Kathy Bonnett
KATHY BONNETT serving the greater Spokane Area
Kathy Bonnett

Spokane Information


Population Trends~     

Spokane is the largest city between Seattle and Minneapolis with a total population of 198,700.

Spokane serves as the hub of the Inland Northwest, a 2-million person, 36-county region encompassing Eastern Washington, Northern Idaho, Western Montana, Northeastern Oregon, and parts of Alberta and British Columbia, Canada.

 

Spokane County Population

Spokane County's 2005 population of 436,300 includes both incorporated areas and unincorporated areas.


Spokane County Population by Age Group



Cost of Living~

Cost of Living Ranking*  (4th Quarter 2004)
All figures compared to a national average of 100

Composite

Utilities

Housing

Health Care

Spokane, WA

103.8

87.1

100.3

130.2

Boise, ID

95.8

93.8

93.7

104.5

Portland, OR

112.8

117.4

106.2

136.3

Salt Lake City, UT

94.4

87.3

89.6

92.0

* The ACCRA cost of living index reflects data for a mid-management standard of living which creates a weighting structure.  Homeownership costs, for example, are more heaviliy weighted than they would be if the index were structured to reflect a clerical worker standard of living.

Top Employers~           

The Spokane economy, which is the most diverse in Eastern Washington, thrives on the emergence of new industries, such as biotechnology and high technology, and the perseverance of our region's mature industries, including agriculture manufacturing and forestry. Below is a list of the major employers in the Spokane region.

Top Ten Major Employers (November 2005)

Company Employees

Fairchild AFB

5,343

Spokane Public Schools

3,146

Sacred Heart Medical Center

3,087

State of Washington

2,763

U.S. Federal Government

2,692

Spokane County

2,049

City of Spokane

1,963

Empire Health Services

1,641

Dakotah Direct Headquarters

1,600*

URM Stores Inc.

1,405

Community Colleges of Spokane

1,335

 

Top Manufacturing Employers (Dec. 2004)

Company Employees

Huntwood Industries

643

CPM Development Corp.

600

The Spokesman-Review

586

Columbia Lighting

560

Kaiser

550

Itron Inc.

482

Honeywell Electronic Materials

471

Travis Patter & Foundry

450

Itronix Corp.

396

Triumph Composite Systems Inc.

325

Hollister-Stier Laboratories LLC

300

 

Top High-Tech Employers (Jan. 2006)

Itron

434   

Honeywell Electronic Materials

429

Itronix

354

Agilent Technologies

350

Inland Imaging

314

Telect

223

 
Top Back Office Operations in the Region (Jul. 2004)

Dakotah Direct Headquarters

1,600*

ICT Group

722

The Guardian

688

Bank of America Credit Card Services

485

Pitney-Bowes

471

Safeco Insurance

301

Software Spectrum

300*

Travelers Property Casualty

280

The Principal Financial Group

218

Communications Center

160

WA State Unemployment Dept.

149

Income~      

The rise in real household income over the previous five-year period indicates a healthy economy and an increase in overall spending power.

Spokane County
Median, Per Capita and Total Personal Income Estimates

Year Median Household Income $ Per Capita Personal
Income $
Total Personal Income ($000)

1994

31,701

20,044

7,934,834

1995

32,332

20,523

8,236,068

1996

33,633

21,434

8,663,081

1997

35,080

22,567

9,151,942

1998

36,510

23,336

9,537,904

1999

37,308

24,100

9,649,545

2000

39,453

25,977

10,876,894

2001

40,615

26,107

11,044,375

2002

42,105*

 

11,420,000*

2003

42,440*

 

11,760,000**

*Estimate
**Projection

Source: Spring 2004 Real Estate Research Report

 

Retail Sales~            

Spokane has experienced over a 12% increase in retail sales and steady growth in the tourism industry over the past five years. These are two strong indicators of economic health in the region.

Spokane County Retail Sales
Year Retail Sales

2000

$5,577,511,000

2001

$5,620,053,000

2002

$5,572,173,000

2003

$5,820,431,000

2004

$6,164,481,335

 

Spokane County Retail Sales
Source: Washington State Deptartment of Revenue, Dec. 2003

 

Here is some links for more information on Spokane:

<a href='http://www.inlandnwliving.com'>Inland Northwest Living</a><br>Inland Northwest Living offers our community a place to find information pertinent to everyday living including.

www.Spokaneedc.org

www.movetospokane.com

www.spokane.com

www.downtown.spokane.net 

www.Spokane.net

www.visitspokane.org

www.spokaneevents.com

www.city-data.com

 


Spokane News


Friday, June 2, 2006
 

Home values jump 16.2%

Assessor's notices reflect surge in prices

Average increase for 2007 Deer Park 28.8 percent Latah 23.0 percent Unincorporated county 17.3 percent Spokane 16.3 percent Liberty Lake 15.8 percent Spokane Valley 15 percent Rockford 13.4 percent Fairfield 13.2 percent Spangle 12.4 percent Millwood 10.5 percent Waverly 9 percent Cheney 8.9 percent Airway Heights7.1 percent Medical Lake 6.0 percent Average increase by year 2006 to 2007 16.2 percent 2005 to 2006 15.1 percent 2004 to 20054.4 percent 2003 to 2004 3.8 percent 2002 to 2003 3.9 percent SOURCE: Spokane County Assessor's Office

Spokane's booming real estate market has triggered a record increase in property values.

The Spokane County assessor's office mailed notices this week to the owners of 176,000 parcels that the worth of their property has changed, mostly upward. Values increased an average of 16.2 percent countywide.

The rise follows last year's surge of 15.1 percent.

"We've had a very, very vibrant real estate market," said Spokane County Assessor Ralph Baker. "This year, I think, will go down as an extraordinary year."

Although the rapid rise worries affordable housing advocates, the numbers are comparable to price increases throughout the Northwest.

"Spokane joined the party a little bit later than other places in the state," said Glenn Crellin, director of the Washington Center for Real Estate Research at Washington State University.

The center's index of affordability has shown Spokane slip slightly, but it's still cheap compared with most urban areas in the state, Crellin said.

Still, nonprofit groups working with first-time homebuyers say their clients are struggling to find something they can buy.

While home prices are jumping fast, income has remained flat. The federal government lists the median income for a family of four in Spokane at about $54,000, almost the same as 2005.

"It means that people are being priced out of the market," said Chris Venne, development finance manager at Community Frameworks, which promotes affordable housing.

Continuing strong sales point to large increases next year.

Next Hot Market...Think Washington!
Above average job and population growth are driving strong home-price gains.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - As forecasts for housing price growth have cooled for most of the country, they are calling for booming values in the state of Washington.

For the June issue of MONEY Magazine, Fiserv Lending Solutions and Moody's Economy.com provided forecasts for the coming 12 months for 380 metro areas - they predict that five of the top 10 fastest growers will be in Washington. Ten of the top 17 will be. (see the rankings)

Tops in Washington
These towns in Washington State have forecasts for home price growth well above the national average, according to Fiserv Lending Solutions and Moody's Economy.com.

The median home price in Wenatchee, a small city in central Washington, is set to grow at 16.7 percent from June 2006 to June 2007. Other bright spots: Mount Vernon (14.5 percent), Olympia (13.1 percent) and Yakima (12.8 percent).

For the United States overall, forecasters expect just 5 percent growth.

"Although price growth has been steady in Washington, it has not been outstripping the economic fundamentals," says Celia Chen, Director of Housing Economics for Economy.com.

The real estate markets have been pretty much balanced in the Northwest while many others have been sellers-markets for years.

Solid fundamentals

Lennox Scott, who runs John L. Scott real estate, one of the biggest brokers in the Northwest, attributes much of the future market strength in Washington to job growth. "Microsoft announced it's hiring 10,000 more people," he says. "Boeing is hiring. The anomaly of historic low mortgage rates drove prices for the past few years. Job growth will drive them for the next few."

Job growth in the area was 3 percent last year, double the rate for the United States as a whole, according to ChangMook Sohn, executive director of the Economic and Revenue Forecast Council of the State of Washington. "We expect that to slow a little this year but to still be strong."

Glenn Crellin, the director of the Washington Center for Real Estate Research at Washington State University, attributes some of the effect to a bit of lag before trends reach Washington.

"Our markets took off after California and the East Coast did," says Crellin.

In addition, home ownership in Washington trails the rest of the country; a strenghtening job market could lead renters to start buying. The home-ownership rate is 64 percent, versus 70 pecent in the rest of the country, according to Barb Lally, of the Washington Realtors Association.

Demand will also come from population growth, now 1.8 percent according to Sohn, nearly twice the national average.

Much of the population growth consists of people with means, according to Richard Davis, president of the Washington Research Council. "Researchers find that those moving to our state tend to be well-educated, higher-income professionals ... these folks add to market pressures by bidding up the price of available housing," Davis wrote in a recent report.

Washington is among the top 10 of states in attracting more domestic migration than they lose to other states. "About 30 percent of the in-migration comes from California," says Sohn. "For them, housing is a bargain. They come with cash and buy houses twice as large as they left behind."

In Seattle, for example, Washington's most expensive city, the median home price in the fourth quarter of 2005 had reached $360,000. But Los Angeles prices were at $525,000 and San Francisco's were a whopping $825,000. Seattle prices are forecasted to growth 10.5 percent during the next four quarters.

Other Washington areas with high projected growth are coming off a lower base -- the median home price in Olympia, for example, was $199,000 at the end of 2005. In Wenatchee, it was $185,000.

Manged growth

Crellin also attributes some of the market strength to a growth management act passed in 1990. It established boundaries for individual cities; they had to focus their development efforts within those limits. That helps preserve farmland and open space and increases the density of populated areas so service delivery, such as water supply, garbage collection and highway construction, can be done more efficiently.

Although that may have a salutary impact on Washingtonians' quality of life, it also curtails the land available for development and so drives up prices.

There is a movement among builders and developers to try to ease these restrictions so as to increase the stock of affordable housing. But until that happens and if Washington's fundamentals remain robust, the housing market should continue to outperform most of the rest of the country.

 


Metro Home Prices

Second Quarter Home Prices for 151 Markets

August 21, 2006

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Housing markets seem to have slid into a new phase, one of much slower price growth.

After several consecutive quarters of double-digit, year-over-year increases, the national market recorded a gain of just 3.7 percent in the second quarter, to $227,500.

 

It was the second consecutive quarter in which home prices failed to repeat the gains of an average of more than 10 percent annually from 2002 through 2005.

Regionally, only the Northeast continued to perform comparatively well - prices climbed there by 6.3 percent to $299,200. Midwestern prices fell by 2.0 percent to $167,400. The South gained 4.1 percent ($188,200) and the West rose 3.6 percent ($350,800).

Condo prices, down nationally by 0.3 percent, fell in the West by 6.7 percent to $272,200. The Northeast again led the market with condo prices there up by 4.9 percent to $257,800. Top of page

Metro Area* State State Median Price (000s) Median Price (000s) % Change (1-yr) % Change (1-yr)
U.S.   227.5 3.7%
NORTHEAST   299.2 6.3%
MIDWEST   167.4 -2.0%
SOUTH   188.2 4.1%
WEST   350.8 3.6%

 

1- Baton Rouge

LA 172.3 27.3%
2- Ocala FL 169.5 25.3%
3- Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News VA-NC 237.3 23.6%
4- Gainesville FL 214.1 19.7%
5- Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton OR-WA 283.4 19.1%
6- Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater FL 231.6 18.8%
7- Jacksonville FL 198.0 18.8%
8- Spokane WA 179.0 18.6%
9- Eugene-Springfield OR 227.6 18.3%
10- Beaumont-Port Arthur TX 114.2 18.3%

 

Home  |  Listings  |  Rentals  |  Downtown Development  |  School Information  |  About Spokane  |  Neighborhood  |  Search MLS Listings  |  Affiliates  |  Our Mission  |  Testimonials  |  OurTeam  |  Contact Us  |  Reports  |  Auto Home Search  |  Home Evaluation  |  Calculators
 

Privacy Policy  |  Site Map  |  Links  |  For Agents  |  Profile  |  Login

©2003-2008 Kathy Bonnett and Associates