How to Keep Business…and Jobs…in LA
CityWatch, Pub: Jan 22, 2010
Vol 8 Issue 6
Our City leaders keep informing us that the Los Angeles budget is in shambles. They tell us that the deficit is large and growing. They say cuts need to be made. They inform us that revenues need to be increased.
In the midst of all these statements, what does our City do? Los Angeles moves forward by doing its best to discourage businesses from doing business in the City. Our fair City enacts unfair business taxes that push businesses away. It appears to me that the Los Angeles motto should be, “The only good business is one that used to be in Los Angeles”.
Why does Los Angeles keep finding new ways to tax the same people that are still in the City? Our City Counsel only needs to read its own statistics which show that the cities adjacent to LA receive twice the sales tax dollars per constituent than those in the City of LA. Could it be that something is scaring high volume businesses from opening or staying in LA?
Would it not be better if the L.A were to be come business friendly and became proactive by bringing new jobs and businesses to our wonderful City?
I have been saying for years most problems usually have simple solutions. Losing local business and their tax generation to nearby and adjacent cities and states is no exception.
Los Angeles’ unfair business taxes are the problem and our enemy here. We all agree the City needs revenues to pay its bills, but pushing businesses out of our community by assessing unfair taxes is not the solution.
Why can’t our leaders see that less business and fewer employees in our City equates to less tax revenues?
One simple solution would be to revisit the business tax schedule in 2010.
How about offering businesses a 1% business tax credit for each full time employee that lives in the City and ½% for every full time employee who lives outside the City? If a company has fifty-one employees living inside the city their tax bill would be 50% lower than a company with only one employee.
Proof of living in the city would be a copy of the employee’s utility bill when submitting the businesses annual business license fee. We might even encourage employers with over 100 employees to move to LA.
How about a business tax credit of 1% for every million dollars of taxable revenue a business generates in the city of LA? That would encourage a lot of high volume retailers or car dealers to move to LA rather than a negative tax for doing a lot of business here. This would be a wonderful encouragement for a car dealer to move from Calabasas or Santa Monica to Los Angeles (for this new tax Heaven).
Yes, I understand that we would initially be loosing a lot of business license fees but can you believe having people working in LA and living LA instead of commuting thirty or more miles a day?
Over the long haul, this short fall would be made up by businesses opening or returning to our City.
Additionally, retailers will be generating hundreds of thousands of dollars in sales tax for the City instead of just a few thousand from business license fees.
Councilmembers are you listening? Or are you too busy contemplating what new taxes and fees you will create in 2010.
(Rickey Gelb is a developer and the Managing Partner of the Gelb Group-A Family of Companies. Gelb is an occasional contributor to CityWatch.) ◘
Leave a Response
You must be logged in to post a comment.


