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Blogroll, Life, Public Policy

Is Your House a Hotel?

In this post I’m going to give you some crucial information that you need if you intend to own a property that you will use for short-term rental.

But first, an admission.

When I was in the legislature I voted in favor of Senate Bill 1350 in 2016, which prohibited cities and towns from banning short-term rentals. It also put in place a structure to tax the services and it specified what municipalities could do to regulate them.

Source: citywatchla.com

So, blame me if you want for how people have abused our neighborhoods with ill-managed short term rental properties. I hear you and I empathize.

I know many of my neighbors in historic neighborhoods, in particular, are very concerned about whether these homes will be treated well while being used as short-term rentals.

I stand by the vote because I think we need to be creative in the new sharing economy. However, I also remember saying at the time that we will have to re-visit this in the future.

We knew that cities and towns would confront new challenges in regulating short-term rentals and I, for one, felt it was best to see what those challenges would be and prepare to respond to them legislatively, if need be. Good government should be able to adopt new realities like the sharing economy and should be responsive as we learn how to adapt to the needs of the public.

So, I support the new law passed by the Legislature and Governor this year, which gives more teeth to cities and law enforcement. In no rational interpretation of the law, should a residential home be a hotel where massive parties are thrown and the needs of the neighborhood cast aside.

So, I hope the law works and we see the owners of short-term rentals respecting their neighborhoods.

Even given that, I’ve been shocked by how many properties are being used for short-term rentals by large corporations, which have purchased gads of properties, with little attention paid to the health of the neighborhood.

None of us saw that specific problem coming. Perhaps we should have.

My friend Tina Tamboer at the Cromford Report has specific concerns about short term rentals, as how they relate to the over-all real estate market. Here are a few:

  1. They can deprive families of homes.
  2. They can drive prices up because a buyer of a short-term rental home values it based on ROI, not just as an affordable place to live.
  3. If we don’t track which homes are short-term rentals, we won’t be able to predict a possible flood of homes on the market if the economy drops and the owners are not seeing the income they expected.

Having laid all that groundwork (and I felt like that context is important for anybody who wants to buy a home for this purpose), I want to cover what you need to know about this new law if you are going to operate a short-term rental property.

The new law, which you can read directly here, will make the following changes to current statutes:

  1. It allows municipalities to restrict the types of events that happen at these properties –think weddings and huge parties that would require a permit if planned in most other spaces.
  2. If you own and market a short-term rental, you must provide a primary contact to the municipality; a person that law enforcement or neighbors can call if there is a nuisance at the property.
  3. If you provide that information to the city or town, they must make a reasonable attempt to contact that person in the case of an ordinance violation.
  4. If you are cited and fined, but you don’t pay, then the citation gets forwarded to the Arizona Department of Revenue for collection and possible interest-based fees.

So, in short, if you need our help to identify a short-term rental property, we are going to refer you to these laws.

We believe in being good neighbors in our personal lives, and we have turned away business if we think they are not going to be good neighbors.

In the end, I think that we need solutions to our housing crisis in Arizona. While short-term rentals might be making that harder to solve, it is here to stay. As agents, we want to get you the best information about the laws and your responsibilities.

If you have more questions, call us at 602-456-9388.

July 31, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Life, Public Policy, Sustainable Living

Support Light Rail

As realtors and long-time Phoenix residents, we know that light rail has helped improve neighborhoods, attract business and transport many people who would otherwise contribute to daily traffic jams.

So, it is alarming that Dark Money groups from out of state, backed by the Koch brothers, are putting money in to an effort to effectively shut down light rail growth in Phoenix.

Further, they are attempting to place arbitrary caps on the city’s ability to spend money on our priorities or recover from massive cuts made during the Great Recession.

City leaders such as Mayor Gallego, a majority of city council members and many non-profit and trade organizations have created a campaign to ask city voters to vote NO on Prop 105 and Prop 106.

See the website with information here.

Prop 105 would:

  1. Create a prohibition agains further rail projects in Phoenix;
  2. Redirect billions of dollars of federal support away from Phoenix infrastructure;
  3. Threaten our ability to plan for population growth;
  4. Increase crowding on our streets.

Prop 106 would make permanent any cuts that leaders will be forced to make during tough times. To put that another way, if we make cuts during an up-coming recession or economic downturn as we did in the Great Recession, those cuts would be permanent.

So, where the city has been restoring services and making the pension program stable again since the recession, Prop 106 would make those cuts permanent and would force drastic cuts to the services that our citizens and neighborhoods rely on. This is simply reckless.

IMPORTANT: This election has been forced on the ballot on August 27th, when many people are on vacation. Early ballots go out on July 29th. So, be certain to get request yours by calling 602-261-VOTE (8683). See the city website for more.

June 26, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Design, Life

Alexandria Court

Donna Reiner, a local historian and a good friend of Get Your PHX, has written many articles over the years for the Arizona Republic and others about what came before us. We use her services when we list properties of historic significance to help us tell the stories behind the homes.

We are happy that Donna is allowing us to re-publish some of her articles on a monthly basis. If you or your business ever needs a historian, let Donna know at laydeescholar “at” hotmail.com.


“I have been influenced by the needs of Phoenix and by the fact that this is home.” With that, Celora M. Stoddard who had recently been discharged from the Army after serving in France during WWI, declared his intent to build a special complex. Arizona looked promising to Stoddard after the war.

Stoddard had originally come out west from Binghamton, NY as a young boy and spent some time in Stoddard, AZ, a small copper mining community northeast of Mayer which had been named after his father. When he moved to Phoenix along with his parents, he continued working for the family company. Later he formed his own firm and focused on investments rather than copper, but still maintained his managerial position with Stoddard Mining.

One of Stoddard’s investments was The Rose Tree, an exquisite confectionery shop and tea room which opened in October 1914. It certain gave Donofrio’s some competition although it was hard for Donofrio’s to surpass The Rose Tree’s twice a week dances. Stoddard also purchased lots in newly opened subdivisions as so many other Phoenicians were doing.

In 1917, Stoddard was part of the Great Western Film Corporation whose initial aim was to establish a film studio in Phoenix (Tucson was the competing site). Yes, Stoddard dabbled in a variety of businesses and then the European war changed things. Stoddard registered for the draft, entered the army, took officer’s training, and was shipped to France.

Recognizing that many soldiers who were returning home had moved to Arizona and had no place to live, Stoddard decided to build a “modern up-to-date bungalow court” the summer of 1919. Each unit had five rooms and an individual outdoor sleeping area on the roof which would be used in the summer months. The bungalow court would be “high class,” have janitor service, and a communal garage along with plenty of shade.

Ads touted that the complex of 10-units was located “in the most exclusive residential section.” And where might that be? It was Bennett Place encompassing Central to Seventh Avenue and Roosevelt to Fillmore. Now a portion of Bennett Place is part of Roosevelt Historic District.

One quirky event related to Alexandria Court (the rather romantic sounding name) occurred when Stoddard decided to sell the complex. In fact, he traded the bungalows with Isaac Rosenzweig a local jeweler for 80 acres of farm land near Scottsdale. Apparently both parties were quite satisfied with the deal.

If you ride the light rail down 1st Avenue today, you go right passed Alexandria Court. Now 815 N. 1st Avenue (even the numbering has changed from the original) is offices. A far cry from Stoddard’s vision, but they have not been demolished.

June 20, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Life, Public Policy

The Truth about Evictions

As realtors, we want all people to have roofs over their heads and we hate to see families evicted from homes, regardless of whether they purchase a home or not.

That is why you’ve seen me do some postings and videos about issues of homelessness.

There are so many destructive myths about homelessness and why people are evicted from rental homes, and why it happens.

“People are lazy and don’t pay the rent.”

“People don’t take care of the property they live in and deserve to be kicked out.”

“People are not financially responsible.”

What we are learning more and more, especially by analyzing huge amounts of data from around the country, is that there are myths about eviction, just as there are myths about poverty.

Why is it important to have a clear picture of why evictions happen? Well, because we make public policy based on these myths and those policies cost us billions of taxpayer dollars. Shouldn’t we get the causes right before we recommend a treatment?

This podcast on the topic of eviction bursts some of the myths is perfect for your summer listening list. I love podcasts as company when I’m driving or working in the garden. However, these, in particular, are very well-researched and bring out things that I’ve not thought of before.

So, these come highly recommended.

If you want another great series on poverty myths, check out this one from the same team.

June 20, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Life, Public Policy

Independents Week is Coming

We are a locally-owned business and we support locally-owned, independent businesses.

For every $100 spent at a locally-owned business, $43 stays in the local economy, versus only $13 for non-locally-owned businesses. That means more money for police, fire, schools and infrastructure.

Nobody expects you to purchase a car made in Arizona. But if you shift your spending by 20%, you can have a huge effect on our state.

So, Independents Week is a big deal for us. You can take this opportunity to shift your spending by 20% in support of our local economy.

Save 20% at your favorite local businesses during Independents Week!

Independents Week is Arizona’s week-long celebration of local businesses that lets you save money while shopping local. 

During June 29 – July 7, use your Golden Coupon to save 20% off at hundreds of participating businesses in every imaginable industry all across Arizona!

We can’t over-state the important of supporting local, independent businesses. Our legislature for years has been sending out tax dollars out of state in the form of tax credits to attract major corporations to Arizona –companies that employ far fewer people than locally-owned businesses.

As agents, we chose HomeSmart because it is locally-owned. We think that is important.

June 5, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Life, Public Policy, Sustainable Living

Recycling in Phoenix

You may have seen the videos and Marshall Shore and I did, along with our videographer Chris Allen of AllenCinema.

We toured the recycling facility in North Phoenix so we could give you a clear idea of the process.

This is huge, especially since we can no longer export our recyclable materials to China for processing. See that article here.

We broke our video in to three episodes, to highlight three major stages in the process.

Hey, it’s not Game of Thrones, but we are pretty proud of it. You can watch the videos here, here and here.

Here are the big take-aways:

  1. For the love of all that his holy, please don’t put plastic bags or plastic wrap, aka “2D plastic” in the recycling bin. You will see in the video just how difficult it is to get out of the machinery.
  2. The process for separating materials is actually quite effective. The part of the process that could use improvement is the human factor. What we put in affects what is separated and what the city can earn from recycling materials.
  3. We should not stop recycling just because China is no longer processing the materials. There is a domestic industry starting up, so it makes no sense to stop when it will be needed here.

Here are some interesting tid-bits that I learned through this process.

  • The Coca-Cola bottling company is trying to make their bottles 100% recycled, but they need more plastic material. In other words, they need more consumers to properly separate their trash. They are also investing in new domestic recycling capacity.
  • The City of Phoenix has updated its guide to recycling. Get it at this link. This guide is much easier to follow than the last one. So, download it and share it in your household. Don’t just print the image here in this blog post. Follow the link. There are two pages.
  • The rush to re-develop domestic capacity to recycle is not happening just in the US. In fact, we are behind other countries, such as Germany. According to RecyclingToday.com, “… a few years ago Germany was a net exporter of as much as 5 million metric tons per year of scrap paper, but now the nation’s mills need to import some 2 million tons of recovered fiber each year.”
  • In the wake of China’s decision to stop imports of recyclable materials, many countries began shipping to Malaysia. Now Malaysia has declared that it will begin shipping materials right back where they came from. “Whoever sends their waste to Malaysia, we will send it back,” Environment Minister Yeo Bee Yin told reporters on Tuesday, declaring the foreign shipments to be “garbage … traded under the pretext of recycling.”
  • A bill working through Congress will direct the EPA to build a national recycling plan, and increases funding for domestic recycling. “The bill provides a total of $9.52 billion for the EPA, 7.6 percent over the 2019 funding level. President Trump’s budget requested $6.1 billion for the agency.” Let’s see if recycling becomes a bi-partisan issue when millions of tons of unwanted recycling comes back to our shores. Wait! Isn’t this a domestic jobs bill?
June 4, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Life, Phoenix News, Sustainable Living

Healing Through Gardening

I’m a full-on gardening nerd-ball. Who else does a video just about composting, not more than once, but three times? See that here and here.

And, as the summer begins to leach the life out of most plants, this article made me reflect on how much I will miss my garden over the summer.

Oliver Sacks was a brilliant neurologist, whom I learned to appreciate on the RadioLab podcast. He said this of gardens:

“As a writer, I find gardens essential to the creative process; as a physician, I take my patients to gardens whenever possible. All of us have had the experience of wandering through a lush garden or a timeless desert, walking by a river or an ocean, or climbing a mountain and finding ourselves simultaneously calmed and reinvigorated, engaged in mind, refreshed in body and spirit. The importance of these physiological states on individual and community health is fundamental and wide-ranging. In forty years of medical practice, I have found only two types of non-pharmaceutical “therapy” to be vitally important for patients with chronic neurological diseases: music and gardens.”

I’m not a writer of any note. But I completely understand the need for a refuge. My garden is just that.

I pulled more kale, spinach and various other edible items out of my garden this year than ever before. I’m learning a little bit every year. Plus, the better I get at gardening, the more the garden is a truly relaxing place.

You may have had to suffer through my many Instagram posts about the height of my sunflowers. Those are about the only flowers that I intentionally grow. They are easy and dramatically large –my most recent pride reached over 9ft tall.

So, why is this worth a blog post? Well, because if you like to garden, especially in Arizona, you need two specialized things.

First, specialized knowledge about how to pick a house with a yard that will support three seasons worth of growth without succumbing to the brutal heat.

I can help you with that. I’ve failed a lot –meaning I’ve learned a lot. Most importantly, I have learned that the orientation of the house you choose will decide for you what you can plant.

You will also need to subscribe to Urban Farming U, a Phoenix-based website with an incredible amount of information, ranging from basic planting plans to fostering desert bees.

If you are in to gardening, or just want to create a desert oasis at your new home, then plan ahead and choose a home that works best for gardening.

Call us at 602-456-9388 for more.

June 3, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Life, Public Policy

George Washington Carver Museum

Marshall Shore, the Hip Historian, and I visited the George Washington Carver Museum recently to consider it’s unique history, as well as to consider some of the vestiges of the terrible history of segregation that plagued our state and our country.

As as Realtor, I am troubled by the role that realtors played in red-lining in US history. Yet I am proud of the role that Realtors are playing today through the Realtor Code of Ethics to create opportunities for all people.

So, it is with the same concern for history, but pride for current efforts that we considered the Carver Museum, previously a school.

It was the site of segregation in Arizona. At the only segregated school, it was the only option for many African American students, who had to travel often for hours to gain education.

Yet from the school came artists and designers who have left a lasting impression on Arizona.

Watch this first video for Marshall’s quick review of the history of the school.

The museum and its board is now working to play a role, not only for the African American community, but as a beacon for understanding and community participation.

We also took this opportunity to consider how the school funding mechanisms in Arizona continue to disadvantage poor and minority students through the use of property taxes as a substantial funding source.

You can see that in the second video that we did on the topic.

In short, schools in areas where property values are higher are taxed less as a percentage of total home value and they generate more money, not only for maintenance and operations, but for school construction.

Further, the School Facilities board, which was intended to level the playing field for school construction, has never been fully funded.

Many people don’t know the basics of how school are funded, let alone about the base-level inequities in the system.

May 2, 2019by phxAdmin
Art, Blogroll, Life, Profiles

Colonial New England in Phoenix

Donna Reiner, a local historian and a good friend of Get Your PHX, has written many articles over the years for the Arizona Republic and others about what came before us. We use her services when we list properties of historic significance to help us tell the stories behind the homes.

We are happy that Donna is allowing us to re-publish some of her articles on a monthly basis. If you or your business ever needs a historian, let Donna know at laydeescholar “at” hotmail.com.


In 1916, a group of Phoenicians came together and decided to establish a church following the tenets of the Congregational Church. And thus, by midsummer of the following year, the First Congregational Church of Phoenix was formalized and purchased some property on the northeast corner of Second Street and Willetta.

church

A church building was finally built on this property in 1923 in the Mission Revival Style. A style that was quite popular for homes and other small commercial buildings in Phoenix at that time.

The congregation grew and the church building began to feel the stress of being “crowded.” While the need to expand was there, the money was not. But that did not diminish the wishes of the members of the church nor the pastorate.

By the late 1930s, the congregation was ready to proceed; but the question of whether to expand the current building or build a new one arose. One voice, that of Dr. O.A. Smith, the pastor of the First Congregational Church in Nogales, supported a new style. He felt that a different and distinct style would attract the numerous Phoenix winter visitors and new residents, especially those from the Midwest and the East. He strongly proposed the New England or Colonial style for the building that now serves the congregation.

The membership agreed and plans were drawn by Harry Pierce, an architect from Los Angeles. The simplicity of the colonial exterior and interior features would stand in sharp contrast to the Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival architecture so common in the nearby residences and commercial buildings.

Whether it was the design of the building that helped increased the size of the congregation may not be that significant, but it did grow. So, by 1952, the building was expanded without destroying its unique Colonial features under the direction of local architect, Harold Ekman.

However, what most Phoenicians do not realize is that the prominent steeple is not the original one designed by Pierce. Ekman designed this large feature which was completed in December 1953. Roger Brevoort, a local historian/preservationist explained, “The addition of the steeple…complet[ed] the architectural image of the classic New England meetinghouse with the tall spire that had been envisioned by the congregation, and Dr. Smith, in the 1930s.”

The progressive congregation hired Weaver and Drover, a Phoenix firm, to design a master plan for the rest of the site in 1956. What you see today with the courtyard, breezeway, and low midcentury education buildings arose from that plan.

May 1, 2019by phxAdmin
Blogroll, Life, Public Policy, Sustainable Living

The Best of a Bad Situation

You may have seen my blog post about how the Chinese government decided earlier this year to stop taking recyclable materials from the US and other countries. The result being that cities all over the country are scrambling to figure out what to do with our recyclable materials.

Phoenix saw the writing on the wall and jumped right in to action to find a solution. While the ideal is re-use of materials made from petroleum, Phoenix found what seems to be a temporary solution: turning low-grade plastics in to diesel fuel.

Now, before you protest, saying that burning plastics as fuel is not a great solution, consider several points.

First, the alternative is to spend all the money to collect the plastics (which we have to do), just to throw them in the landfill. I don’t like the idea of not having a fully renewable economy, but if we are going to reach a zero waste economy by 2050, we need to keep pushing forward, despite this set-back.

Second, there are benefits to transforming materials here to diesel fuel, rather than importing them.

Third, if we are lucky, perhaps the same policy makers at the state level who make it harder for us to collect recycling at the city level will change their minds once they see how we could be generating a massive supply of our own fleet fuels in Phoenix.

Aside from that issue, it is heartening to see that the Phoenix Public Works Department staff was agile enough to adapt to this massive change. This speaks volumes to the potential of this city to continue to build relationships with material recyclers through its Resource Innovation Campus (RIC).

Ultimately, what the China policy has shown us is that the US should have never given up its domestic recycling capacity. Until that returns and until we truly educate the public about the need for waste recycling, efforts like this will continue to push us forward.

The announcement, in its entirety is copied below.


The City of Phoenix to Begin Turning Plastics into Fuel

The city of Phoenix Public Works Department is excited to announce a new partnership with Renew Phoenix that aims to turn plastics destined for the landfill into fuel. This innovative repurposing of what’s known as “Plastics 3-7,” or low-value plastics, is the latest venture in the city’s “Reimagine Phoenix” initiative to increase its diversion rate to 40% by the end of 2020, and ultimately reach zero waste by 2050.

 “I believe in taking bold chances to make big change. The idea of making fuel with the plastics we are throwing away is certainly an ‘out of the box’ idea that I am thrilled to say will also bring jobs and revenue to our city,” said Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego. “During a time when cities are giving up on recycling, Phoenix is again leading the way in setting the gold standard for innovation and creativity.”

The need to find a way to re-use these materials comes on the heels of China no longer accepting certain recycled materials from the United States. This forced city leadership to think creatively to find new solutions for its recycled materials. Thanks to the foresight of the Phoenix City Council, this new project is now ready to take shape.

“The future is all about recycling, sustainability and doing our part to ensure future generations have a healthy planet,” said Councilwoman Thelda Williams, who serves as the chair of the Water, Wastewater, Infrastructure and Sustainability (WWIS) Subcommittee. “I am certain that once others see what we are doing, they will want to be part of this movement to prevent more materials from being simply thrown away.”

The plan is for Renew Phoenix, a joint venture between Generated Materials Recovery and Renewlogy, to work together to build a facility to process the materials on the city’s Resource Innovation Campus.

“I am excited for what this partnership brings to Phoenix,” said Councilman Michael Nowakowski, whose district is home to the City’s Resource Innovation Campus. “This new, innovative venture will encourage other businesses to bring-next generation technology to the Phoenix to help us reach our diversion goal of 40% by 2020.”

Renew Phoenix was selected through a competitive Request for Proposal (RFP) process. Their plan is to use a proprietary chemical recycling process to reverse the plastic back into its basic molecular structure, which will allow them to convert the plastic waste into fuel. Renew Phoenix will also bring as many as 15 full-time jobs to the valley, after investing more than five million dollars in capital to the project.

“Renewlogy is excited about bringing our technology to Phoenix and creating a more circular economy around plastic waste locally,” said Priyanka Bakaya, Founder and CEO of Renewlogy. “Phoenix will serve as a model for cities around the country looking for local solutions for plastic waste.”

Once at full production, the project is expected to divert ten tons per day of mixed plastic waste, which equates to 60 barrels of liquid fuel. This partnership will not only help Phoenix, but the Valley altogether. Renew Phoenix will be able to scale their production to allow regional remanufacturing of Plastics 3-7 to be processed as well.

“We are proud to continue bucking the trend and pushing forward with innovation, economic development and repurposing our waste,” said Ginger Spencer, city of Phoenix Public Works Director. “We are committed to building a circular economy and achieving our Reimagine Phoenix goals. This new venture to turn plastics into fuel is eye-opening and we hope it will serve as a model for other cities to reimagine their own recycling programs.”

About Reimagine Phoenix: Reimagine Phoenix is the city’s initiative to increase the city’s waste diversion rate to 40 percent by 2020 and to better manage its solid waste resources.To achieve this, the city is conducting community and educational outreach on the five pillars–reduce, reuse, recycle, reconsider and reimagine—in hopes to increase awareness of the importance of waste diversion and management. The city is developing the Resource Innovation Campus (RIC) as a regional circular economy hub. The RIC is home to one of the city’s two transfer stations, a composting facility, Palm Silage and the future operations of Renew Phoenix. Approximately 50 acres of the RIC will be leased to innovators with market-ready technologies and manufacturing processes that reuse or repurpose trash materials including recycled plastics, recycled paper, and recycled boxes and packing materials.

About Renew Phoenix: Renew Phoenix is a joint venture between Generated Materials Recovery (GMR) and Renewlogy. Renewlogy has the innovative technology and operational experience while GMR has the technical, operation, and local market expertise. Renew Phoenix will draw on the expertise of both companies to build a showcase facility for handling low value plastics such as #3-#7s and serve as a model for other cities around the world to follow.

About Renewlogy: Renewlogy is a plastic to fuel technology firm with facilities in the U.S. and Canada. Renewlogy was founded at MIT in 2011 and started operating its first pilot in Salt Lake City, UT in 2013. Renewlogy has been recognized by Inc. Magazine as one of the Top 25 Most Audacious Companies.

About Generated Materials Recovery (GMR): Generated Materials Recovery (GMR) is a $10 million waste company established in 1998. GMR provides recycling services to manufacturing and industrial facilities in AZ, UT and CO. It currently services municipalities around the Phoenix Metro area including Mesa, Chandler, Glendale, Scottsdale, Gilbert, Tempe, and Surprise, and has a 20-year history specializing in the plastics industry.

April 15, 2019by phxAdmin
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