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Arizona is the New
California
The
Phoenix area is a magnet for people from the Golden State for two reasons:
real estate prices and jobs.
BUCKEYE, ARIZ. (By Maria L. La Ganga and Doug Smith, LATimes) April 24, 2007
Kyle Campos doesn't look like a pioneer, standing behind the counter at Main
Squeeze, tossing frozen berries into a whirling blender. And "go East, young
man," doesn't have quite the same ring as the 19th century version.
But when he transplanted his family from Santa Barbara to this scorching slice
of Sonoran Desert three years ago, Campos accomplished something he never could
have done if he'd stayed on the California coast: He bought a house. He started
a business.
And he unleashed a flood of family members who followed him here to the Phoenix
suburbs to fulfill the same thwarted dreams. First came Aaron, his brother and
business partner, with wife and four children in tow. His in-laws, who could
never afford a house, came next and bought two. And last year, his mother joined
them, buying a home for the first time since her divorce nearly a decade before.
"Living in Santa Barbara, you get used to nothing being under a million dollars,
and a million-dollar house is really small," Campos said. "Here, I could build
my dream house for less than $300,000. At some point, you weigh the beach versus
a realistic life someplace."
These days, that "someplace" is likely to be Maricopa County. For the first time
since Nevada became a magnet for Californians in the 1990s, the Phoenix area has
nudged Las Vegas aside as the No. 1 destination for people fleeing the Golden
State and its soaring home prices.
In fact, the Arizona-bound are at the head of a long parade of bargain hunters
marching out of expensive urban California and settling ever eastward, in
Riverside, San Bernardino, Buckeye, Phoenix.
Tax returns for 2005, the most recent data available, show that a net 11,375
households representing nearly 29,000 people moved from California to
Maricopa County in 2004. At the same time, a net 10,657 households with about
23,000 members moved from California to Clark County, Nev.
"Housing isn't cheap in Vegas anymore, nor is it in Phoenix, compared to what it
was. But it's still cheap compared to California," said R.L. Brown, publisher of
the Phoenix Housing Market Letter. "We're averaging 9,000 Californians a month
changing their [driver's] licenses to Arizona. To me, that's a phenomenal
number."
As much as California has beckoned adventurers throughout its history, the state
has had an equally long tradition of defectors, in search, at least in the last
generation, of destinations with fewer cars and cheaper houses.
In the 1980s, the Pacific Northwest decried the hordes of "Californicators" who
snapped up real estate and filled freeways in Starbucks' stamping ground. After
that, Sin City and its non-neon environs reigned supreme: no state income tax;
no brainer.
But then home prices in the Silver State took off like a drunken gambler's
dreams. Between 2003 and 2004, the median price of a Las Vegas-area house jumped
40%, according to DataQuick Information Systems. Phoenix started looking better
and better.
February's median home price the level at which half of all home sales are
above and half below speaks volumes about California migration patterns. Los
Angeles County: $528,000. Las Vegas area: $300,000. Phoenix area: $253,000.
Maricopa County, here we come.
At least that's what members of the extended Campos family thought when they
moved to the western suburbs of Phoenix, a vast, wind-swept expanse that looks
like the Central Valley with saguaro. Most of them ended up in Verrado, a New
Urbanist development in the shadow of the White Tank Mountains.
Real estate experts here would place the subdivision at the higher end of
Phoenix's offerings; unlike most other new developments, which look as raw as a
fresh haircut, it boasts its own tree-lined shopping district. It has a grocery
store and a pharmacy, a bank and restaurants like the Campos' juice and smoothie
bar, where Kyle and Aaron sell drinks named after California beach towns.
Still, an earth-tone bungalow with a red tile roof, a Craftsman-style front
porch and two to five bedrooms will cost somewhere in the $200,000 to $300,000
range. For anyone house hunting in Greater Los Angeles, that pretty much
qualifies as a steal.
At least that's what Patricia and Joe Ornelas found. She's 34 and an
architectural designer who grew up near Chavez Ravine and loves the Dodgers.
He's 33 and a construction manager who had a chance to move his job to Tempe. A
couple of years ago they adopted Penelope from China.
In January, they stepped into the quintessential CA-to-AZ story line, which goes
something like this: Buy a fixer-upper in Alhambra for $240,000. Sell it five
years later for $600,000. Pay off all your debts. Buy a four-bedroom house,
complete with office, gym and pool, 25 miles outside of Phoenix. Have enough
money left over so mom can stay home with baby and start adopting child No. 2.
"I never thought we'd leave," Patricia Ornelas said of her Los Angeles-area
home. "I'm a metropolitan girl. But it was a rat race for us
. Our ultimate goal
was to move to South Pasadena. But we'd still have to work like dogs to keep up
with the house. It just wasn't worth it."
But real estate prices unheard of in metropolitan California aren't the only
reason that Maricopa is the fastest-growing county in the fastest-growing state
in America.
The other part of the equation is jobs.
Unemployment runs on average about 4.2%, said Barry Broome, president and chief
executive of the Greater Phoenix Economic Council, and "would be lower, but we
add 100,000 to 130,000 people each year."
Skeptics argue that the local economy leans too heavily on the building
industry, and Broome acknowledges that the region is far more reliant on
construction jobs than is the nation as a whole. Still, a boom in commercial
building has helped ease the pain of a housing market that has cooled
considerably. And Arizona has benefited greatly from a particular brand of
California export: the young technology worker.
Construction aside, the No. 1 industry sector in Arizona is professional and
business services. That's a fact that Ray Aleman could easily have explained
from his seat in section 108 at Chase Field.
There he was one balmy Tuesday night, wearing a Fernando Valenzuela jersey
purchased at the Montebello Town Center mall and watching the Dodgers clobber
the Arizona Diamondbacks for the second night in a row.
Aleman is from East Los Angeles, a graduate of Garfield High. But back in 1996,
when California was struggling to shake off a recession, his bosses at Wells
Fargo told him he could move along with his job to Arizona or look for work in
his hometown.
It was a pretty simple decision: Los Angeles, unemployment. Maricopa County, a
job in the Wells Fargo imaging department. Los Angeles, a lifetime of renting.
Arizona, a four-bedroom house with a pool on half an acre in suburban Mesa,
purchased for $140,000 in 1999.
"Can you get anything for $140,000 in L.A.? Not even in Compton," Aleman said.
"My house doubled in five years. It was like, wow. That's the main reason people
from L.A. come here."
Sure there are things he misses about Los Angeles, and he ticked them off in
precise order: The Dodgers. The Lakers. Tommy's. Shakey's. King Taco. Oh, and
his parents are still there. But it's only six hours away, and he visits twice a
year.
As for the future: "I won't go back."
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