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Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024

Business Groups Take Different Paths to Winning BIDs

Three years after the Sherman Oaks business improvement district went dormant in 2009, the impact along Ventura and Van Nuys boulevards was clear. “It looked terrible,” recalled Leslie Elkan, president of the board for the Village at Sherman Oaks Business Improvement District. “It was dirty and plants were dying. It took until 2013 to renew (the BID), and we have just done so much ever since. Everything is really flourishing.” There are about 20 business improvement districts throughout the greater San Fernando Valley region, representing property owners and retail merchants. But since the Great Recession, they have had to evolve and adapt to new economic realities. BIDs provide extra services members might not otherwise get, from street maintenance, decorative landscaping and security to marketing and promotional events. In order to pay for these services, property owners within BID boundaries are assessed a special fee, usually on a square-foot basis, that is collected by the city and turned over to the nonprofit BID’s board. Owners are willing to do this because BIDs have proved to be an effective tool at reducing commercial vacancies and boosting property values. As city budgets keep dwindling, economic development consultant Larry Kosmont, chief executive of Manhattan Beach’s Kosmont Cos., said BIDs have a role to play in maintaining retail corridors. “I see a long future for BIDs because cities continue to be constrained for funding, and the costs of pensions continue to have an impact on operations because they limit hiring at the city level,” Kosmont said. “A lot of this is about operational deficiencies as viewed by property owners and I don’t think that’s going to get any better.” Flexible strategies To form a BID, potential members – commercial property owners, merchants or hotel owners – vote publicly either for or against creating a district. Yearly budgets for BIDS usually range from around $100,000 to about $1 million, depending on the assessment amounts and number of members. A board of directors, made up of BID members, decide on how to use the assessments to accomplish the BID’s goals. The challenge for BID organizers is to sell their vision to property owners in order to create the BID – and then again when it’s time to renew the district, or face extinction. The Downtown Burbank Partnership has survived through 14 years and two renewals because it changed strategy on promotional events. About 235 property owners formed the BID to reverse trends of high commercial vacancies and tenant turnovers, said Mary Hamzoian, economic development manager for Burbank. Initially, BID members thought that creating and organizing events would prove to be an effective strategy. But Hamzoian said that after years of planning and hosting numerous events to drive traffic to member stores, a survey revealed that the events, such as expensive weekly concerts with swing dancing, failed to benefit all members. So the BID scaled back funding for the small events and now focuses a portion of its $690,000 annual budget on four larger, seasonal events that impact both large and small merchants. The big four are an arts festival, a classic car show, a beer festival and an ice-skating rink. The BID also partners with the city and other organizations to hold even larger events, such as an annual comedy festival and international film festival. In another shift, it cut an ambassador program and put the money into upping the curb appeal of its infrastructure, such as parking structures. “It’s all about being flexible within the confines of the goals and plans that all the property owners have approved,” Hamzoian said. As evidence the strategy has worked, Hamzoian points to the Yard House, Wood Ranch BBQ & Grill, Gyu-Kaku Japanese BBQ and Five Guys Burgers & Fries, all of which are new tenants in the area. “Overall, it’s definitely on an upward trend,” she said. “We have less than 3 percent vacancy. That does extremely well for us, and our asking rates continue to go up. It’s not good for tenants, but good for property owners.” For the BLVD Association BID in Lancaster, success came after changing its organizational structure in 2013, when it shifted to a property owner-based BID after 20-plus years as a retail merchant-based BID. The change resulted in the BID’s annual budget increasing from $26,000 to $263,000 – a spike of more than 100 percent. That’s because the money assessed on property owners’ square footage is more lucrative than the previous model of taking a slice of the small business license fees, said Chenin Dow, a management analyst with the city of Lancaster’s economic development division and its representative on the BID’s board. Dow said a budget of $26,000 was too small for the BID to execute its mission to increase visitors to downtown Lancaster, even after the area underwent streetscape revitalization in 2010. With the larger budget, the BID now coordinates the cleaning and maintenance of the area along with organizing and marketing events such as the upcoming Bacon, Blues and Brews festival scheduled for May 14, Dow said. As a result of the improving retail traffic, Dow said that 53 new businesses have moved in, rents are rising and commercial property values show double-digit increases. “I think the augmented services have encouraged businesses to locate downtown,” she said. “And certainly the ability to do increased marketing has been valuable to businesses as well.” Renewal challenge Even with success, BIDs aren’t on easy street. They must frequently campaign to maintain support from members when it’s time for renewal. Just ask Elkan at the Sherman Oaks BID, which expired during the recession because its members did not support its renewal. Restarting the BID was nearly as much work as starting from scratch, she explained. “I called up every single member myself and begged,” Elkan said. “It’s not an easy process by any means.” Elkan also had to re-file paperwork with the city, and she undertook a similar amount of work when the BID came up for renewal in 2015 – when it was approved for a five-year term. The BID had previously proposed one-year terms because asking for a longer period is a riskier strategy, she added. “We would’ve really liked to do 10 years, but if we lost, we would’ve lost it all,” Elkan said. “Some BIDs have been successful with the 10. That would be so much better to have that kind of continuity.” BIDs typically need approval from 50 percent of the land owners within district boundaries, but voting is proportional to square footage. That’s where large property owners come in handy, BID representatives said, because two or three together can reach the 50 percent threshold, regardless of how the smaller owners vote. “You’ll get to 50 percent sooner if you have the larger (owners) behind you, but you want to be able to go to council saying you have the support of both large and small property owners.” Burbank’s Hamzoian said. Dow in Lancaster said she starts the renewal campaign a year before election day because she has to track down absentee landlords – another challenge for BIDs. Kosmont, the economic development consultant, said BIDs can advocate and negotiate with the city on behalf of members on issues such as where hotel shuttles pick up and drop off passengers, square footage for outside dining at restaurants, hours of operation, parking requirements and signage regulations. Without a BID, property owners or merchants may not have a single, large voice, Kosmont said, as chambers of commerce typically deal more with state issues versus local security and marketing. “If you’re a property owner, you want a centralized voice to help negotiate a better outcome, or an improved outcome, for better expenditures in the area,” Kosmont said. “There’s so much that can be done.”

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