Last month the NAIOP Research Foundation released an update
to a tool created two years ago called the Development
Approvals Index, designed to provide a systematic
method to evaluate and compare local development approvals
processes by focusing on site and building plan reviews,
permitting and inspections (but not zoning).
“A user can enter publicly available data on these elements
into the Index,” the NAIOP report explains, “and compare
them across several key metrics, which are weighted and
summarized under three broad ‘pillar’ categories:
transparency, accountability and consistency — all of which
affect the duration and cost of approvals, and the risk that
a project goes uncompleted.”
With the assistance of George Mason University, the NAIOP
Research Foundation has expanded the scope of the index from
30 jurisdictions in 16 U.S. states to 100 jurisdictions in
30 states plus the Canadian province of Ontario. The
results? Based on data collected in fall 2022, out of a
possible 120 points, Fairfax County, Virginia, tallied 69 to
rank No. 1. San Antonio, Texas — one of three Texas
communities in the top six — is runner-up, followed by a
third-place finish for Charlotte/Mecklenburg County, whose
neighboring jurisdiction of Huntersville/Mecklenburg County
is No. 7. Here are the Top 10 and their scores across the
three pillars:
Top 10 Jurisdictions, 2023 Development Approvals Index
|
Pillar
1 Transparency raw point score |
Pillar
2 Transparency raw point score |
Pillar
3 Transparency raw point score |
Weighted Overall Score |
Fairfax County, VA |
77 |
90 |
45 |
69 |
San Antonio, TX |
85 |
70 |
55 |
68 |
Charlotte/Mecklenburg County, NC |
87 |
54 |
60 |
65 |
Miami Dade County, FL |
57 |
80 |
50 |
62 |
Austin, TX |
72 |
36 |
75 |
61 |
Georgetown, TX |
92 |
33 |
65 |
61 |
Town of Huntersville/Mecklenburg County, NC |
86 |
59 |
45 |
60 |
Clark County, NV |
66 |
78 |
40 |
60 |
Goodyear, AZ |
95 |
35 |
55 |
58 |
Aurora, CO |
65 |
42 |
60 |
55 |
Source: NAIOP Research Foundation
The report is authored by C. Kat Grimsley, Ph.D., a visiting
scholar in the Housing Economics and Real Estate Sector
Research Group at the University of Alicante in Spain who
was recently appointed as an advisory peer to the U.S.
Department of State’s Bureau of Overseas Buildings
Operations as part of their Industry Advisory Group and
whoserved as the first Thomas J. Bisacquino NAIOP
Distinguished Fellow while director of the MRED program at
George Mason University.
Noting that some processes may
have changed since the data collection period, the
researchers point out that “jurisdictions whose processes
are opaque may be penalized across one or more measures
because not enough information about their operations is
publicly available.” Notably, data collection was refined by
including site plan review processes and accounting for a
greater range of approaches to review processes across an
expanded number of jurisdictions. “For example,” says the
NAIOP research brief, “a new prompt was created to reflect
the possibility of concurrent site and building plan
submission in some jurisdictions. Another change accounts
for approvals completed by a single department that might be
tasked with the entire review process.” Among the findings:
- “The largest relative difference between the highest and
lowest 30% of jurisdictions appears in the
Accountability scores,” the report states, “which
measure a jurisdiction’s commitment to responsibility
for its handling of applications and inspections. The
metrics in this pillar tend to require more innovative
procedural reforms in order for a jurisdiction to score
well, such as the creation of third-party review and
inspection programs, expedited review, data tracking,
and performance measurement. The highest-scoring 30%
have, at some point, undertaken some of these reforms.
However, there is noticeable room for improvement for
all jurisdictions regardless of their rank,” the
researchers note, with even the highest-scoring
jurisdictions, with capture rates between 46% and 58%,
capturing only a portion of total possible points.
- “In the absence of a consistent correlation between
population or population density and score, urbanization
alone may be a poor predictor of the transparency,
accountability and consistency of municipal approvals
processes.”
- “The average median household income is 26% higher for
the 10 highest-scoring jurisdictions than for the 10
lowest-scoring, and 12.9% higher for the top 30% than
for the bottom 30%.”
- The manufacturing sector accounted for a full 65% of
greenfield FDI with a total of $5.3 billion, led by
computer and electronic products ($1.8 billion). By
state, California is cited with the highest level of
greenfield investment ($1.5 billion), but again, that
leaves out such multibillion-dollar FDI recipients as
Georgia and Arizona.
- Exemplars showcased for their best practices by pillar
include Goodyear, Arizona, for transparency; Fairfax
County for accountability; and Georgetown, Texas, for
consistency.
The report notes that while Georgetown deserves credit for
its practices, development across all of Texas is supported
by Texas House Bill 3167, the “shot clock” bill, which
requires municipalities to approve or deny site plan
applications within 30 days of their submission.
The report makes no other connection to state policies’
impact on local approvals processes, but it got me to
thinking: In states where three or more jurisdictions were
evaluated, which had the highest average rank? A few
calculations later, here are the top finishers, with Texas,
North Carolina and Arizona standing out with average ranks
in the top 50% even with a high number of evaluated
communities:
Top 10 Jurisdictions, 2023 Development Approvals Index*
State |
Avg. Rank |
1. Virginia (3 jurisdictions) |
13.67 |
2. Texas (7) |
18.71 |
3. Oregon (3) |
29.67 |
4. North Carolina (8) |
34.6 |
5. Nevada (4) |
39.75 |
6. Arizona (7) |
41.29 |
7. Georgia (5) |
52.4 |
8. Florida (6) |
53.5 |
9. Utah (3) |
55.33 |
10. Pennsylvania (6) |
56.16 |
*three or more communities evaluated
Visit naiop.org/research-foundation
for more information about this index and other valuable
business intelligence.— Adam Bruns
|