Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Will Downtown Sacramento Ever Recover From COVID-19?
By admin
Published 3 years ago on
January 24, 2022

Share

 

It’s been said that COVID-19 changes everything, and there’s some truth to that. More importantly, however, what changes will persist even after the pandemic fades, and will they be positive or negative?

The question popped up in my mind this month when, after a nearly two years of working from home, I began commuting to the new CalMatters office in downtown Sacramento, one we were to occupy 22 months ago, but has been mostly vacant since.

Downtown Changed by COVID

After writing about 350 columns from home, I could finally see my new digs, fire up my office computer and return to a more professional setting. However, it was soon evident that the downtown I had left behind in 2020 had changed.

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

COVID-19 hit just as the city’s center, after decades of decay and failed efforts at revival, was beginning to click. A massive new arena for the Sacramento Kings basketball team, several new hotels, some new housing, a project to expand the city’s convention center and ambitious plans to develop a former railyard were having a positive effect on downtown ambience.

Much of that progress, however, has been interrupted. It’s not exactly a ghost town, but downtown Sacramento is eerily quiet these days. Streets have only light traffic and parking lots and garages are half-full at best. A little sandwich shop I had often frequented used to have lunchtime lines stretching out into the sidewalk, but last week I was the only customer.

Downtown is highly dependent on the influx of thousands of state workers each morning, but the state, like other employers, turned to remote work, and that may be a permanent change. Gov. Gavin Newsom’s new budget calls for expanding what it calls “telework” and reducing its occupied office space throughout the state by 20%.

Area Facing Other Headwinds

Even when COVID-19 fades, therefore, there will be fewer commuters into downtown Sacramento and thus fewer customers for its shops, restaurants and other service businesses.

However, that’s not downtown’s only uncertainty. Another is the basketball arena whose construction touched off a flurry of development on its periphery, including new housing and a fancy new hotel. The city financed its share of the arena with bonds backed by parking revenues, on the assumption that events at the arena and other new attractions would bring in more people and their cars.

However, the Kings are one of the NBA’s persistently bad teams and has the league’s second lowest attendance. Moreover, a series of semi-violent demonstrations not only damaged downtown’s businesses, but made it less attractive to visitors. Thus, parking revenues have been subpar and city officials have warned that they may have to dip into general revenues to make arena bond payments.

Likewise, the city’s convention center expansion is backed by hotel occupancy taxes, which are also taking a beating.

Finally, the Capitol itself, which is the main driver of downtown Sacramento’s economic activity, is also undergoing change. The Capitol’s east wing, which contains legislators’ offices and most committee hearing rooms, is scheduled for demolition and replacement.

For several years, therefore, legislators will be housed in temporary quarters blocks away from the restaurants, bars and other businesses that depend on patronage by legislators, Capitol staffers and the hundreds of lobbyists who try to influence their work.

Will Housing be Salvation?

The only positive change I noticed while returning to the area that’s been my working home for nearly a half-century is dozens of new apartment and condo complexes. They may be downtown Sacramento’s salvation — if they can attract enough new residents to the troubled area.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Voting Rights Under Fire in Texas: Over a Million Purged From Rolls, ACLU Warns

DON'T MISS

Bettors Banking on Eagles Resurgence, Cowboys Regression as NFL Season Begins

DON'T MISS

Abandoned Poodle Mix Adam Survives the Wild and Seeks a Forever Home

DON'T MISS

Labor Day Quiz: What Did Elvis Do Before He Was the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’?

DON'T MISS

Why Black Students Are Still Disciplined at Higher Rates: Takeaways From AP’s Report

DON'T MISS

Top Brazilian Judge Orders Suspension of X Platform in Brazil Amid Feud With Musk

DON'T MISS

Trump Reverses Course, Opposes Florida Abortion Rights Measure After Conservative Backlash

DON'T MISS

How a Real Estate Boom Drove Political Corruption in Los Angeles

DON'T MISS

Big Red Church Hosts Forum on Palestine on Saturday Night

DON'T MISS

Palestinian TikTok Star Who Shared Details of Gaza Life Under Siege Is Killed by Israeli Airstrike

UP NEXT

Snark’s in Season as National Park Embraces the Hate on Social Media

UP NEXT

California’s Fast Food Workers Got a $20 Minimum Wage, but Is It Working? It’s Debatable

UP NEXT

JD Vance: A Millennial in Age, but Not in Spirit

UP NEXT

Why Economists Worry About Trumpflation

UP NEXT

With 28 Months to Go, Will Newsom Now Pay More Attention to His Day Job?

UP NEXT

Republicans Are Right: One Party Is ‘Anti-Family and Anti-Kid’

UP NEXT

Oakland Needs Serious Leadership Changes. What About Bringing Back Jerry Brown?

UP NEXT

Fresno Unified’s Credit Recovery Tool Is Roadbock to Real Learning

UP NEXT

The Great Convention Divide: How Voter Energy Will Tip the Scales in November

UP NEXT

As Inflation Keeps Hitting Pocketbooks, Newsom Scrambles for Answers

Labor Day Quiz: What Did Elvis Do Before He Was the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’?

11 hours ago

Why Black Students Are Still Disciplined at Higher Rates: Takeaways From AP’s Report

12 hours ago

Top Brazilian Judge Orders Suspension of X Platform in Brazil Amid Feud With Musk

23 hours ago

Trump Reverses Course, Opposes Florida Abortion Rights Measure After Conservative Backlash

23 hours ago

How a Real Estate Boom Drove Political Corruption in Los Angeles

1 day ago

Big Red Church Hosts Forum on Palestine on Saturday Night

1 day ago

Palestinian TikTok Star Who Shared Details of Gaza Life Under Siege Is Killed by Israeli Airstrike

1 day ago

Valley PBS Taps Mollison to Be New President/CEO

1 day ago

Farber Campus Opening: ‘Where Students’ Dreams Can Flourish and Not Wither’

1 day ago

Visalia Rawhide and City Agree on Terms to Upgrade Stadium

1 day ago

Voting Rights Under Fire in Texas: Over a Million Purged From Rolls, ACLU Warns

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced the removal of over one million voters from state rolls since 2020, sparking concern among voting rights ad...

6 hours ago

6 hours ago

Voting Rights Under Fire in Texas: Over a Million Purged From Rolls, ACLU Warns

9 hours ago

Bettors Banking on Eagles Resurgence, Cowboys Regression as NFL Season Begins

A black poodle's face with his tongue sticking out
11 hours ago

Abandoned Poodle Mix Adam Survives the Wild and Seeks a Forever Home

11 hours ago

Labor Day Quiz: What Did Elvis Do Before He Was the ‘King of Rock ‘n’ Roll’?

12 hours ago

Why Black Students Are Still Disciplined at Higher Rates: Takeaways From AP’s Report

23 hours ago

Top Brazilian Judge Orders Suspension of X Platform in Brazil Amid Feud With Musk

23 hours ago

Trump Reverses Course, Opposes Florida Abortion Rights Measure After Conservative Backlash

1 day ago

How a Real Estate Boom Drove Political Corruption in Los Angeles

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend