Last week Erica Barnett wrote a thought provoking article in Publicola looking at the proposed tree legislation. Among its criticisms, the article noted the cost of the new staff needed to administer this proposed legislation against the expected revenue the city hoped to raise to fund a tree planting in underserved neighborhoods.
… the city’s Department of
Construction and Inspections says it will need to hire three new full-time
staffers at an initial cost of $273,000 a year. That more than offsets the
revenues the city expects to receive from payments in lieu of tree plantings,
which will be used to plant new trees on city-owned property—an estimated
$191,000 in the first year.
Analysis of the tree legislation
didn’t include the exact cost of replacing trees removed for development. But
using the city’s own average “nursery purchase price” of $2,833 per tree, that
$191,000 would plant about 67 trees citywide
Barnett raises that the point that it's hard for government
initiatives to be effective when more money is spent on administration than on
actually achieving their goals. A few months ago AIA Seattle sent
a letter to the council and the mayor critiquing the proposed legislation and
outlining some principles that they felt were important in crafting a
successful tree policy. One of those principles was very much along the same
lines as Barnett's criticism:
Spend money on planting
trees, not on paperwork: Arborist reports, regulatory review, city
inspections, and the attendant delays and bureaucracy associated with an
emphasis on verification of compliance are costly. City and community resources
are better allocated to developing the tree canopy.
If we take Barnett’s point, and expand the cost of the
program to include not just the salaries of the new SDCI staff but the cost of
all of the paperwork and bureaucracy required by the program, how much would
that be? How much are we spending to generate $191,000 of fees for the city to
plant 67 trees per year? I sat down this week to make a rough estimate.
I began with the city permit data from data.seattle.gov
for issued building permits for 2022. My goal was to figure out about how many
permits each year might trigger a tree review. The
first step is to figure out how many permit processes a year are going to be affected
by the new tree legislation. I began with all of the new construction permits. Safe
to say a new building is going to have significant ground disturbance. I also
looked through the additions and alterations, filtered by the keyword “addition”,
and then manually checked the project descriptions to remove projects where the
addition seemed likely to be at an upper story and not at the ground level. Most
of the projects left over are additions to single family homes, attached
accessory dwelling units, and projects like decks and porches that create
ground disturbance.
Seattle permit data isn't exactly straightforward. Some permit
applications generate more than one permit number. If there are multiple structures
proposed on a site, SDCI will issue a separate permit for each freestanding structure.
So, short of researching each individual line item, there's a little guesswork
involved here. Most of the new multifamily projects are of the townhouse
variety which typically generate 2-3 permits for each project, and many of the new
single-family projects include a DADU which would generate two permits for each
project (one for the house and one for the DADU). I created a summary table of
each project type and divided the single family permits by 2 and the multifamily
permits by 3. From that I got an estimate of about 1200 completed permit
applications per year.
Some of those projects aren't going to have trees on site or on neighboring sites or anywhere near the area of ground disturbance and so they won't require a review. But the whole point of this legislation is to require careful study of all sites to make sure protected trees are identified and that exhaustive means are taken to protect them, so I think it's fair to assume that a significant percentage of projects are going to have to go through the new processes outlined by this legislation. For the purposes of this exercise, I assumed that 65% of sites that have ground disturbance will be subject to the SDCI arborists review during the permitting process. That works out to just under 800 unique permit application processes each year that will be subject to new reviews.
2022 - Complete permit applications
with ground disturbance |
||
Permits |
likely # of projects |
|
Single Family/Duplex |
847 |
424 |
Multifamily |
242 |
81 |
Commercial |
37 |
37 |
Additions |
681 |
681 |
Est. projects with ground disturbance |
1222 |
|
% of project sites requiring review |
65% |
|
Annual permits requiring review |
794 |
The next step is to estimate how much these new permit reviews will cost. All projects with a tree nearby will now begin with a survey and an arborists report. Once those elements are provided the architect must translate those into a series of diagrams that analyze the trees, their protected root zones, any proposed disturbance into those root zones, placement of protection fencing etc. The city arborists will review the architects’ diagrams and the arborist report. SDCI has the discretion to request further site investigations to explore the extent of feeder roots so that those elements may be located with precision and protected if deemed necessary. Based upon those site investigations, the tree protection areas may have to be adjusted and the building redesigned.
With this background in mind, I have attempted to estimate the additional costs per project that we might expect in order to comply with these new requirements:
Estimated Costs of Proposed Tree
Legislation per Application |
||
Required Costs/Processes |
Low |
High |
Survey |
$3,000 |
$5,000 |
Arborist Report |
$1,500 |
$2,500 |
Arborist Supplement |
$500 |
$1,000 |
Arborist review letter |
$300 |
$500 |
Architect site plan and diagrams |
$3,000 |
$5,000 |
SDCI reviewer charges (5-10 hours) |
$1,500 |
$3,000 |
Architect plan revisions (15-50
hours) |
$1,500 |
$5,000 |
Time delay costs (1-2 Months) |
$5,833 |
$11,667 |
Estimated total |
$17,133 |
$33,667 |
This works out to an average of about $25,000 per project. That might seem like a big number but if anything it's probably a lowball estimate, because this is just looking at costs incurred during design and permitting. It doesn't take into account costs during construction required for tree protection fencing, SDCI inspection fees, and increased fees for right of way usage due to the inability to stockpile materials on site. But that's not exactly my world and those costs will vary a bit more depending on project specifics, so for now let's just go with $25,000 additional cost per project. With that in mind we can flesh out our earlier table to get a total annual cost of this new process: $20 million dollars!
2022 - Complete permit applications
with ground disturbance |
||
Permits |
likely # of projects |
|
Single Family/Duplex |
847 |
424 |
Multifamily |
242 |
81 |
Commercial |
37 |
37 |
Additions |
681 |
681 |
Est. projects with ground disturbance |
1222 |
|
% of project sites requiring review |
65% |
|
Annual permits requiring review |
794 |
|
Total Annual Process Cost |
$20,177,971 |
So, if we put all of this information together, our new tree legislation will generate $20 million in new bureaucracy costs every year to plant 67 trees. That's $300,000 per tree. If you're looking for an example of ineffective and wasteful government policy, the $300,000 tree is right up there with the $10,000 toilet seat.
Imagine what else you could do with that money, aside from
pushing a bunch of paper in a circle. $20,000,000 would fund the planting and
maintenance of 7,000 trees on public land every year. Or, instead of paying
city employees an hourly wage to plant and maintain trees, you could simply give
away free
trees and let an army of volunteer tree lovers do the rest.
Some pieces of problematic legislation are basically sound
ideas that simply need to be tweaked. This proposal is not one of them. It's
based on a flawed premise that the way to grow our tree canopy is to
create a massive new bureaucracy to restrict and fine landowners into retaining
the trees they have. But trees are something that people really like, are
generally happy to maintain, and will often volunteer to plant all on their own.
Where do you think all the trees that we have today came from?
We are working to get this proposal amended to try to blunt the worst effects that might suppress housing by making sites undevelopable. But there's no tweak that can pave over the gulf between the millions of wasted dollars and the thousands of dollars in benefits. Here's hoping the council can find five votes to send this one back to the drawing board.
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