Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

First master-planned community establishe­d in 1500s

- By David W. Myers, Cowles Syndicate Inc. Send questions to David Myers, P.O. Box 4405, Culver City, CA 90231-2960, and we’ll try to respond in a future column.

A small seaside town in Florida, founded in 1565, still influences the way nearly every American city is configured today.

Q. My brother lives in St. Augustine, Florida. He boasts that it was the first master-planned community in America, but I looked it up online and can’t confirm it. Can you?

A. Most historians agree that the lovely seaside town of St. Augustine (pop. 13,000) did indeed become the first master-planned community in North America when it was founded by the Spanish in 1565.

The fledgling town was laid out by following a document known as the Law of the Indies, a lengthy set of rules that the Spanish Crown issued to guide developmen­t and other issues in its American and Philippine possession­s. A key tenet of the document mandated that a common area — the predecesso­r of the modern-day town plaza — be built in the center of the community so “there will always be sufficient space where the people may go to for recreation and take their cattle to pasture without them making any damage.”

The Law of the Indies also stated that the colonists “shall try as far as possible to have the buildings all of one type for the sake of the beauty of the town,” not unlike the architectu­ral restrictio­ns that many cities and independen­t homeowners associatio­ns impose today. The law also tended to group businesses such as slaughterh­ouses and tanneries in more secluded areas, where the rubbish and filth they produced could “easily be disposed of” — very much like the way most cities zone certain areas for industrial purposes today.

St. Augustine was routinely sacked by pirates during its first century of existence, and the city was rebuilt with the Law of the Indies after it was virtually burned to the ground by British armed forces in 1702. St. Augustine and the rest of the Sunshine State were ceded to the United States through the Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819, a pact often referred to as “the Florida Treaty” or “the Transconti­nental Treaty.”

REAL ESTATE TRIVIA

Researcher­s at the National League of Cities scoured public records and found that 10,866 U.S. thoroughfa­res are named either “Second Street” or “Second Avenue.” That trumps the 9,898 that are called “First Street,” in part because a city or town’s primary roads are instead called “Main” or “Broadway.”

Q. We hired a contractor to remodel our kitchen. He did only half the work before he filed for bankruptcy and skipped town. Can we deduct the $6,000 we paid him as a “casualty loss” on our income-tax return? How about the additional $5,000 we had to pay a second contractor to finish the job?

A. Sorry, but the answer to both of your questions is no.

Homeowners generally cannot take a tax write-off for shoddy workmanshi­p or the subsequent cost of doing the job right.

You conceivabl­y could deduct the $6,000 payment you made to the first contractor as a “fraud loss,” but only if you could prove to the Internal Revenue Service that the wayward contractor intentiona­lly set out to rip you off.

Though the combined $11,000 you paid likely won’t provide a hefty deduction on your upcoming tax return, you can add the entire amount to the cost-basis of your home to reduce or even eliminate any taxes you may owe on the profit when you eventually sell.

Q. Is an actual cash-value homeowners insurance policy the same as a replacemen­t-cost policy?

A. No. An actual cash-value policy pays to replace only your home and possession­s after a fire or other calamity — minus a deduction for depreciati­on — up to the limits of the policy itself. A replacemen­tcost policy is more thorough because it will pay to replace any items that were lost or stolen without any depreciati­on deductions.

To illustrate, let’s say a small fire destroyed your three-year-old washing machine and dryer. If you had an actual cash-value policy, the insurer would factor in the age of the appliances before cutting a check. The amount probably wouldn’t cover the entire cost of buying new ones.

If you had a replacemen­t-cost policy instead, the insurer would pay the entire cost of replacing the burned-up appliances with new ones of comparable quality. No depreciati­on deductions would cut into your reimbursem­ent check.

Because replacemen­t-cost policies offer more protection, they usually cost about 10 percent more than cash-value policies, according to a spokesman for the nonprofit Insurance Informatio­n Institute (www.iii.org).

The nedgling town was laid out by following a document known as the Law of the Indies, a lengthy set of rules that the Spanish Crown issued to guide developmen­t and other issues in its American and Philippine possession­s.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States