Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Elite cities should share wealth

- Froma Harrop Froma Harrop is syndicated by Creators Syndicate.

As Seattle ascended into the club of superstar American cities, its housing became expensive and its streets congested. That’s the price of success. These factors helped prompt Amazon. com to announce plans to build a second headquarte­rs somewhere else in North America.

This move could herald a neat solution for cities seeking choice jobs and for those burdened by crowding and astronomic­al rents. In this vast continent of ours, it’s crazy to shoehorn so much ambition, innovation and technical prowess into New York, San Francisco and a handful of other coastal cities.

For the “elite” cities, sharing the growth would reduce pressure to tear down their beloved neighborho­ods to build forests of soulless towers — all in the name of improving affordabil­ity. That’s the “remedy” pushed by developers and foes of zoning, historic preservati­on and sane urban planning.

The explosive growth of New York City’s population has driven the subway system to near breakdown. Some see congestion pricing — charging new fees to drive into midtown Manhattan — as a fix for perpetual gridlock. That would encourage more people to use the subways, the argument goes (but see the previous two sentences).

Get this. New York has just “upzoned” the Midtown East business district to allow the constructi­on of at least 16 new office towers. That would bring 28,000 more workers to the area. Things have gotten so crowded the city is removing some subway seats to pack in more people.

Companies increasing­ly demand urban settings where people bounce ideas off one another and younger workers congregate. But there are fine urban settings far from the coasts, and employers are going to them. Denver and Phoenix, for example, have become magnets for finance companies strained by the high costs of San Francisco.

Amazon’s casting call included some specificat­ions. The city’s population must exceed 1 million. The site must have access to public transporta­tion and be near a university and internatio­nal airport.

Amazon has its hand out for tax breaks and assorted public subsidies. Waving 50,000 good new jobs should bring out a good number of eager contestant­s.

Cities cited as likely finalists include Columbus, Denver, Nashville, Phoenix, Raleigh and San Antonio. A few may want for artisanal bakeries and curated wine lists, but add 50,000 tech workers to the mix and watch the urban amenities grow.

As for those left behind in the elite cities, they, too, have reasons to welcome seeing some of the people headed for other destinatio­ns. After all, the cure for very high housing prices isn’t just more supply; it’s less demand for housing.

In the meantime, let’s put in a good word for smaller cities that don’t meet Amazon’s size standard. There’s evidence that some young, educated people are moving back to the devastated Rust Belt cities their families abandoned, places like Youngstown, Ohio. Love of place draws them, not expectatio­n of high pay. But wouldn’t companies value having employees like them?

Let’s see whether Amazon’s move kicks off a trend to create a second power center outside the superstar city of a company’s birth. It would make so much sense, both for cities burdened with too many people and for those wanting more.

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