Esbee's post about various states of local small businesses, some moving and some gone out of business, coincided with my discovery that the Back Yard Burgers in Lewisville has been closed since last month. Given that the Back Yard Burger website says "Under construction" I'm wondering if the whole chain went under. After seeing that I'm tempted to start a "Dead Pool" for area businesses, but considering how depressing most of the economic news is these days it just feels too "icky."
Category Archives: Winston-Salem
Is Winston-Salem Pursuing GMAC? If Not, Should They?
Talk about coincidence: a couple of days ago I was talking with some friends and we were discussing GMAC restructuring so they could get some of the government's bailout funds. Someone asked where GMAC was headquartered and we all agreed that it was probably Detroit, but we weren't sure (we were in a bar and not inclined to do a quick online search). The next morning I read that GMAC was indeed headquartered in Detroit, but they were considering a move to Charlotte because they already have operations there, the CEO used to be a Bank of America exec and kept his home in Charlotte after taking the position at GMAC, and they figure there will be some banking professionals looking for work when Wells Fargo starts laying people off. (Since GMAC has restructured as a bank holding company they need to hire bankers).
- We have our own banking professionals suffering from the financial industry turmoil.
- We have lots of nice office space ready and waiting.
- They'll be a bigger fish in our pond, thus more likely to get attention from our local leaders. Businesses love that.
Sure it's a long shot, but it's one of the better opportunities our community will probably see for a while so why not go for it? And if someone says that we should play nice with our neighbors to the south my reply is, "Remember the Alamo merger!"
You Know It’s Bad When the Hospital Hoses Its Own Employees
Did anyone else appreciate the irony of Baptist Hospital having to settle a lawsuit with their employees over health benefits? From the article:
The lawsuit said that Baptist "violated the duties, responsibilities and obligations imposed upon them as a fiduciary" under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, or ERISA.
The lawsuit accuses Baptist of requiring employees to pay more for services rendered at the hospital through MedCost than alternative health-care plans would have, including higher co-payments and lower discounts. It also said that employees paid higher fees than those required by MedCost from other corporate clients.
You may remember that I complained about my wife's MRI at Baptist last fall, so let's just say I'm sympathetic to the employees.
Josh Howard Get Front Page Smack Down by Greensboro Newspaper
Josh Howard, a native of Winston-Salem and former player for Winston-Salem's very own Wake Forest University, got a front page going-over in the Greensboro News & Record because his foundation is the name sponsor of a scholastic basketball tournament being held in the Greensboro Coliseum. Essentially the article points out that Howard's been in some trouble of late and points out that due to his recent behavior it may not be the best idea to have his name attached to the tournament for high school players.
Merchants Mirror: New Online Accounting Product Launched by Triad Company
Ben Hwang, a resident of Winston-Salem, announced on his personal blog the launch of a new small business accounting product that his company created. The product is called Merchant's Mirror and here's a little of what Ben wrote:
Those of you that know me on a personal level know that recently I've been working diligently on a startup with John Brown called Merchant's Mirror. In planning and development it's been over a year in the making and we're happy to announce that onJanuary 1st, we released it to the public. At $15.95USD per month, we provide a small business with everything necessary in accounting (and if you prepay a year, it's $169.95USD per year!) at a fair price.
Creating invoices for customers and paying your vendors doesn't have to be a difficult process, so why make it such? While only in our first release, we're already looking into methods and ways to make it easier for the small business owner to take full advantage of doing their accounting the way they can understand it, not because they're forced to do so.
There's one thing that we stress and that's the fact that we're not only writing this for our clients, but with our clients. That means that every person that uses Merchant's Mirror is in fact helping craft and shape the tool. Keeping track of your books shouldn't take you all day nor should it confuse you. And as such, we'll be striving to work with our customers on all things great and small to try to provide the best in SMB accounting.
Ben and I had a brief chat via IM last week and I could tell that he was excited to get this thing launched. I don't even want to think about how many nights he and his business partner lost to developing this thing.
Forsyth County Property Tax Revaluation
I read with interest the Winston-Salem Journal article about the upcoming property tax revaluations for Forsyth County homeowners. It was interesting because it quotes Pete Rodda, the Forsyth County Tax Assessor, as saying that we should be ready to see higher valuations than we had four years ago in 2005, thus we should also expect higher tax bills. Given what's happened this year it's easy to believe that we'd actually have lower valuations, so if what Mr. Rodda says is true then it's good that he gets out in front of this issue before the poop hits the fan.
Mr. Rodda also said that his office is delaying the assessment until February so that they have all 2008 sales data, which he thinks is prudent given how much real estate value is declining right now. I'd have to agree with him there.
What worries me is that the number of actual sales is also declining which means that the recent lower sales prices may not effect the average sales prices of a neighborhood because so many more sold at higher prices two, three and four years ago. For instance if only four houses sold at $150,000 in a neighborhood in the last four months, but over 50 sold at $200,000 over the last four years then the rate is still going to skew to the higher number. Here's the math:
50 houses sold at $200,000 = $10,000,000
4 houses sold at $150,000 = $600,000
$10,600,000 in total sales divided by 54 houses sold = $196,296 average sale price.
This ignores the fact that literally dozens of homes in the neighborhood are currently listed at $150,000 or less but can't be sold because there are no buyers. That means that in reality the homes in the neighborhood are probably worth less than $150,000 in today's market. Yet the average homeowner will be facing a tax bill based on a valuation closer to $200,000 than $150,000.
To see if I was totally off base I checked out the County's website to see what they say about revaluations. Here's an excerpt from the web page:
The appraisal staff of the Tax Assessor's Office has divided the county into approximately 1,300 appraisal neighborhoods.
These neighborhoods are homogeneous in that the parcels within the neighborhoods share many common characteristics and are
affected by similar influences. In conducting a revaluation, the appraisal staff reviews all recent sales of real property
which have occurred within each neighborhood. This massive analysis of recent sales culminates in a uniform schedule of
values, standards and rules which is applied to each parcel of real property in Forsyth County. The purpose of the uniform
schedule is to insure equity in valuations.
It
would not be difficult to simply appraise a given property at its most
recent sale price. This is not practical because many sales are not
arm's-length transactions. Sales between family members, related
corporations, gifts, etc. do not usually represent market value. The
needs and compulsions of buyers and sellers also influence sale prices.
For example, a home may sell for less than its market value because a
sudden job transfer motivates the seller. Conversely, a home may sell
for a higher amount to a new resident moving in from a region where
home values are much higher. Analyzing all recent sales allows the Tax
Assessor's Office to account for unusual circumstances such as those
described above and develop a uniform schedule of values, standards and
rules. The application of the schedule may not exactly match every
recent sale price; however, the schedule insures that each parcel of
real property will be treated in a similar manner.
Forsyth
County and the municipalities within the county adopt a budget each
year. The tax rate supporting the budget is determined by the budgetary
needs of the local government. Typically each local unit of government
reviews the budget requests of their departments, determines how much
revenue is available from sources other than the property tax, and then
determines how much revenue is necessary from property taxes to balance
the budget.
That last paragraph also worries me. In a time of shrinking budgets I doubt we'll get a sympathetic ear from the county commissioners in terms of reducing our tax burden. When I lived in Northern Virginia and we were experiencing incredible increases in valuations during the real estate bubble the county would regularly reduce the tax percentage so that our tax hit wouldn't be too bad on any given year. It still hurt, just not as much as it would have. I don't think we have a snow ball's chance in hell of that happening here.
My final point is that in the article Mr. Rodda is quoted as saying that they are going to put the valuation tool up on their website so that we can all see for ourselves that our property values have indeed increased. That's fine, but that won't tell us what other factors underly the numbers. Is it just comparable sales prices, or are there other data points incorporated in the numbers? If it's simply on sales then I think they will have a problem because in the real world home values aren't simply a function of comparable sales in the neighborhood. Other factors include number of homes in the neighborhood that are in foreclosure, the number of homes that are for sale in the neighborhood (and their listing price) and the average length of time that a house takes to sell.
Merry Christmas! Wanna buy an Ice Cream Shop?
Merry Christmas! I wish I could give this to you, but I don't have $99,000 lying around so I'm just going to point you in the right direction. If you've ever dreamed of owning an ice cream shop you can buy a Cold Stone Creamery in Winston-Salem for a low, low, low $99,000. If you end up buying it please remember me when I show up with one of my kids' teams in tow. Discounts and gifts are always welcomed:)
Esbee’s Gift to Winston-Salem
Esbee's been running a "Shop Local" series over the last few weeks and she's done us all the favor of compiling the local listings into two pages so you can check them out in two easy clicks. Considering the traffic that Esbee gets to her site I have to believe that her features were a God-send to the local merchants she highlighted.
Actually the title of this post isn't quite accurate since Esbee is a gift to Winston-Salem; the series is just more of that gift.
Reclaiming Futures in Forsyth County (and Elsewhere)
Reclaiming Futures is a project that tries to help young people in trouble with drugs, alcohol and crime. They have a blog called Reclaiming Futures Every Day and it's there that I found a post about the site visit that Renate Reichs, the Network Coordinator for Cook County, Illinois made as part of her coaching of the Forsyth County and Crossroads (a collaboration of Iredell, Surry and Yadkin counties) networks. From the post:
Forsyth County is more urban (think Winston-Salem), and Yadkin, Surry,
and Iredell (“R-dale”–?) are more rural (think Mr. Airy and Andy
Griffith), both sites have committed, experienced, and professional
fellows well versed in cooperative planning and collaboration. There is
also a zeal for the tasks involved in Reclaiming Futures that's very
energizing.
three counties working together, meeting on a regular basis, and
assembling and smoothing disparate pieces to fit the Reclaiming Futures Model. Specifically, they have regularly-involved people who are not “Fellows”
to bring a wider pool of experience, commitment, and knowledge to the
table. For its part, Forsyth County has chosen to expand Reclaiming
Futures from its established drug treatment court, championed by its
Judicial and Justice Fellows, thus starting on a firm foundation.
sites face — and it is huge — is a lack of treatment resources.
There's great enthusiasm for implementing better screening and
assessment tools (everybody was off and running with their rapid cycle test for screening), but the “Then what?” question looms large:
- What if the kids funneled through screening and assessment completely overwhelm treatment capacity?
- How do we grow treatment—good treatment, administered by professionals?
- Where do the dollars come from?
- Is Reclaiming Futures capable of pushing treatment expansion, and exactly how does that happen?
We'd love to hear from sites that have successfully answered these
questions or are grappling with the same problems. Forsyth, Crossroads
(is that “Ire-dale”?), and I await your wisdom.
This sounds like a worthy program and for the sake of our local at-risk youth I hope they are able to solve their treatment conundrum.
Winston-Salem Journal Full of Itself, or Something
I was out of town over the weekend so I just had a chance to read the Sunday edition of the Winston-Salem Journal. In their Opinion section the executive editor Carl Crothers announced some changes to their Opinion section, including changing their "Letters to the Editor" to "The readers' forum" and they carry a column written by their letters editor, Mick Scott, explaining how you can get your letter published by the paper. Let's just say I have a small problem with their attitude.
Really the heart of my problem I have with their approach can be summed up by the following paragraph in Mr. Scott's column:
to keep the quality high. Our letter writers expend a little more
effort, a little more thought than you'll find on most bulletin boards
or blogs and we want it to be that way.
Surely he's kidding. I'll grant that a great amount of total crap appears on blogs and bulletin boards, but let's be honest and say that some of the worst stuff that appears locally is in the comments on Journal stories. If you want to see exactly how infantile and almost illiterate many of your fellow denizens are then make your way to the JournalNow site and read some comments; just be prepared for indecipherable spelling and lots of really unimaginative spewing.
Still, the comments aren't the vaunted "letters" page that Mr. Scott is referring to, that outlet that is necessarily more selective due to limited space. Let's see some examples of the greater thoughtfulness and effort that they've carried on the "letters" page of the Journal in just the last couple of weeks:
December 9, 2008: Thank God and Greyhound that Forsyth County Commissioner Dave Plyler
has taken the chair from Commissioner Gloria Whisenhunt. It's time for
a change. -JIM HATCHER, Winston-Salem
December 10, 2008: While I read the article "DNA Secrets" (Dec. 4) with interest, was
it really key to the story to include a photo of decades-old feces? I
would submit that sometimes an accurately written description is worth
a thousand photos. – PAIGE DEAL, Winston-Salem
December 15, 2008: Congratulations to all who participated in the Dec. 7 performance of Handel's Messiah
, by the Mozart Club. To the local church choir singers who were not on stage — you missed a thrilling experience. Do join next year's performance. I hope that the same conductor, Peter Perret, and the same soloists will be there, too. – ANN W. CHARLES, Winston-Salem
Riveting stuff, eh? I have nothing against the letter writers, but if the space is so limited and special don't you think the paper could have found something more interesting or compelling to print? Honestly I think my kids put more thought into their Facebook status line than those authors put into their letters.
On another note, something that kind of nagged at me when I read Crothers' column was the question of why "Editor" is capitalized in "Letters to the Editor", yet "readers'" isn't in "The readers' forum." To me it reads that the paper feels that editors are somehow special, while readers are the great unwashed masses. It seems pompous.
Don't get me wrong. I like that the paper is trying to engage the readers, but I think they're hamstrung by their institutional tradition of pontificating rather than conversing. For their sakes I hope their efforts help save the franchise, but it's not happening until they start to think of their readers with a capital "r".