes that commercial property changes ownership every 20 years, or turns over at an annual rate of five percent. Thus, the City can anticipate annual property transfer tax revenues of approximately $6,300. Table 21 shows the projected property transfer tax revenues from the proposed project. It should be noted that these revenues could vary significantly on an annual basis, depending on which project components are sold in a given year. It may also be the case that the entire project remains under one owner, with transfer tax revenues only occurring rarely as the entire parcel is transferred to a new owner. Table 21: Projected Property Transfer Tax Revenues Property Transfer Tax Revenues New Assessed Value Annual Commercial Turnover Rate (a) Amount of Assessed Value subject to Turnover (b) Transfer Tax Rate (c) Net Increase to City Property Transfer Tax Revenues 2009 Dollars $62,881,107 5% $3,144,055 $2.00 $6,288 (a) Shows the amount of assessed value subject to turnover in a given year (b) Assumes that one twentieth of commercial spaces turnover per year. (c) The property transfer tax rate is $3.10 per $1,000 in value, $2.00 of which goes to the City, while $1.10 goes to the County. Sources: City of Petaluma; Sonoma County Auditor-Controller; Sonoma County Assessor's Office; BAE, 2008. Property Tax In-Lieu of VLF Revenues. Beginning in the 2005-2006 fiscal year, the State ceased to provide backfill funds to counties and cities in the form of Motor Vehicle In-Lieu Fees (VLF) as they had through the 04-05 fiscal year. As a result of complicated financial restructuring enacted as part of the State’s budget balancing process, counties and cities now receive revenues from the State in the form of what is known as property tax in-lieu of vehicle license fees, or ILVLF. This State-funded revenue source is tied to a city’s total assessed valuation. In 2005-06, former vehicle license fee revenues were swapped for ILVLF revenues, which set the local jurisdiction’s ILVLF “base.” The base increases each year thereafter proportionate to the increase in total assessed valuation within the jurisdiction. Thus, if total assessed valuation increases by ten percent from one year to the next, the ILVLF base would increase by ten percent. In order to calculate the increment in ILVLF revenues that would result from the construction of the proposed project, the analysis first determines the total assessed value within the City, and the City’s current year ILVLF revenues. The analysis then determines the percentage by which the project would increase the City’s assessed valuation and applies that percentage increase to the 56 current year’s ILVLF revenues in order to determine the incremental amount of ILVLF attributable to the new development. The improvements from the proposed project would generate an 0.84 percent increase the City’s total assessed value, resulting in project-generated ILVLF revenues of approximately $33,600. It should be noted that the State could modify these revenue calculations between the current year and buildout. Table 22 shows the projected ILVLF revenues from the proposed project based on the current allocation formula. Table 22: Projected Property Tax In-Lieu Of VLF (ILVLF) Revenues ILVLF Revenues New Assessed Value 2008/09 Total Citywide Assessed Value Percent Change in Total AV resulting from Development 2008 ILVLF Revenues Percent Increase from New Development Net Increase to City ILVLF Revenues 2009 Dollars $62,881,107 $7,486,941,460 0.84% $4,000,000 0.84% $33,595 Sources: City of Petaluma; Sonoma County Auditor-Controller; Sonoma County Assessor's Office; BAE, 2008. Franchise Fee Revenues. The City collects franchise fees on utility usage. This analysis assumes that the proposed project would use garbage, cable, and gas and electric services provided within the City. In total, the City collects $2.4 million in franchise fees, which translates into approximately $32 per service population. As the proposed project would generate a 255-person net service population increase, the City can expect to generate approximately $8,100 in additional franchise fees. Table 23 shows the projected annual franchise fee revenues from the proposed project. License, Permits, and Fees Revenues. The City collects revenues on licenses, permits, and fees. The City budget projects that in Fiscal Year 08/09, the City will collect approximately $580,000 in license, permits, and fees revenues, which translates into approximately eight dollars per service population. As the proposed project would generate a 255-person net service population increase, the City can expect to generate approximately $2,000 in additional license, permits, and fees revenues. Table 24 shows the projected annual license, permits, and fees revenues from the proposed project. 57 Table 23: Projected Franchise Fee Revenues FY 08/09 Budget Revenues Waste Cable Electric/Gas Total Franchise Fee Revenues 2009 Dollars $1,200,000 $750,000 $440,000 $2,390,000 Total Service Population (a) Resident Population Employment 74,974 58,925 32,097 Total Franchise Fee Revenues Per Service Population $31.88 New Franchise Fee Revenues Associated with New Development Net New Employment Net New Service Population Revenue Per Service Population 510 255 $31.88 Total New Franchise Fee Revenues Associated with New Development $8,134 (a) Service Population estimated based on ABAG estimates. Service population equals the resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. Table 24: Projected Licenses, Permits, and Fees Revenues FY 08/09 Budget Revenues Total Licenses, Permits, and Fees Revenues Total Service Population (a) Resident Population Employment 2009 Dollars $580,000 74,974 58,925 32,097 Total Licenses, Permits, and Fees Revenues Per Service Population $7.74 New Licenses, Permits, and Fees Revenues Associated with New Development Net New Employment Net New Service Population Revenue Per Service Population 510 255 $7.74 Total New Licenses, Permits, and Fees Revenues Associated with New Development $1,974 (a) Service Population estimated based on ABAG estimates. Service population equals the resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. Fines, Forfeitures, and Penalties Revenues. The City collects revenues on fines, forfeitures, and penalties. The City budget projects that in Fiscal Year 08/09, the City will collect approximately $603,000 in fines, forfeitures, and penalties revenues, which translates into approximately eight dollars per service population. As the proposed project would generate a 58 255-person net service population increase, the City can expect to generate approximately $2,100 in additional fines, forfeitures, and penalties revenues. Table 25 shows the projected annual fines, forfeitures, and penalties revenues from the proposed project. Table 25: Projected Fines, Forfeitures, and Penalties Revenues 2009 Dollars $603,000 FY 08/09 Budget Revenues Total Fines, Forfeitures, and Penalties Revenues Total Service Population (a) Resident Population Employment 74,974 58,925 32,097 Total Fines, Forfeitures, and Penalties Revenues Per Service Population $8.04 New Fines, Forfeitures, and Penalties Revenues Associated with New Development Net New Employment Net New Service Population Revenue Per Service Population 510 255 $8.04 Total New Fines, Forfeitures, and Penalties Revenues Associated with New Development $2,052 (a) Service Population estimated based on ABAG estimates. Service population equals the resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. Business License Revenues. The proposed expansion would increase the business license fee revenues for the City of Petaluma. Currently, all relevant business types that would be present in the projected development pay between 0.016 percent and 0.048 percent of total gross receipts, or a maximum $45 for annual license renewals. This analysis assumes that all of the businesses within the proposed project would pay $45 per year for business licenses totaling $1,100 in annual City revenues. Table 26 shows the projected annual business license fee revenues from the proposed project. Table 26: Projected Business License Revenues Business License Revenues Annual Business License Revenues per New or Existing Business 2009 Dollars $45.00 New Business License Revenues Associated with New Development Number of New Businesses Revenue Per Business 24 $45.00 Total New Business License Revenues Associated with New Development $1,080 Sources: City of Petaluma; BAE, 2008. 59 Transient Occupancy Tax Revenues. Since the proposed project does not include a hotel, or additional residential units, the City should not anticipate additional transient occupancy tax (TOT) revenues associated with the new development. Projected General Fund Costs This portion of the analysis estimates the costs for the City of Petaluma to extend ongoing services to the proposed project site. This analysis focuses on the impacts to the City General Fund, that is, the City’s primary discretionary fund, which pays for key public services. Following are the costs analyzed within this report. Police Services. The Police department in Petaluma provides protective services to all City residents and workers. In total, the City spends approximately $16.1 million of discretionary funds on police services annually, which translates into approximately $214 per service population. Since the proposed project would generate a 255-person net service population increase, the proposed project would generate an increase of approximately $54,700 annually in police services. In reviewing this finding, it is important to note that, according to Captain Dave Sears of the City of Petaluma Police Department, the proposed project probably would not lead to a significant increase in service demand for police. There would likely be additional traffic and shoplifting calls, but these calls should have a minimal impact on service demand. The Captain indicated that new residential units generate significantly higher service demand than commercial uses. Since this project does not contain a residential component, the estimate for new service demand associated with the proposed project is relatively conservative. Table 27 shows the projected police costs associated with the proposed project. 60 Table 27: Projected Police Costs FY 08/09 Budget Expenditures Administration Communications CAD/RMS Crime Prevention Investigation Patrol Auto Theft Traffic Safety Parking Enforcement Records Total Police Department Expenditures Total Service Population (a) Resident Population Employment 2009 Dollars $1,651,450 $1,308,700 $379,750 $438,800 $1,072,650 $9,060,850 $143,300 $1,124,500 $298,450 $588,650 $16,067,100 74,974 58,925 32,097 Total Police Department Expenditures Per Service Population $214.30 New Police Departm ent Expenditures Associated with New Development Net New Employment Net New Service Population Revenue Per Service Population 510 255 $214.30 Total Police Department Expenditures Associated with New Development $54,683 (a) Service Population estimated based on ABAG estimates. Service population equals the resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. Fire Services. The Fire Department in Petaluma provides fire protection services to all City residents, and dispatch services for all EMS calls within the City. In total, the City spends approximately $7.8 million of discretionary funds on fire services annually, which translates into approximately $104 per service population. As the proposed project would generate a 255-person net service population increase, it would also result in an increase of approximately $26,500 annually in fire services. According to Chief Larry Anderson of the City of Petaluma Fire Department, the proposed project would not likely lead to a significant increase in service demand for the Fire Department, as the project does not include a residential component and constitutes infill development; existing stations should be able to serve the project. Table 28 shows the projected fire costs associated with the proposed project. 61 Table 28: Projected Fire Costs FY 08/09 Budget Expenditures Administration Disaster Preparedness Hazardous Materials Prevention Suppression Suppression - Apparatus Suppression - Building/Grounds Suppression - Communications Suppression - Supplies Suppression - Training Total Fire Department Expenditures Total Service Population (a) Resident Population Employment 2009 Dollars $569,750 $6,650 $138,850 $306,250 $6,529,900 $105,550 $28,450 $2,000 $56,750 $37,650 $7,781,800 74,974 58,925 32,097 Total Fire Departm ent Expenditures Per Service Population $103.79 New Fire Department Expenditures Associated with New Development Net New Employment Net New Service Population Revenue Per Service Population 510 255 $103.79 Total Fire Departm ent Expenditures Associated with New Development $26,485 (a) Service Population estimated based on ABAG estimates. Service population equals the resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. Public Works. The Public Works Department provides engineering, traffic, and maintenance to public infrastructure within the City. Currently, the City spends approximately $4.3 million annually on Public Works services, or approximately $57 per service population. With the addition of 255 net new service population persons, the proposed project would generate approximately $14,500 in costs to the City annually. Table 29 shows the projected Public Works Department costs associated with the proposed project. 62 Table 29: Projected Public Works Expenditures FY 08/09 Budget Expenditures Total Public Works Expenditures (a) 2009 Dollars $4,259,700 Total Service Population (b) Resident Population Employment 74,974 58,925 32,097 Total Public Works Expenditures Per Service Population $56.82 New Public Works Expenditures Associated with New Development Net New Employment Net New Service Population Revenue Per Service Population 510 255 $56.82 Total Public Works Expenditures Associated with New Development $14,497 (a) Does not include CIP expenditures. (b) Service Population estimated based on ABAG estimates. Service population equals the resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. Community Development Department. The Community Development Department for the City of Petaluma is responsible for providing planning and building services for the City. Currently, the City spends approximately $370,100 annually on these services, or approximately five dollars per service population. With the addition of 255 net new service population persons from development, the proposed project would generate approximately $1,300 in costs to the City annually. Table 30 shows the projected costs to the Community Development Department associated with the proposed project. Table 30: Projected Community Development Expenditures FY 08/09 Budget Expenditures Total Community Development Expenditures Total Service Population (a) Resident Population Employment 2009 Dollars $370,100 74,974 58,925 32,097 Total Community Development Expenditures Per Service Population $4.94 New Community Development Expenditures Associated with New Development Net New Employment Net New Service Population Revenue Per Service Population 510 255 $4.94 Total Community Development Expenditures Associated with New Development $1,260 (a) Service Population estimated based on ABAG estimates. Service population equals the resident population plus one-half the employment population. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. 63 General Government. General Government refers to the administrative functions of the City, including the City Clerk, City Manager, City Attorney, Administrative Services, Finance, and Non-Departmental functions. This analysis assumes that as non-general government functions increase within the City, General Government functions would increase proportionately. In this case, the General Government functions account for approximately 6.5 percent of all General Fund expenditures. Thus, a $100,000 increase in other City services would result in a $6,500 increase in General Government services. Table 31 shows the General Government expenditures as a percentage of non-General Government expenditures, and shows that given the estimated costs of non-General Government functions from the increased service population, General Government costs would be approximately $6,300 annually. Table 31: Projected General Government Expenditures 2009 Dollars $147,400 $399,850 $234,700 $1,283,800 $341,100 $2,406,850 FY 08/09 Budget Expenditures City Council City Attorney City Clerk (a) Finance Human Resources Total General Government Expenditures Total Non-General Government General Fund Expenditures $36,802,800 Total General Government Expenditures as a Share of Non-General Governm ent Expenditures New General Government Expenditures Associated with New Developm ent 6.5% $6,339 (a) Does not include elections expenditures, as the proposed project does not include new residential units. Sources: ABAG; City of Petaluma FY 08/09 Budget; BAE, 2008. Parks and Recreation and Animal Services. Although the City of Petaluma provides park and recreation and animal services to the city, these services are almost solely used by residents. Since the proposed project does not include any new residential development, the City should not anticipate additional service costs resulting from the proposed project. 64 Projected Net Fiscal General Fund Balance As shown at the bottom of Table 32, this analysis estimates that the proposed project generates a net fiscal surplus of approximately $681,100 annually to the City of Petaluma General Fund, owing largely to the sales taxes generated. This surplus represents 1.8 percent of the City’s General Fund budget, indicating that the proposed project would have a relatively significant positive impact on the City’s overall fiscal position. Table 32: Net Fiscal Impact Revenues Sales Tax Revenues Property Tax Revenues Property Transfer Tax Revenues ILVLF Revenues Franchise Fee Revenues Licenses, Permits, and Fees Revenues Fines, Forfeitures, and Penalties Revenues Business License Revenues 2009 Dollars $714,218 $17,041 $6,288 $33,595 $8,134 $1,974 $2,052 $1,080 SUBTOTAL: Revenues $784,382 Costs (a) Police Fire Public Works Community Development General Government 2009 Dollars $54,683 $26,485 $14,497 $1,260 $6,339 SUBTOTAL: Costs $103,263 Net Fiscal Impact $681,119 (a) As the development does not include any new residential units, the analysis assumes that increases to the Parks and Recreation and Animal Services Departments will be zero, since workers who do not live within the City are not likely to use these services. Source: BAE, 2009. 65 Non-General Fund Revenues and Costs This chapter of the analysis evaluates the potential impacts to non-General Fund costs and revenues including development impact fees, other public revenue benefits, and public contributions. Development Impact Fees In addition to providing ongoing municipal services to the new development, the City of Petaluma may also need to increase its capital facilities, including fire suppression and law enforcement facilities, in order to maintain current service standards and serve new development. The City uses development impact fees to fund these improvements. AB1600 Requirements. The fee per new development must meet the nexus requirements set forth in AB 1600. AB 1600, adopted in 1987 as the “Mitigation Fee Act,” requires that new development only pay its fair share of capital facility needs. Cities generally update their fees every few years to keep in compliance with AB1600 requirements as infrastructure and facility needs change. Projected Development Impact Fee Revenues. In May 2008, the City of Petaluma adopted a series of impact fee mitigation studies that set citywide development impact fees. Table 33 shows the development impact fees that the City would collect from Deer Creek Village. Fees are estimated to total approximately $9.2 million. As AB1600 requirements limits the amount of development fees a city can charge based on the nexus between new development and capital facility needs, and the City recently adopted the current fee structure, the City should not suffer any capital facility shortfalls between need and fees collected resulting from the proposed development. In addition to the above development fees, the May 2008 City of Petaluma Traffic Mitigation Fee Program Update states that “development projects adjacent to major new roadway connections, such as Rainier Avenue, Caulfield Lane and Copeland Street, will experience higher transportation costs for their projects because they will be responsible for dedicating right-of-way 28 and building the portion of public roadways that traverse and/or are adjacent to their properties.” The dedication and improvements will result in significant additional City benefits. However, as the amount of land dedicated and types of improvements have not yet been specified, it is not yet possible to quantify the additional City benefits. 28 May 2008. City of Petaluma Traffic Mitigation Fee Program Update. Page 2. 66 Table 33: Projected Development Impact Fee Revenues Building Sq. Ft 303,295 11,800 Total Fee $18,804 $696 Square Foot Square Foot 11,800 303,295 $24,544 $1,088,829 $261 $249 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $79,160 $2,938 Retail Uses Office Uses $144 $138 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $43,674 $1,628 Law Enforcement Facilities Retail Office $217 $208 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $65,815 $2,454 Library Facilities Commercial Office $111 $106 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $33,666 $1,251 Open Space Acquisition Commercial Office $1,127 $1,078 Unit 1,000 square feet 20 11,800 $22,540 $12,720 Park Land Acquisition Commercial Office $608 $581 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $184,403 $6,856 Park Land Development Commercial Office $1,041 $996 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $315,730 $11,753 Public Facilities Commercial Office $248 $237 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $75,217 $2,797 Traffic (Locally Preferred) (a) Office $15,198 Commercial/Shoppin $14,723 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet 303,295 11,800 $4,609,477 $173,731 Fee Type Aquatic Center Facilities Land Use Type Commercial Office Fee $62 $59 Commercial Linkage Commercial Retail $2.08 $3.59 Community Center Facilities Commercial Office Fire Suppression Facilities Unit of Measurement 1,000 square feet 1,000 square feet Wastewater (b) $1,023,754 Water Capacity Non-Residential Any Land Use $18,078 $45,195 1" meter/business 2" meter/business Storm Drain Commercial $9,000 Acre Parking Commercial $20,000 space Public Art Commercial 1% construction budget GRAND TOTAL 21 3 $379,638 $135,585 36.29 $326,610 n/a (c) $53,500,000 n/a $535,000 $9,179,272 (a) Provides a more conservative estimate. (b) Estimates from City allow for water conservation credits. (c) Only applies to projects in the Central Petaluma Specific Plan area. Sources: City of Petaluma; BAE, 2009. 67 Other Public Revenue Benefits The City could also anticipate additional benefits from property tax increment accruing to the Redevelopment Agency or through developer land dedication, exactions, or developer-funded improvements. Redevelopment Funds. Since the proposed project is located within the Petaluma Community Development (PCD) Area redevelopment area, the City’s redevelopment agency will receive additional benefits from the property tax increment. According to the City’s redevelopment consultant, Seifel Consulting, the redevelopment agency collects the property tax increment, which equals one percent of the net new assessed value. The redevelopment agency then passes a portion of the increment through to other agencies, including the County for administrative services, the County General Fund and County Library, which set up contractual pass through agreements with the redevelopment agency, and other taxing entities. As Table 34 shows, the redevelopment agency retains approximately 49 percent of the total property tax increment, which amounts to approximately $311,000 in 2009, and increasing in following years assuming an increase in property values over time. Table 34: Projected Redevelopment Agency Revenues Property Tax Revenues Property Tax Increment New Assessed Value (a) Basic Property Tax as a Percentage of Assessed Value Total Property Tax Increment Less: County Admin Share Less: Other Taxing Entities Share, Statutory Pass Throughs (b) Less: Contractual Pass Throughs (c) Redevelopment Agency's Share of Property Tax Increment Total Redevelopment Agency Revenues 2009 Dollars $62,881,107 1.0% $628,811 1.278% 20.000% 29.280% 49.442% $310,897 (a) Assessed values based on construction costs and estimated land value increment since inception of redevelopment. See Appendix H for details. (b) Other taxing entities include all government entities entitled to a share of the base property tax if this were not a Redevelopment Area, excepting those with contractual agreements as shown in next item footnote. City share of this 20% is shown in Table 20. (c) County General Fund and County Library contractually get pass throughs equal to 96 percent of their base allocations (28.6 and 1.9 percent respectively). Sources: City of Petaluma; Sonoma County Auditor-Controller; Sonoma County Assessor's Office; Merlone Geier Partners; Seifel Consulting; BAE, 2008. Developer Contributions. Other than the dedication requirements specified in the traffic mitigation fee study, there are currently no other specified developer contributions that would benefit the City. 68 Public Contributions to Proposed Project Finally, this analysis examines the cost to the City of public contributions. Such contributions could include land write downs, tax rebates or refunds, below market or contingent loans, site acquisition or preparation costs, fee waivers or payments, and unfunded infrastructure and public improvement costs. According to Community Development Director Mike Moore, the City is not planning to extend any of these payments to the Deer Creek development. Thus, no public contribution costs should accrue to the City. Summary of Non-General Fund Revenues and Costs The City’s development impact fees have been recently updated, so the fees of approximately $9.2 million should cover the public costs associated with the Proposed Project. The Petaluma Community Development Commission should also benefit substantially from the property tax increment, since the project is in the Petaluma Community Development Area. The City will also benefit from the developer’s land dedication for the eventual completion of a new highway interchange. Currently, the City has no plans to make any public contributions such as land write-downs, tax rebates or refunds, below-market or contingent loans to the project, or to pay for any other costs associated with the development of the project. 69 Appendices 70 Appendix A: Trade Area Census Tracts County Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Sonoma Tract 1501 1502.01 1502.02 1503.02 1503.03 1503.04 1506.01 1506.02 1506.03 1506.05 1506.06 1507.01 1507.02 1508 1509.01 1509.02 1510 71 Appendix B: Unemployment and Labor Force Trends in Civilian Labor Force Petaluma 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 November 2008 (a) Sonoma County Labor Force (a) Employment Unemployment Unemployment Rate Labor Force (a) Employment 31,200 31,800 31,700 31,300 31,500 31,500 31,800 32,200 30,200 30,700 30,300 29,800 30,100 30,200 30,600 31,000 1,000 1,100 1,500 1,600 1,400 1,300 1,200 1,300 3.0% 3.3% 4.6% 5.0% 4.5% 4.0% 3.6% 4.0% 253,100 257,900 258,100 254,800 256,100 256,200 258,100 262,000 244,600 248,400 244,900 240,900 243,400 244,700 247,800 250,500 8,500 9,500 13,100 13,900 12,700 11,400 10,400 11,600 3.4% 3.7% 5.1% 5.5% 5.0% 4.5% 4.0% 4.4% 33,200 31,300 2,000 5.9% 270,500 252,900 17,500 6.5% Change, 2000-2007 1,000 Number 3% Percent 800 3% Unemployment Unemployment Rate 300 30% 8,900 4% 5,900 2% 3,100 36% Notes: Civilian Labor Force refers to workers by place of residence. Sum may not equal parts due to independent rounding. Data represent annual averages of monthly employment data. Uses benchmarks from March 2007. (a) Preliminary. Sources: California Employment Development Department; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 72 Appendix C-1: Petaluma Taxable Retail Sales Trends, 1997 to 2007 (Adjusted for Inflation) City of Petaluma Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores 1997 $27,833 $54,344 $46,031 $56,002 $17,251 $34,198 $161,112 $46,288 $62,493 1998 $30,055 $60,076 $46,166 $58,862 $18,294 $35,063 $197,818 $42,459 $67,684 1999 $28,842 $65,420 $48,142 $62,602 $18,365 $36,880 $253,726 $51,899 $81,254 2000 $30,521 $65,632 $49,229 $66,977 $20,956 $43,042 $293,227 $62,082 $91,448 2001 $29,826 $67,659 $53,825 $70,635 $18,070 $37,517 $304,741 $60,320 $89,690 2002 $28,059 $66,170 $56,250 $71,186 $19,510 $40,078 $317,920 $52,156 $91,445 2003 $28,499 $63,365 $57,889 $73,529 $18,053 $41,509 $327,462 $56,385 $92,112 2004 $39,092 $59,682 $59,309 $74,528 $17,220 $44,843 $329,118 $65,233 $100,600 2005 $47,089 $56,334 $59,642 $76,872 $17,664 $45,000 $322,471 $67,967 $100,964 2006 $50,415 $55,087 $59,829 $80,498 $16,457 $40,328 $302,244 $81,019 $98,521 2007 $65,163 $51,054 $58,100 $84,687 $13,324 $46,226 $268,358 $87,978 $83,053 $505,551 $556,477 $647,132 $723,115 $732,284 $742,775 $758,803 $789,623 $794,004 $784,398 $757,943 Deer Creek Village Retail Types (c) $298,151 $316,200 $341,507 $367,805 $367,223 $372,699 $374,956 $395,272 $403,566 $401,135 $401,607 Petaluma Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (d) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores 1997 $558 $1,089 $922 $1,122 $346 $685 $3,228 $927 $1,252 1998 $588 $1,176 $903 $1,152 $358 $686 $3,871 $831 $1,324 1999 $550 $1,247 $918 $1,194 $350 $703 $4,838 $990 $1,549 2000 $560 $1,203 $902 $1,228 $384 $789 $5,375 $1,138 $1,676 2001 $538 $1,221 $971 $1,274 $326 $677 $5,497 $1,088 $1,618 2002 $503 $1,187 $1,009 $1,277 $350 $719 $5,705 $936 $1,641 2003 $511 $1,135 $1,037 $1,318 $323 $744 $5,868 $1,010 $1,651 2004 $697 $1,065 $1,058 $1,329 $307 $800 $5,871 $1,164 $1,795 2005 $836 $1,000 $1,059 $1,365 $314 $799 $5,724 $1,206 $1,792 2006 $893 $976 $1,060 $1,426 $291 $714 $5,354 $1,435 $1,745 2007 $1,148 $900 $1,024 $1,492 $235 $815 $4,729 $1,550 $1,464 Retail Stores Total $10,130 $10,890 $12,340 $13,256 $13,210 $13,328 $13,598 $14,086 $14,094 $13,894 $13,357 $5,974 $6,188 $6,512 $6,743 $6,624 $6,688 $6,719 $7,051 $7,163 $7,105 $7,078 Retail Stores Total Deer Creek Village Retail Types (c) Population 49,907 51,102 52,443 54,550 55,435 55,730 55,804 56,057 56,337 56,455 56,743 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) Excludes Building Materials, Auto, and Service Station categories. (d) Per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Sources: State Board of Equalization; 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 73 Appendix C-2: Sonoma City Taxable Retail Sales Trends, 1997 to 2007 (Adjusted for Inflation) City of Sonoma Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) (c) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores (c) Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements (c) Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total Sonoma Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (c) (d) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores (c) Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements (c) Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total (b) Population 1997 $5,421 $17,167 $21,983 $27,022 $3,491 $15,681 $20,799 $9,820 $15,284 1998 $5,198 $17,534 $23,472 $30,202 $4,773 $15,699 $22,562 $9,611 $15,986 1999 $6,270 $18,009 $24,195 $31,300 $4,654 $17,302 $26,284 $13,782 $17,275 2000 $7,354 $17,530 $24,621 $34,269 $6,290 $17,445 $24,613 $17,577 $18,535 2001 $7,852 $18,799 $26,413 $36,859 $6,458 $17,390 $28,261 $16,944 $20,306 2002 $8,343 $18,982 $27,523 $38,091 $5,200 $17,875 $28,399 $15,124 $20,179 $136,667 $145,038 $159,069 $168,234 $179,282 $179,717 1997 $611 $1,936 $2,479 $3,048 $394 $1,768 $2,346 $1,107 $1,724 1998 $575 $1,939 $2,595 $3,339 $528 $1,736 $2,495 $1,063 $1,768 1999 $688 $1,975 $2,654 $3,433 $510 $1,898 $2,883 $1,511 $1,895 2000 $793 $1,890 $2,655 $3,695 $678 $1,881 $2,654 $1,895 $1,998 2001 $827 $1,979 $2,781 $3,881 $680 $1,831 $2,975 $1,784 $2,138 2002 $881 $2,004 $2,905 $4,021 $549 $1,887 $2,998 $1,596 $2,130 2003 $785 $1,839 $2,842 $4,254 $479 # $2,747 $1,712 $4,004 2004 $770 $1,811 $2,814 $4,306 $463 # $2,583 $1,995 $4,193 2005 $780 $1,744 $2,771 $4,478 $532 # $2,129 $2,009 $4,359 2006 $779 $1,734 $2,697 $4,277 $576 # $1,794 $2,092 $4,431 2007 $870 $1,823 $3,014 $4,174 $624 # $2,319 $2,106 $3,970 $15,413 $16,037 $17,446 $18,138 $18,876 $18,969 $18,662 $18,935 $18,802 $18,380 $18,900 8,867 9,044 9,118 9,275 9,498 9,474 2003 $7,508 $17,599 $27,192 $40,709 $4,584 # $26,289 $16,380 $38,317 $178,580 9,569 2004 $7,476 $17,589 $27,336 $41,830 $4,493 # $25,096 $19,381 $40,730 $183,930 9,714 2005 $7,633 $17,059 $27,110 $43,807 $5,208 # $20,831 $19,653 $42,639 $183,940 9,783 2006 $7,667 $17,072 $26,546 $42,100 $5,669 # $17,657 $20,598 $43,621 $180,929 2007 $8,612 $18,049 $29,835 $41,311 $6,174 # $22,954 $20,844 $39,292 $187,071 9,844 9,898 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) A "#" sign indicates data supressed to preserve confidentiality due to four or fewer outlets or sales of more than 80% of the category in one store. Suppressed sales have been combined with Other Retail Stores, so evaluation of changes in the Other Retail category should take this into consideration. (d) Per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Sources: State Board of Equalization; 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 74 Appendix C-3: Novato Taxable Retail Sales Trends, 1997 to 2007 (Adjusted for Inflation) City of Novato Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) (c) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores 1997 $21,846 $144,664 $28,278 $47,101 $8,260 $17,285 $54,561 $32,190 $75,915 1998 $19,787 $160,014 $31,413 $50,201 $9,297 $18,563 $66,681 $28,238 $96,566 1999 $19,161 $170,754 $33,605 $53,313 $10,547 $21,697 $73,922 $29,445 $101,164 2000 $23,304 $177,782 $33,288 $57,761 $12,149 $22,681 $80,915 $31,310 $97,977 2001 $23,658 $174,263 $33,807 $59,494 $11,851 $24,690 $86,412 $26,871 $93,001 2002 $22,420 $175,437 $33,734 $62,251 $12,366 $24,678 $92,243 $28,465 $71,385 2003 $22,655 $172,301 $32,320 $62,280 $12,110 $24,540 $87,846 $33,805 $74,315 2004 $23,326 $174,775 $30,937 $63,577 $12,018 $28,094 $107,664 $41,139 $83,384 2005 $22,256 $175,886 $30,882 $64,549 $12,719 $27,345 $106,480 $48,970 $89,783 2006 $25,972 $177,516 $32,992 $65,985 $12,353 $26,405 $105,546 $62,228 $91,692 2007 $26,815 $175,419 $33,440 $69,521 $12,650 $25,356 $98,845 $66,375 $87,040 $430,098 $480,760 $513,609 $537,167 $534,045 $522,979 $522,172 $564,915 $578,870 $600,688 $595,461 Deer Creek Village Retail Types (c) $343,348 $385,841 $410,241 $424,942 $420,763 $402,271 $400,521 $416,112 $423,420 $432,914 $430,241 Novato Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (d) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores 1997 $486 $3,218 $629 $1,048 $184 $384 $1,214 $716 $1,688 1998 $434 $3,509 $689 $1,101 $204 $407 $1,462 $619 $2,118 1999 $415 $3,702 $729 $1,156 $229 $470 $1,603 $638 $2,193 2000 $489 $3,733 $699 $1,213 $255 $476 $1,699 $657 $2,057 2001 $490 $3,606 $700 $1,231 $245 $511 $1,788 $556 $1,925 2002 $460 $3,598 $692 $1,277 $254 $506 $1,892 $584 $1,464 2003 $465 $3,533 $663 $1,277 $248 $503 $1,801 $693 $1,524 2004 $471 $3,529 $625 $1,284 $243 $567 $2,174 $831 $1,683 2005 $441 $3,487 $612 $1,280 $252 $542 $2,111 $971 $1,780 2006 $509 $3,476 $646 $1,292 $242 $517 $2,067 $1,219 $1,796 2007 $508 $3,326 $634 $1,318 $240 $481 $1,874 $1,259 $1,650 $9,566 $10,543 $11,136 $11,278 $11,052 $10,726 $10,707 $11,405 $11,475 $11,763 $11,291 $7,637 $8,461 $8,894 $8,922 $8,707 $8,250 $8,213 $8,401 $8,393 $8,478 $8,158 Retail Stores Total Retail Stores Total Deer Creek Village Retail Types (c) Population 44,960 45,600 46,123 47,630 48,323 48,760 48,769 49,532 50,447 51,066 52,737 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) Excludes Building Materials, Auto, and Service Station categories. (d) Per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Sources: State Board of Equalization; 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 75 Appendix C-4: Rohnert Park Taxable Retail Sales Trends, 1997 to 2007 (Adjusted for Inflation) City of Rohnert Park Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) (c) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores 1997 $7,132 $83,655 $28,544 $41,740 $18,525 $81,691 $15,709 $23,698 $56,427 1998 $4,052 $94,386 $30,823 $48,622 $14,331 $89,441 $19,033 $22,041 $51,131 1999 $8,614 $93,341 $32,622 $51,185 $28,018 $101,315 $17,115 $26,833 $46,893 2000 $10,202 $95,554 $33,826 $54,739 $30,261 $107,416 $24,527 $31,893 $66,439 2001 $9,952 $100,136 $34,770 $57,392 $32,782 $108,464 $24,710 $30,120 $61,296 2002 $11,670 $125,658 $37,413 $59,606 $55,924 $107,829 $18,793 $28,422 $59,831 2003 $11,212 $188,377 $38,990 $64,179 $49,841 $111,215 $21,276 $31,039 $60,612 2004 2005 2006 2007 # $202,731 $41,831 $70,177 $46,774 $122,875 $20,343 $30,391 $74,193 # $211,870 $41,709 $73,606 $41,627 $109,310 $19,018 $32,327 $81,619 # $214,634 $41,110 $74,832 $36,529 $103,094 $19,758 $35,132 $80,343 # $217,032 $37,170 $75,291 $40,211 $76,206 $27,947 $38,814 $61,219 $357,121 $373,861 $405,937 $454,857 $459,623 $505,146 $576,742 $611,320 $613,089 $607,438 $575,897 Deer Creek Village Retail Types (c) $317,714 $332,787 $361,989 $398,437 $404,793 $457,931 $524,427 $560,586 $561,744 $552,548 $509,136 Rohnert Park Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (c) (e) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total (b) 1997 $176 $2,066 $705 $1,031 $457 $2,017 $388 $585 $1,393 1998 1999 $205 $2,221 $776 $1,218 $667 $2,411 $407 $639 $1,116 2000 $242 $2,262 $801 $1,296 $716 $2,543 $581 $755 $1,573 2001 $235 $2,369 $823 $1,358 $775 $2,566 $585 $713 $1,450 2002 $277 $2,978 $887 $1,413 $1,325 $2,555 $445 $674 $1,418 2003 $264 $4,442 $919 $1,513 $1,175 $2,622 $502 $732 $1,429 2004 2005 2006 2007 $98 $2,285 $746 $1,177 $347 $2,165 $461 $534 $1,238 # $4,798 $990 $1,661 $1,107 $2,908 $481 $719 $1,756 # $5,017 $988 $1,743 $986 $2,589 $450 $766 $1,933 # $5,012 $960 $1,747 $853 $2,407 $461 $820 $1,876 # $5,074 $869 $1,760 $940 $1,782 $653 $907 $1,431 $8,819 $9,049 $9,659 $10,769 $10,873 $11,971 $13,599 $14,467 $14,518 $14,185 $13,464 $7,846 $8,055 $8,614 $9,434 $9,576 $10,852 $12,365 $13,266 $13,302 $12,903 $11,903 Retail Stores Total Deer Creek Village Retail Types (c) Population 40,495 41,314 42,025 42,236 42,272 42,198 42,412 42,256 42,229 42,824 42,772 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) A "#" sign indicates data supressed to preserve confidentiality due to four or fewer outlets or sales of more than 80% of the category in one store. Suppressed sales have been combined with Other Retail Stores, (d) Excludes Building Materials, Auto, and Service Station categories. (e) Per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Sources: State Board of Equalization; 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 76 Appendix C-5: Sonoma County Taxable Retail Sales Trends, 1997 to 2007 (Adjusted for Inflation) Sonoma County Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores 1997 $135,292 $582,220 $321,708 $388,070 $161,053 $432,281 $690,425 $297,848 $644,054 1998 $139,357 $655,693 $330,763 $417,957 $176,015 $462,556 $815,006 $267,108 $685,297 1999 $144,793 $718,882 $348,222 $441,990 $201,763 $542,477 $968,080 $312,384 $741,903 2000 $162,552 $753,903 $365,665 $475,884 $232,059 $580,471 $1,114,306 $367,198 $842,307 2001 $174,696 $777,063 $383,476 $496,558 $227,132 $600,338 $1,145,340 $370,082 $839,301 2002 $179,581 $789,126 $390,265 $507,672 $249,830 $613,612 $1,146,561 $338,312 $848,897 2003 $187,827 $827,183 $398,995 $524,616 $248,690 $635,338 $1,154,591 $387,075 $859,516 2004 $209,478 $841,178 $403,279 $542,924 $251,449 $707,690 $1,149,315 $434,860 $907,733 2005 $231,840 $840,160 $406,883 $565,703 $243,958 $732,541 $1,115,741 $479,693 $951,305 2006 $239,661 $841,011 $406,985 $573,896 $236,820 $732,812 $1,042,668 $521,839 $944,493 2007 $258,991 $845,947 $398,084 $592,801 $222,132 $611,581 $1,033,898 $582,426 $858,737 $3,652,952 $3,949,753 $4,420,494 $4,894,345 $5,013,986 $5,063,856 $5,223,831 $5,447,907 $5,567,825 $5,540,184 $5,404,597 $2,664,679 $2,867,639 $3,140,031 $3,412,841 $3,498,565 $3,578,984 $3,682,165 $3,863,732 $3,972,391 $3,975,677 $3,788,273 1997 $312 $1,341 $741 $894 $371 $996 $1,590 $686 $1,484 1998 $315 $1,483 $748 $946 $398 $1,046 $1,844 $604 $1,550 1999 $322 $1,599 $775 $983 $449 $1,207 $2,154 $695 $1,651 2000 $354 $1,644 $797 $1,038 $506 $1,266 $2,430 $801 $1,837 2001 $376 $1,673 $825 $1,069 $489 $1,292 $2,466 $797 $1,807 2002 $383 $1,684 $833 $1,084 $533 $1,310 $2,447 $722 $1,812 2003 $399 $1,757 $847 $1,114 $528 $1,349 $2,452 $822 $1,826 2004 $442 $1,776 $852 $1,147 $531 $1,495 $2,427 $918 $1,917 2005 $488 $1,767 $856 $1,190 $513 $1,541 $2,347 $1,009 $2,001 2006 $502 $1,763 $853 $1,203 $497 $1,536 $2,186 $1,094 $1,980 2007 $540 $1,764 $830 $1,236 $463 $1,275 $2,155 $1,214 $1,790 $8,414 $8,936 $9,835 $10,672 $10,793 $10,809 $11,095 $11,505 $11,710 $11,616 $11,267 East Washington Place Retail Types (d) $6,138 $6,488 $6,986 $7,442 $7,531 $7,639 $7,821 $8,160 $8,355 $8,336 $7,898 Population 434,133 442,025 449,455 458,614 464,543 468,501 470,829 473,521 475,461 476,956 479,668 Retail Stores Total Deer Creek Village Retail Types (c) Sonoma County Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (d) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total (b) (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) Excludes Food, Building Materials, Auto, and Service Station categories. (d) Per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Sources: State Board of Equalization; 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 77 Appendix C-6: California Taxable Retail Sales Trends, 1997 to 2007 (Adjusted for Inflation) California Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total California Sales per Capita in 2007 $ (c) Apparel Stores General Merchandise Stores Food Stores Eating and Drinking Places Home Furnishings and Appliances Building Materials and Farm Implements Auto Dealers and Auto Supplies Service Stations Other Retail Stores Retail Stores Total (b) Population 1997 $12,289,592 $38,930,895 $16,972,823 $30,114,227 $10,267,178 $18,754,496 $40,524,458 $20,590,076 $43,109,705 1998 $12,706,968 $42,004,330 $17,455,065 $32,546,359 $11,411,754 $20,974,482 $45,930,127 $18,794,027 $46,673,805 1999 $12,337,931 $45,814,292 $18,496,636 $34,948,302 $12,896,294 $23,961,220 $52,827,017 $21,876,691 $52,052,619 2000 $13,570,706 $48,409,654 $19,408,915 $37,458,301 $14,358,213 $26,201,904 $59,921,922 $26,628,562 $57,272,036 2001 $14,159,860 $49,910,072 $19,908,166 $38,972,373 $14,100,349 $27,985,893 $64,277,633 $26,043,887 $55,535,499 2002 $14,956,350 $51,691,252 $20,203,857 $40,596,418 $14,907,403 $29,929,600 $68,038,905 $25,509,708 $55,711,516 $231,553,449 $248,496,918 $275,211,003 $303,230,214 $310,893,732 $321,545,008 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 $16,187,177 $53,905,842 $20,695,907 $42,707,771 $16,106,674 $32,730,879 $71,502,347 $29,554,037 $58,079,012 2004 $17,804,640 $56,635,384 $20,816,646 $45,437,888 $17,225,272 $38,985,973 $74,306,213 $34,396,928 $62,065,078 2005 $19,198,983 $58,264,661 $21,678,197 $47,620,432 $17,841,129 $40,689,358 $75,516,360 $39,569,986 $65,206,923 2006 $19,972,158 $59,691,512 $22,021,568 $49,583,796 $17,508,584 $40,098,124 $72,090,047 $43,893,427 $67,008,050 2007 $20,855,890 $59,897,350 $22,461,059 $51,658,575 $16,720,852 $32,656,324 $70,779,978 $47,084,940 $64,910,134 $341,469,645 $367,676,027 $385,588,035 $391,869,271 $387,027,109 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 $382 $1,209 $527 $935 $319 $582 $1,258 $639 $1,338 $389 $1,286 $534 $997 $349 $642 $1,406 $575 $1,429 $372 $1,382 $558 $1,055 $389 $723 $1,594 $660 $1,571 $401 $1,429 $573 $1,106 $424 $774 $1,769 $786 $1,691 $411 $1,450 $578 $1,132 $410 $813 $1,867 $756 $1,613 $427 $1,474 $576 $1,158 $425 $854 $1,940 $728 $1,589 $454 $1,512 $580 $1,198 $452 $918 $2,006 $829 $1,629 $492 $1,565 $575 $1,255 $476 $1,077 $2,053 $950 $1,715 $523 $1,589 $591 $1,298 $486 $1,109 $2,059 $1,079 $1,778 $538 $1,608 $593 $1,336 $472 $1,080 $1,942 $1,183 $1,805 $555 $1,595 $598 $1,375 $445 $869 $1,884 $1,254 $1,728 $7,189 $7,609 $8,304 $8,952 $9,029 $9,170 $9,578 $10,157 $10,514 $10,558 $10,304 32,207,869 32,657,877 33,140,771 33,873,086 34,430,970 35,063,959 35,652,700 36,199,342 36,675,346 37,114,598 37,559,440 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) Analysis excludes all non-retail outlets (business and personal services) reporting taxable sales. (c) Per capita sales calculated based on State Board of Equalization reported sales and annual Department of Finance population estimates benchmarked to the decennial Census. Sources: State Board of Equalization; 2000 U.S. Census; State Department of Finance; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 78 Appendix D: Home Furnishings and Appliances Sales Detail Sales in 2007 $000 (a) (b) Furniture and Home Furnishings Electronics and Appliances Home Furnishings and Appliances Total Sales Per Capita in 2007 $ (a) (b) Furniture and Home Furnishings Electronics and Appliances Home Furnishings and Appliances Total Population, 2002 Petaluma $9,854 $17,053 Novato $25,293 $7,238 Rohnert Park $27,415 $22,263 Sonoma County $187,367 $210,995 $26,907 $32,530 $49,678 $398,362 Petaluma $177 $306 Novato $519 $148 Rohnert Park $650 $528 Sonoma County $400 $450 $483 $667 $1,177 $850 55,730 48,760 42,198 468,501 (a) Retail sales have been adjusted to 2007 dollars based on the Taxable Sales Deflators calculated by the State Board of Equalization (BOE). (b) This table relies on data from the 2002 Census of Retail Trade rather than the CA State Board of Equalization. Numbers may not exactly match state taxable sales data due to use of different source data, different classification of individual outlets, and inclusion of non-taxable sales in the data presented here. (c) Data not available due to disclosure rules. Sources: 2002 Census of Retail Trade; State Board of Equalization; Bay Area Economics, 2008. 79 Appendix E: Estimate of Retail Sales in Unincorporated Portion of Trade Area From 2002 Economic Census Sonoma County NAICS Category Sales ($1,000) A Number of Employees B Sales per Employee C =A*1,000 / C 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 451 452 453 454 Motor vehicle & parts dealers Furniture & home furnishings stores Electronics & appliance stores Bldng mtrial & grdn equip & supplies Food & beverage stores Health & personal care stores Gasoline stations Clothing & clothing accessories stores Sporting goods, hobby, book, & music stores General merchandise stores Miscellaneous store retailers Nonstore retailers Total Retail Sector $1,332,598 $178,448 $200,952 $610,256 $1,180,440 $327,631 $299,133 $245,567 $169,726 $735,573 $178,224 $273,400 $5,731,948 3,546 996 875 2,772 5,905 2,173 861 2,027 1,481 2,944 1,402 1,124 26,106 $375,803 $179,165 $229,659 $220,150 $199,905 $150,774 $347,425 $121,148 $114,602 $249,855 $127,121 $243,238 $219,564 722 Food services and drinking establishments TOTAL $537,967 $6,269,915 12,865 65,077 $41,816 $96,346 Unincorporated Sonoma County NAICS Category Sales ($1,000) E Number of Employees F Sales per Employee G =E*1,000 / F 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 451 452 453 454 Motor vehicle & parts dealers Furniture & home furnishings stores Electronics & appliance stores Bldng mtrial & grdn equip & supplies Food & beverage stores Health & personal care stores Gasoline stations Clothing & clothing accessories stores Sporting goods, hobby, book, & music stores General merchandise stores Miscellaneous store retailers Nonstore retailers $83,930 $7,835 $10,043 $152,875 $257,045 $19,337 $44,558 $33,346 $14,698 $1,745 $36,693 $31,196 $693,301 300 51 51 783 1,500 150 150 321 150 8 261 150 3,873 $279,767 $153,599 $196,888 $195,243 $171,380 $129,259 $297,849 $103,861 $98,249 $214,202 $140,586 $208,530 $178,987 722 Food services and drinking establishments TOTAL $76,942 $770,243 1,840 5,713 $41,816 $134,812 Employment Distribution D 14% 4% 3% 11% 23% 8% 3% 8% 6% 11% 5% 4% 100% Employment Distribution H 8% 1% 1% 20% 39% 4% 4% 8% 4% 0% 7% 4% 100% Cells in gray represent estimates, based on employment class size stated in Economic Census. Sales per employee, where estimated, is derived by taking the sales per employee for each category for the County and adjusting this number and the employment number by a factor so that the total sales for all retail (excluding NAICS 722, which is classified with services in the Economics Census) is equal to the total stated in the Census of Retail Trade for unincorporated Sonoma County. This also has the effect of making the employment numbers roughly equivalent to the total stated. NAICS 722 employment is estimated by taking the published numbers for all components of the sector, and adding the low end of the estimate for the one compononet NAICS sector where only an employment range is given. continued on next page 80 Appendix E: Estimate of Retail Sales in Unincorporated Portion of Trade Area Unincorporated Sonoma County by State Board of Equalization Categories Apparel stores General merchandise stores Food stores Home furnishings and appliances Building materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service stations Other retail Total Retail Sector Eating and drinking places Total all SBE retail categories Sales ($1,000) I grouped from E Number of Employees J grouped from F Estimated Taxable Sales ($1,000) K adjusted from I Taxable Sales per Employee L =K*1,000 / J $33,346 $1,745 $257,045 $17,878 $152,875 $83,930 $44,558 $101,924 $693,301 321 8 1,500 102 783 300 150 710 3,873 $33,346 $1,745 $77,114 $17,878 $152,875 $83,930 $44,558 $101,924 $513,369 $103,861 $214,202 $51,414 $175,244 $195,243 $279,767 $297,849 $143,596 $132,534 $110,725 $228,358 $54,812 $186,825 $208,146 $298,256 $317,534 $153,086 $141,293 $76,942 1,840 $76,942 $41,816 $44,580 $770,243 5,713 $590,311 $103,319 $110,147 Inflator, 2002-2007 (BOE Taxable Sales Deflators) 1.066087 Employment Distribution N from H Estimated Employment O Estimated Taxable Sales P =M*O Rounded (in $1,000) Q =P/1,000 8% 0% 39% 3% 20% 8% 4% 18% 43 1 202 14 106 40 20 96 522 $4,790,726 $250,637 $11,078,793 $2,568,542 $21,963,337 $12,058,106 $6,401,619 $14,643,308 $73,755,068 $4,791 $251 $11,079 $2,569 $21,963 $12,058 $6,402 $14,643 $73,755 Eating and drinking places 409 $18,233,157 $18,233 Total all SBE retail categories 931 $91,988,225 $91,988 Unincorporated Trade Area Apparel stores General merchandise stores Food stores Home furnishings and appliances Building materials Motor Vehicles and Parts Service stations Other retail Total retail sector employment, 2000 Census Inflated to 2007 $ M =L*inflator Total unincorporated retail sector employment from 2000 Census Transportation Planning Package. Trade Area unincorporated distribution by category assumed to follow distribution for entire unincorporated Sonoma County. Based on data from CA State Employment Development Department, overall retail employment in Sonoma County has been relatively unchanged since 2000. This trend is applied to the unincorporated area, with the assumption that employment has remained unchanged since 2000. 30% of total food store sales are taxable. Taxable sales for food stores has been calculated based on the assumption t While the drug store component of general merchandise is generally also adjusted, this sector is of insigificant size here and is not adjusted. Eating and drinking place employment in unincorporated area based on ratio of unincorporated area to total unincorporated county applied to 1,840 food service workers as shown above for unincorporated county for major sector combining arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodation and food services. Employment numbers for Economic Census and 2000 Census are generally similar where comparisons are possible. Arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodation and food services, from Census Transportation Planning Package Workers in unincorporated Trade Area 1,141 22% Workers in unincorporated County 5,133 100% Food services and drinking establishments Workers in unincorporated County times proportion for major sector Estimated workers in unincorporated Trade Area 1,840 22% 409 from Economic Census, above Sources: BAE 2008, based on data from 2000 Census Transportation Planning Package, 2002 Economic Census, CA Employment Development Department, and CA State Board of Equalization. 81 Appendix F: Employment by Industry, 2007 Industry Group Farm Natural Resources & Mining Construction Manufacturing Wholesale Trade Retail Trade Transportation, Warehousing & Utilities Information Financial Activities Professional & Business Services Educational & Health Services Leisure & Hospitality Other Services Government Sonoma County Number Percent 6,000 3.1% 200 0.1% 14,400 7.3% 22,300 11.4% 7,700 3.9% 24,100 12.3% 4,500 2.3% 3,000 1.5% 9,300 4.7% 23,000 11.7% 23,600 12.0% 20,800 10.6% 6,400 3.3% 31,000 15.8% Total, All Industries 196,400 100.0% California Number Percent 386,400 2.5% 25,900 0.2% 892,300 5.7% 1,463,200 9.4% 716,900 4.6% 1,688,800 10.9% 505,200 3.2% 472,800 3.0% 906,600 5.8% 2,263,300 14.6% 1,664,300 10.7% 1,553,100 10.0% 513,600 3.3% 2,497,400 16.1% 15,549,600 100.0% Notes: Annual average wage and salary employment. Workers by place of work, not by place of residence. March 2007 Benchmark. Data may not sum due to independent rounding Source: California Employment Development Department 82 Appendix G: Part vs. Full Time Employment by Key Sectors Number of W orkers Part Time Full Time Number Total Industry Group Number % of Total % of Total Building Materials Apparel Pharmacies Grocery Stores Restaurant Home Electronics Other Retail Retail Types not in Project 13,646 56,941 25,355 105,260 391,964 24,227 135,226 245,629 15.9% 42.8% 30.8% 34.1% 43.2% 16.3% 39.0% 28.0% 72,243 75,956 57,046 203,840 514,706 124,194 211,139 633,045 84.1% 57.2% 69.2% 65.9% 56.8% 83.7% 61.0% 72.0% 85,889 132,897 82,401 309,100 906,670 148,421 346,365 878,674 Bank Fitness Club Office 45,360 86,744 495,643 20.9% 38.4% 20.1% 172,081 139,277 1,966,666 79.1% 61.6% 79.9% 217,441 226,021 2,462,309 Source: 2000 U.S. Census Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS); BAE, 2009. Appendix H: Property Value Estimates Component Total Assessed Land Value Value/Cost $17,500,000 Site Improvements Building Improvements Total Value Improvements $14,100,000 $39,400,000 $53,500,000 Total Assessed Value $71,000,000 Pre-and Post Redevelopment Value Split Estimated Value Pre-RDA $8,118,893 Estimated Value Post-RDA $62,881,107 Land value based on purchase price in 2008. Uses cost method for assuming value of improvements. Pre-RDA value estimated based on known sale value in 2004, with calculation back to 1988 (baseline for redevelopment) assuming 2% increase in assessed value each year per Prop 13. This value is also assumed to be a base value for the property absent this development, so is not included in fiscal analysis. This estimate of value thus may have some degree of error, but the overall fiscal revenue draws largely from the improvements regardless of how the land value is handled. Sources: City of Petaluma; Sonoma County Assessor's Office; Dataquick; Merlone Geier Partners; BAE, 2009. 83