Public Dollars for Public Benefit: A Smart Investment in Spokane's Future
On August 25th, Spokane City Council will decide on the Public Dollars for Public Benefit Ordinance, shaping the future of our families and neighborhoods. The ordinance calls for using Community Workforce Agreements to maximize public benefit on public works projects over $5 million. Spokane Alliance is proud to build upon our city's legacy by investing in Spokane families with this smart policy.
We believe our public tax dollars should create maximum public benefit for Spokane residents. This ordinance ensures that on public works projects costing $5 million or more, our tax dollars stay in Spokane, are invested in Spokane, and create lasting benefits for our community.
The Numbers Don't Lie
National research, including Cornell University, shows Community Workforce Agreements return $3 to $6 to the local economy for every $1 spent. Cities that implement these policies create opportunities that benefit taxpayers for years after projects are completed.
Right here in Spokane, we've already proven this works. The Convention Center expansion we supported generated 2,300 jobs and $266 million in economic impact over the 5 years that the project took place and today brings in $173 million in economic impact annually. These weren't accidents—they were the result of strategic public investment.
Addressing the Myths About Costs
Some critics claim Community Workforce Agreements increase project costs. The facts say otherwise. A comprehensive study of 263 construction projects worth $707 million in California found that projects with workforce agreements had slightly more bidders and lower costs than projects without them. In Illinois, an analysis of 773 projects indicated that bid competition increased by 14% with such labor agreements and there was no impact on costs. In New York City, agreements saved about $300M on $5.3B worth of projects, while creating 1,800 new jobs. The U.S. Department of Labor confirms that these agreements ensure timely completion of projects at or under budget.”
Project bidding is open to all, union and non-union, which increases competition. However, with requirements that projects be staffed with skilled, trained workers through apprenticeship programs, residents benefit by getting better quality construction, fewer delays, reduced work stoppages, less reworking, and less waste. That saves taxpayers money, while creating good jobs.
Proven Track Record of Results
The Spokane Alliance has spent over 20 years working towards creating policies that benefit working families and Spokanites. We've delivered real results: protecting over $11 million in affordable housing funds, securing over $9 million for childcare and mental health investments, and creating one of the strongest apprenticeship utilization policies in the nation.
This proposed ordinance continues that work by ensuring that 25% of hours on major public projects go to “priority hire workers”, which includes graduates of certified pre-apprenticeship programs, residents of economically distressed areas, veterans, women, people of color, and other underrepresented groups. These workers earn $300,000 more over their lifetimes compared to those without training, and 93% find employment after completing their programs.
Creating Opportunities for Our Neighbors
This ordinance targets opportunities in Spokane's most economically distressed neighborhoods like Northeast Spokane, parts of downtown Spokane, East Central, Hillyard, West Central, Browne's Addition, and North Spokane. It creates pathways for local residents, veterans, women, and underrepresented communities to access family-sustaining careers with full healthcare and retirement benefits.
When we invest in our neighbors, they spend locally, support schools through taxes, and build stronger communities. That's not just good policy—it's good business.
The Choice is Clear
Spokane can stick with low-bid approaches that save pennies but cost dollars in missed opportunities, or invest in policies that build wealth, strengthen businesses, and streamline contracting. Collectively this creates lasting opportunity by keeping public dollars in Spokane and investing in our community.
The Public Dollars for Public Benefit Ordinance received its first reading on August 18th, with the final vote on August 25th. Contact your Spokane City Council Members at [email protected] to support this smart investment in Spokane's future.
Our tax dollars should work for all of us—not just the lowest bidder.
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