Westside property on city agenda
Deirdre Newman
City leaders today will re-consider the Planning Commission’s
recommendation to add about 440 acres to the downtown redevelopment
zone.
The City Council, acting as the Redevelopment Agency, postponed a
decision on the issue seven months ago because of uncertainty over
whether the proposed area is lagging economically. Instead, it
instructed staffers to accomplish nine directives to get more insight
on the status of the area.
Since then, city staffers have started an economic study of West
19th Street and the Community Revitalization Action Committee has
issued its final vision and recommendations for the Westside.
Today, the agency will be confronted with three options: approve
the preliminary boundaries of the 440 acres already approved by the
commission; approve a request by industrial property owners to
eliminate all industrial property, thereby reducing the size of the
area to 204 acres; or limit the project area to the West 19th Street
commercial corridor, which could include as many as 52 acres.
The issue pits residents, who feel the city’s redeveloping the
Westside is necessary to improve the area, against industrial
property owners -- many of whom have been in the area for decades --
who believe they can improve the area without redevelopment.
In the past seven months, opinions have become more polarized, and
a feisty crowd is expected to pack the community center chambers.
“It’s going to be a free-for-all,” Mayor Gary Monahan said.
Redevelopment is a formal process that earmarks qualifying
properties and siphons associated taxes into a fund for area
improvements.
Independent consultants established the preliminary boundaries,
encompassing 434 acres, after an initial study of the area. If the
boundaries are approved, the consultants will embark on an in-depth,
parcel-by-parcel assessment of the approximate 627 properties in the
zone to see which ones are blighted and which need to be included to
ensure a contiguous redevelopment.
In January, the Planning Commission gave preliminary approval to
the boundaries, which run roughly along 15th Street, Whittier Avenue,
West 19th Street and Pomona Avenue. It also added four acres that
include properties on the north side of Center Street, between
Placentia and Pomona avenues, and the balance of the Hoosier Mobile
Home Park north of 19th Street and west of Harbor Boulevard.
Approval of the preliminary plan is the first major step of intent
in the redevelopment process. When the agency decides how much
territory it wants to add, it also has to delineate its plans for
eminent domain, the bugaboo for industrial property owners.
Staff points out that just because property is included in a
redevelopment project area, it doesn’t mean it will be acquired
through eminent domain. For example, city staffers point out, in the
Downtown Redevelopment Zone, less than 20 acres was acquired through
eminent domain since the project area was created in 1973.
Industrial property owners, however, point to part of the
preliminary plan’s stated objectives that include the reinstatement
and inclusion of the agency’s power of eminent domain. They worry
that their property values will go down if they are included in the
redevelopment area.
A group of them has banded together as the Westside Revitalization
Assn. to rejuvenate the area without redevelopment.
They feel their efforts have been successful, proving that they
are not a physical or economic burden to the community, said John
Hawley, who owns Railmakers.
Some residents believe that however well-intentioned these efforts
are, they won’t go far enough.
“While it is great that these business owners have shown some
initiative to get their own houses in order, their efforts will still
fall far short of the massive infrastructure needs of the area,” Eric
Bever wrote in a Sept. 7 article in the Daily Pilot.
Monahan said he strongly supports the smallest redevelopment
alternative.
“I firmly believe the only area that makes financial sense for
redevelopment is the 19th Street corridor,” Monahan said, adding that
the concept just needs more work and the corridor needs to be defined
a little better.
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