Home | Yearly News Archive | Advertisers | Blog | Contact Us |
|
Sunday, November 24, 2024 |
|
City Master Plan |
Post Reply |
Author | |
Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
Posted: Mar 01 2016 at 10:57am |
Middletown City Manager Douglas
Adkins
www.cityofmiddletown.org
City Master Plan
So, over the past few weeks I’ve talked about the
revenues we need to return to providing needed public services year after
year. We’ve talked about how we might generate those revenues. We
need new business and new families and improving property values and a
strong quality of life. The plan
I’ve laid out for you up to this point is intended to be the skeleton of
the plan. We know where we need to be with revenues and we know the types
of things that could reach those revenue goals. We know
that we need to pave, maintain water and sewer, and add quality of life back
for our residents… about $4 million additional dollars per year. Now how do we turn the model above into reality and how do we
make sure we are moving in the direction that the residents want for their
city? A lot of 2016 will be spent trying to answer those questions.
The pieces generated this year will lead to a The Community Building Institute and Middletown Moving Forward
have conducted almost 40 focus group discussions asking residents and business
owners “What do you want Downtown Middletown, Inc., has been working with downtown
property owners to select a consultant to prepare a new downtown Master
Plan. The last one was completed around 2008-2009 and contemplated a rail
station that never materialized. The recession created problems and
opportunities and now the downtown has or will open about 20 businesses that
weren’t there just five years ago. The new downtown plan will be based on
the Main Street concept and provide details on business support, branding,
amenities, style, and housing to make downtown the most sustainable and vibrant
it can be moving forward. After it is completed, I expect to change out
the street lights (which are at the end of their useful life) with some new style
of light, and then add benches, trash cans, and other amenities
consistent with the new plan. As we continue to gear up our public
relations efforts, we will be marketing city-wide and downtown events to the
region. Downtown is one of many areas that will receive specific
attention during the next few years. We have a I’ve discussed in previous posts the need to expand airport
operations and to generate as much economic development out of
the airport property as possible. We have a preliminary plan
that lays out additional tourism opportunities, industrial/manufacturing
acreage and backfilling of the existing facility when completed. The next
step is to update the Airport Layout Plan with the Federal Aviation
Administration, laying out the details of the plan. Once that
process is complete and approved by the FAA, we can start adding new business
to the airport. I have spent the last few months meeting with local real estate
professionals including realtors, home builders and landlords (they own almost
50% of our housing stock) to understand their perspective and challenges
in today’s real estate market. Our property values have not rebounded as
quickly as other communities. Our effective tax rate is higher than some
other communities. We have an older and smaller housing stock than many
other communities. We have almost 400 vacant residential lots from
demolition during the recession. My goal is to create a housing
strategy that over time raises values, aids in recruitment of families, and
builds a housing stock that allows families to move up and move down in price
and size while staying in This is a fancy term for “how do we move people around
town?” How do we improve the way we use automobiles, transit buses,
bicycles and pedestrian traffic? How do we make it faster and
easier to get from downtown to the highway and back again? How do we
improve the health of our community by providing better walking and
bicycle options throughout the city? How do we use transit not just to
move people, but as an economic development tool to get people to and from
work? How do we utilize the latest in traffic signals, etc., to speed up
auto traffic throughout the city? We hope to develop viable alternatives
through this process. The City developed a comprehensive So… as we complete these items, a vision starts to come
together. We know what we need… $4 million extra dollars each year to
complete needed city services. We know the types of things that can
generate that additional money… new families, new jobs, improved property
values, etc. Now we use the information above to create the path to the
goal. Not an inspirational plan but a strategic plan designed to bring us
back to sustainability using the city residents’ vision of what they would like
their city to become. In 2017, we put the whole package together. Have a
great day! |
|
VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
"We need new business and new families and improving property values and a strong quality of life"
This should have been the primary focus during the Olsen, Becker and Gilleland times. Why just now is this an important feature under your leadership? You worked for Gilleland. Why didn't you suggest this to her? Or did she just want to trash the city and watch it go down? "Downtown is one of many areas that will receive specific attention during the next few years" Nope. The downtown comes toward the end of the city makeover. However, we all know that you must include attention given this area because IF the downtown prospers (not likely after all the attempts, money wasted and time consumed), it will make the S. Main St property more valuable and protect your little buddies like the Mulligans. You know you must attend to their special agenda down there so as not to upset the power people. The rest of us people have always been expendable as to city focus. Airport Layout Plan- Turn the airport over to a private developer who has connections to what you need there. The city, as the property owner, must stay out of it or it will be as messed up as anything else the city has touched and will become another downtown "slow drain to futility"lasting for decades with no progress. Housing Study "Our property values have not rebounded as quickly as other communities. Our effective tax rate is higher than some other communities" Blame no one else but the city. You created a ghetto mentality here. Too much Section 8, low income, poverty, to lure anyone to this city. Taxes are too high also for the service residents get. "We have almost 400 vacant residential lots from demolition during the recession. You got the money and started knocking down everything in sight. Didn't give it a thought as to what would happen to all those empty lots did you? Now, you have a problem on what to do with all the holes in the landscape of the city. Looks "bombed out" in certain sections of the city doesn't it. We realized this years ago and commented on it on this forum. "How do we improve the health of our community by providing better walking and bicycle options throughout the city?" Like the downtown, forget the "bike path/recreational/everyone in Middletown will get fit" concept for now. Comes well after the basics have been satisfied. In reality, it is an idea where only 1-2% of the people around here would participate in. Not exactly a real popular activity in this city. East End- The city needs to keep it's hands off the development there. Just be accommodating as the private sector plans the direction and interest there. Just provide enticing propositions for all businesses interested out by the freeway....and for God's sake, stay out of the way or you'll screw that up too. In 2017, we'll all see just how much of this is lip service and how much will materialize. If we look at history, it ain't lookin' too good right now. |
|
I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
|
|
Factguy
MUSA Resident Joined: Dec 07 2009 Status: Offline Points: 217 |
Post Options
Thanks(0)
|
Help is on the way.
FACTS- - Tax generated will be from street lamps moved out from General Fund. - MMF doesn't need confirmation of vision. Chosen 15 years ago. They will round up friends of council nodding heads YES before reading a document or having a question submitted. - Downtown giveaways only used to create shine around Main Street. - Connectivity study? Fill potholes Doug. The bikers with no cars downtown that can't pay insurance get around with the sidewalk just fine. - Housing strategy, your tactics are ridiculous. Bring in businesses that are growing and pay well, and the housing takes care of itself. Knocking down homes does nothing when capacity is so high. - Zoning code, nuts. It isn't the codes destroying Middletown, its businesses and residents fleeing. And the 0 tax giveaways are creating expectation everyone expects zero base taxes. Just make Middletown one big TIF, just like declaring all of Middletown poverty, for NSP funds. - Airport. Sell it. Waste of taxpayer money and non core functionality. I like Doug but really getting off the rails. Smoke, mirrors, and pulleys only works for a short period of time, and really dumb people. |
|
Post Reply | |
Tweet
|
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |
This page was generated in 0.098 seconds.
Copyright ©2024 MiddletownUSA.com | Privacy Statement | Terms of Use | Site by Xponex Media | Advertising Information |