In Los Angeles, the city government does all it can to tax, regulate, humiliate and demean jobs and business. It is as if, business is the enemy and poverty, homelessness, joblessness and high prices are our friends.
“For openers, we are part of an integrated regional economy where boundary lines are meaningless to the business community and its employees. While many people live and work in the City, others may live in the County and work in the City or live in the City and work in the County.
Determining the impact of the local bid preference would be very difficult, especially if other jurisdictions adopted similar policies that targeted the City and its business community. It is the equivalent of starting a trade war where there are no winners, only losers.
But more to the point, the City needs to clean up its act and create a more employer and business friendly environment.
So a high priced mediocre firm, operating from L.A. would get a bid, but those firms with better pricing and quality will not. This is how a Third World country operates—which is what L.A. has become.
Hello LA. Business is Not the Enemy
Jack Humphreville, City Watch, 9/16/21
LA WATCHDOG – The City Council is considering a 2022 ballot measure that would amend the City Charter to limit bid preferences on City contracts to include only business located in the City of Los Angeles.
Currently, business located in the County of Los Angeles and the State of California are eligible for bid preferences on City contracts. According to the Council motion, keeping tax dollars in the City will support the “development, enrichment, growth, expansion, and retention of the local business community and the City’s workforce” and will outweigh the added cost of a local preference program. But to date, there is no evidence to support this claim.
This proposed ballot measure appears to be another poorly thought out scheme cooked up by City Hall without any detailed analysis as to the tradeoffs and additional costs of the local bid preference and possible adverse outcomes.
For openers, we are part of an integrated regional economy where boundary lines are meaningless to the business community and its employees. While many people live and work in the City, others may live in the County and work in the City or live in the City and work in the County.
Determining the impact of the local bid preference would be very difficult, especially if other jurisdictions adopted similar policies that targeted the City and its business community. It is the equivalent of starting a trade war where there are no winners, only losers.
But more to the point, the City needs to clean up its act and create a more employer and business friendly environment.
According to the motion which was passed without discussion by the Rules, Elections, and Intergovernmental Relations Committee of the City Council, the expenses incurred by City businesses related to “labor costs, rent/lease costs, utilities, insurance, sales taxes, and business taxes” are often higher than for business located outside the City, putting Los Angeles firms at a competitive disadvantage.
But rather than trying to level the playing field through legislation, the City should focus on creating a more favorable environment for employers and businesses. This would include lowering the gross receipts tax, especially for small manufacturing and service businesses with revenues of less than $5 million, eliminating the regulatory hurdles for growing businesses that want to expand their operations, and creating a more accommodating bureaucracy, especially in the Planning, Building and Safety, and the Finance Departments. And this is only the beginning.
(Jack Humphreville writes LA Watchdog for CityWatch. He is the President of the DWP Advocacy Committee and is the Budget and DWP representative for the Greater Wilshire Neighborhood Council. He is a Neighborhood Council Budget Advocate. He can be reached at: [email protected].)