Westside report delayed two months
Lolita Harper
The committee was large. The task was considerable. The conclusion
will take more time.
The City Council, acting as the Redevelopment Agency, approved a
two-month extension Monday for the final report due from the
Community Redevelopment Action Committee. The report -- the
culmination of an 18-month process to allow various residents to
present suggestions for the future of the Westside -- was scheduled
to be presented at the end of this month.
Committee facilitators Civic Solutions, which was hired to guide
the committee through the “consensus building” process and forge the
final report, asked for the additional time to allow committee
members to be actively involved in the drafting.
The facilitators initially requested that the report be due in
September, said Mike Robinson, the city’s director of redevelopment,
but council members refused to delay the process.
“I would like to get this thing wrapped up as soon as possible,”
Councilwoman Libby Cowan said.
The report will end the city’s contract with Civic Solutions and
the initial study period. The contract, originally set to end June
30, will be extended to Aug. 30, without further compensation.
Committee member Bill Turpit said Civic Solutions created a rough
draft of the report, which was then given to a subcommittee for
revision. Once the changes are made, it will return to the entire
committee for more input for the final draft.
“In the last three months and three meetings, the committee has
made tremendous progress in comparison to the first nine months,”
Turpit said. “It doesn’t surprise me at all that we are getting an
extra two months to finish the report.”
Mayor Gary Monahan, who has been critical of the Civic Solutions
during the tumultuous study, said the extension was “not acceptable.”
Throughout the process, a core group of about a dozen members of the
committee repeatedly complained that the methods being used to gain
consensus were childlike, and that facilitators spoke down to them
and wasted time on fruitless exercises.
“We are talking about a consulting firm that, from day one, [we’ve
gotten complaints] that nothing has been moving, and now we are
talking about a one- to three-month delay?” Monahan asked.
Although the committee was deliberately created to have no council
input, Monahan intervened briefly to make sure all the players were
on the same page. Officials from Civic Solutions and committee
members were reminded of the goals of redevelopment and what the city
actually had the power to accomplish.
Despite the bumpy ride, many members of the Community
Redevelopment Action Committee were anxious to carry on their
meetings and continue giving their input.
In May, the council voted to invite all members back for an
ongoing study of the city’s redevelopment, after the initial 18-month
study is completed.
Cowan said Monday that delays regarding the final report would
hinder the group’s momentum.
Monahan supported the unanimous vote to extend the deadline, but
said he refuses to grant any more time.
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