Buffalo in the future

I just started reading a new book called “The Endless City”, a great book that I’ll probably bring into future posts.
The concept of Buffalo being able to feed off the growth of NYC or Chicago or Toronto due to the centrality of our location has long been held by many but it has for the most part failed to deliver. Buffalo isn’t the only city that has failed at this-Cleveland and Pittsburgh bank on their location in relation to stronger, more global cities yet cannot get much from it.
In the book it has a similar story with similar cities in England. When companies want to come to London but can’t they don’t settle for Manchester or Liverpool or Birmingham. They go to Frankfurt or Paris or Shanghai. This isn’t a theory-the proof is in the tax base. The book continues to add that if England emphasized infrastructure improvements in places like Manchester as a 2nd best choice to starting up shop in London it would just entice the company to go to Frankfurt. Perhaps if that infrastructure money was spent in London, said hypothetical company would have been more enticed.
So what does that hold for Buffalo? If a company wants to go to Toronto and can’t-they’ll go to Montreal or New York or Chicago. Why would a company with the capital and allure go to a 2nd rate rust belt city? Heck, if they had to settle for rust belt they’d go to Cleveland or Pittsburgh because the Economist says they are two of the best 50 cities in the world to live in.
At the same time, cities are becoming more grouped together as mega-regions. Tor-Buf-Chester is cited in this book as the 4th biggest mega-region in North America (and also includes Ottawa and Montreal which is new to me). This is clearly a marketable asset for Buffalo if used right but another important asset in economic development in the 21st century is making sure you have the cultural toys to entice these companies-Pittsburgh and Cleveland do a better job with that but are basically prettier versions of Buffalo with the same ugly problems.
You could apply this theory to what HSBC has done to its’ Buffalo operations. HSBC has moved all their executives to NYC for the 1st time and has moved many operations to Chicago (another global city)-hinting that perhaps Buffalo could lose a significant amount of what remains of HSBC (besides, how can you court new bank executives when you’d be sticking them in Buffalo?).
But to create the cultural toys you have to spend tax money-and Buffalo is doing that. The Martin House, the Richardson Complex, Canal Side, Burchfield-Penney and so on. At the same time these assets add a tax burden, making it harder to entice businesses. An endless cycle of frustration for those who care.
For the 1st time in generations local leadership is showing signs that it wants to be with the times in accordance to how the local economy should be structured. Manufacturing is about 11% of the local economy now and leaders are not waiting for big industry to magically come back anymore but have done a decent job getting light manufacturing to come into and grow in the city (Buffalo Lakeside Commerce Park has been a success story).
A large investment in creating new energy (8 windmills in Lackawanna are a start), heavier investment in the medical campus, and encouraging large growth of local colleges-especially UB will be key. A downtown campus that flows in with a growing Medical Campus can create a contemporary and cutting edge intellectual center that can serve as the cradle for Buffalo’s future as a city of importance in the new knowledge based/white collar economy.
But then again, as it says in “The Endless City”:
The sad truth is that city after city is expending enormous energy chasing the tantalizing prize of biotech, when we know that only 10 or so metropolitan areas really have a shot at agglomeration economies that will make a discernible difference in the creation of jobs and fiscal vitality
Back end operations might expand here and there but expecting legitimate overflow from surrounding global cities is unrealistic-and we have years of proof.
Creating new energy, new science, and new intellectuals is the key to the core of our economy and spending money on our historical assets will help set us apart from new places that serve as our competition.
In the end it might all be worthless. Perhaps Detroit, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Buffalo are all just relics of the past. Perhaps Shanghai, Dubai and Delhi await similar fates 100 years from now as well.
But as of now it seems like these are the only legitimate chances we have of ever becoming a respected metropolitan region in the global scene. Creativity is what made Buffalo a successful place to begin with-creativity is what can take Buffalo out of its own slide to a place below mediocrity in the eyes of national and international business.
Economic Karma
Buffalo’s post-industrial life has consisted of nothing but stories of it getting left behind by the rest of the country as regions diversified their economies and new sectors of employment replaced factory jobs elsewhere.
Although there is no return to glory in sight, America’s recent economic struggles have come while the Buffalo region continues its slow climb out of mediocrity and in some cases-directly benefit from the rest of the country’s woes.
*Retailers in the Buffalo region have done fairly well and sale tax coffers have grown by millions thanks to Canadians as retail in America struggles.
*Recently Buffalo’s job growth topped almost all of Florida.
*Buffalo-Niagara house sales went up 8% percent while the nation went down double digits.
*And the debt-collecting service is bursting out the seams in Buffalo almost as the nation of debt struggles through unofficial recession.
I don’t want to cheer for the demise of America or anything…
American Apparel

American Apparel’s clothing doesn’t particularly interest me- I hate the 70’s. And if not for its sexual ads…
there’s no way in hell I’d see my urbanist/artsy peers busting out spandex, leotards and unisex clothing in 2007.
What fascinates me about their business model is that all the clothes are made in the USA. In downtown LA. Clothes made in the USA?! Wtf mate.
A large factory hosts workers who make about $14.00 an hour, get subsidized lunches, and a health care plan. This could clearly be replicated under the right circumstances.
As someone who is interested in opening a clothing store geared towards the same audience in downtown Buffalo after college, I’d love to be able to say that not only is my store downtown but my factory is too!
Sadly its’ highly unlikely. Unions are important but the Buffalo ones seem to be particularly crippling. I think a lot of people would love to have business here and even treat their employees with good pay and health care like American Apparel but simply don’t want to be tied down to the extensive pre-determined obligations of unions. And if the business is going out of its way to make their employees happy that should be a situation in which unions should step back and watch the local economy grow.
The perks of living in a bubble
Buffalo tends to get left behind a lot since the late 50’s but because of our stagnant economy we seem to avoid things like massive illegal immigration, and housing slumps.
While the nation and even the world panics over the sub-prime loan failures in the US housing market, we see that the Buffalo-Niagara region (that has seen its’ housing market stay pretty level since the 80’s really) saw a 14 % boost in home sales from over a year ago.
This quote gets me pretty pumped up by the way…
Among other trends Taylor says she is seeing: more people buying homes to move back to Buffalo, and greater interest in U.S. properties by Canadians, a reflection of the robust Canadian dollar, she said.
I feel wierd posting about only good things lately…like I must be subconsciously omitting all these bad things I know about but honestly, its been a pretty darn great summer for the Buffalo-Niagara region overall.
The streak continues

Some good news out of the Buffalo News today. The job growth streak is now seven straight months. The more this happens, the less you can say its a fluke or a short spurt because all these gains keep outnumbering the continuing and inevitable losses in manufacturing.
Our problems aren’t solved, but consistent job growth makes it a lot easier to feel good about what lays ahead for Buffalo.




