Small-business owners are optimistic
Andrew Edwards
A survey of California small-business owners reported Orange County
entrepreneurs look forward to 2005 being a good year, though they
worry about taxes and rising healthcare costs.
The survey was conducted by Union Bank in January, and 228 of
1,941 business owners responding to questions were from Orange
County. The bank defined small business as companies with sales
numbers at $5 million or less.
Results of the survey were published last week. Union Bank
executive vice president Barbara Hoos described the survey as a cross
between an economic forecast for the state and market research for
the bank.
In Orange County, 72.4% of respondents said they anticipated
profits would improve this year. Most small-business owners surveyed
(53.1%) said they expected to keep staffing levels steady over 2005,
and 43.9% of those surveyed anticipated hiring more workers.
“What they’re saying is, ‘It’s OK....” Hoos said.
The majority of Orange County respondents (57.9%) stated rising
workers’ compensation costs posed their greatest challenge.
Taxes came in as the second biggest difficulty for local small
businesses, with 33.3% of responses. Healthcare costs came in a close
third, with 32% of replies.
Across the state, workers’ compensation and healthcare costs were
among top concerns, but Orange County businesses were unique among
selecting taxes as a chief hardship, Hoos said.
The concerns of Costa Mesa’s small-business owners are in line
with the survey’s results, Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce president
Ed Fawcett said.
He said local business owners are especially rankled by taxes
because many perceive the state using tax revenues from Orange County
to pay for programs in other parts of California.
“Orange County has always perceived themselves -- and we are -- as
the proverbial donor county,” Fawcett said.
One of the business owners surveyed, Susan Kline, who has owned
the Kline School in Costa Mesa for 20 years, said her workers’
compensation costs have increased from about $5,700 three years ago
to about $12,000.
“We’re talking about $5,000 to $10,000 a year. These are not small
numbers -- these are gouging numbers,” Kline said.
Newport Beach business owners also worry about “the high cost of
doing business in California,” Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce
president Richard Luehrs said. Luehrs cited high electric bills,
unemployment insurance and litigation as other expenses disliked by
business owners.
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