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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Posted: May 11 2014 at 3:25pm |
Middletown Journal
Updated: City has high hopes for revitalization
projects
Art center and
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Downtown parking garage demolition work to
start
Former Swallens building
also coming down
Staff Writer
“It’s convenient to get to any place
downtown. But I can understand taking it down,” he said while pointing to a
chunk of concrete in a parking spot inside the garage. “It’s not safe.” June 4 was the last day for residents to
use the parking garage as the city plans to demolish the structure along with
the former Swallens building beginning Monday, June 7. Davidson was the driver of one of about 50
cars parked inside of the garage during its last day. The vehicles inside were
as varied as a Honda Civic with a missing fender and mismatched hood to a red
Chevrolet Corvette. Any cars left inside the structure will be issued a notice
to move. Those still in the building next week will be towed, said Rob Nicolls,
senior engineer for Work will begin with perimeter fencing
being installed and some asbestos removal. The right lane of southbound “There’s no doubt it will be tight, but we
don’t feel there will be any problems with that,” he said. While the city had billed
removing the garage and Swallens building as a cost-saving measure — about
$90,000 is expended annually to keep the garage open — local Realtor Walter
Leap said the entire measure would be unnecessary if officials had properly
marketed the property. “They never put the (Swallens building) up
for sale or put a price on it,” Leap said. “They could put it on the market
with a legitimate broker and let it sell... but they are really concerned about
not having ultimate control.” The demolition, which city
officials estimate will cost about $950,000, should be finished by July 30, said
City Manager Judy Gilleland. Contact this reporter at (513) 705-2843 or jheffner@coxohio.com. Garage costs
Breakdown
estimate of annual garage maintenance costs: $77,000
for utilities $13,000
for maintenance $5,000
for property and liability insurance $400
for taxes
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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Mercy sakes!!! I can't believe some of the crap from Mulligan and Ashworth...
First, you have this: "downtown has seen its share of action in 2010 with the city spending roughly $1.9 million on various renovation and revitalization projects". Then, a few lines latter, this: “I think the biggest difference this go-round is we have partners coming to the table,” Mayor Larry Mulligan said. “It was strictly the city’s idea for a mall. This time we aren’t the only party.” And while he said the city could have opened its own art or education center, it is instead partnering with institutions that have a track record of success and can operate the programs. “We are encouraging and doing some planning to shake things up,” Mulligan said. “That is the role the government should play. It is not a developer.” MULLIGAN, THE CITY GOVERNMENT IS THE DEVELOPER OF THE DOWNTOWN. WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH YOU? Then, this from Ashworth: Local historian Sam Ashworth said he feels the new projects coming to downtown are not so much trying to change the city’s identity as actually creating one for its downtown. “This is different than the past because we aren’t really turning it into anything else. For many years, it hasn’t been anything,” he said. OF COURSE YOU'RE TRYING TO CHANGE THE CITY'S IDENTITY. YOU'RE TRYING TO CHANGE IT FROM A BLUE-COLLAR TOWN WITH BEER AND NASCAR TO A CULTURAL TOWN WITH WINE, CHEESE, AND ART. THE PROBLEM IS, YOU WHO FEEL THE NEED TO TRANSITION THE TOWN INTO AN ARTS/EDUCATION MECCA STILL DON'T UNDERSTAND YOU IT CAN'T BE DONE BECAUSE THE PEOPLE IN MIDDLETOWN ARE 98% BLUE COLLAR/LOWER INCOME AND YOU ARE WANTING A MASON/SPRINGBORO/CENTERVILLE TYPE OF TOWN. IT AIN'T GONNA WORK PEOPLE. GO TO THE CITIES MENTIONED IF YOU WANT HIGH-END CULTURE AND PEOPLE WITH MONEY TO FRATERNIZE WITH. DON'T TRY TO RE-INVENT THIS CITY INTO SOMETHING IT WILL NEVER BE. "Ann Mort said she moved to Middletown 40 years ago because of its schools and the promise it held for her family. Since then, she has lived through some of its low points, such as Lake Middletown and the end of the City Centre Mall. All through that time she said she has never given up hope on the city she calls home, but she has also never felt so optimistic. “I am very encouraged by all the action. There are a lot of little things happening and a lot of big things,” she said." ASK THE SAME OLD PEOPLE JOURNAL, NOT ONLY DO YOU GET THE SAME OLD RAH RAH RESPONSE BUT YOU ALSO FAIL TO GET THE REAL FEELINGS OF THE MAJORITY OF THE PEOPLE. More from Mort: Ann Mort said she moved to Middletown 40 years ago because of its schools and the promise it held for her family HOW'S THAT SCHOOL QUALITY AND PROMISE FOR THE FAMILY WORKING OUT FOR YOU NOW MORT? AND JUST THINK, YOU HAD A HAND IN HOW IT HAS TURNED OUT AS WE SIT HERE AND WATCH IT DETERIORATE. “Sometimes things don’t work out the way we intend, but you pick up and go in another direction.” NO YOU DON'T. WHEN THINGS DON'T WORK OUT, THESE CITY LEADERS JUST TRY IT AGAIN, SOMETIMES FOR DECADES WASTING MILLIONS ALONG THE WAY. EVEN THEN, THEY STILL DON'T CHANGE THEIR GAMEPLAN. THEIR DAM EGOS WON'T ALLOW THEM TO ADMIT THEY ARE WRONG. "Mort said she thinks the city is finally taking advantage of its strategic position between Dayton and Cincinnati to bring in new business." NO THEY AREN'T. NOT SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW HOW. “It’s a new world,” she said. “Lots of things are different and it’s a bigger world out there than we saw in the past,” Mort said. WHAT? Why save downtown? Since the 1970s, city officials have chased project after project in an attempt to revitalize downtown. Much focus and development recently has centered on Middletown’s East End near Interstate 75, but Economic Development Director Mike Robinette said downtown is also very marketable and worth saving. SO ALL THE MONEY WASTED FINDING SOMETHING THAT WORKS IS BASED ON ONE MAN'S OPINION....THAT THE DOWNTOWN IS "MARKETABLE AND WORTH SAVING"? The historic significance tied to downtown coupled by the nearby South Main Street Historic District is a draw for many residents REALLY, I DON'T SEE PEOPLE FLOCKING TO THE S. MAIN ST OR DOWNTOWN AREA ROBINETTE. WHAT'S THE DRAW, EMPTY BUILDINGS, NON INTERESTING ART AND VACANT STORE FRONTS? WHAT IS THE DRAW FOR A PERSON IN A BLUE COLLAR TOWN DOWN THERE? TELL US. "Those businesses that are drawn to downtown are not as dependent on highway access, either" NO, THEY WANT TO RELY ON DOWNTOWN FOOT TRAFFIC WHICH HAS BEEN SO MEAGER THAT MANY HAVE COME AND GONE OVER THE YEARS. (QUISNOS KINDA TELLS IT LIKE IT IS) “I don’t see (downtown and the East End) competing against each other.. YOU'RE CORRECT. DEVELOP THE EAST END AND STABILIZE IT FIRST, THEN START ON THE DOWNTOWN IF YOU WANT TO. NOW, ALL THE FOCUS IS ON THE DOWNTOWN. YA GOT IT BACKWARD BUD. Kris Allen, 28, said she was born in Middletown and can only remember its downtown with the City Centre Mall and watching the roof come down in the new millennium. It’s a place she only comes to now to pay the occasional late water bill. “I don’t care what they do, really, but I think the city should stop spending money,” Allen said. “If people want to come here, great. But they should use their own money at least for projects, not taxpayers’ money.” BINGO KRIS!!!! TAKE A SEAT BEHIND THAT COUNCIL DESK AND RETAIN THAT ATTITUDE. WE'LL BRING LAUBACH BACK TO HELP YOU AND FIRE PICARD, JONES, AND THE MULLIGANS AND THEN WE CAN GET SOME REAL WORK DONE. Robinette said both of these projects hold some form of risk to the city, but the benefits outweigh it. Having partners with knowledge and experience to make the projects happen will help downtown’s success as well. “In my experience finding key partners to work with to move these different initiatives forward is what makes this progress happen,” he said. WHAT BENEFITS? While Robinette said he believes the city is not repeating its mistakes of the past, he hopes Middletown learns from those mistakes. “I think you work on the issues of your project and pay attention to the criticisms, but don’t lose focus on what you have accomplished,” he said. “It would be a mistake to ignore the criticism completely because the critics may raise issues you haven’t thought of.” BUT THAT IS EXACTLY WHAT IS HAPPENING ROBINETTE. THE CITY LEADERS IGNORE THE CRITICS AND DO WHAT THEY WANT. ALWAYS HAVE. Mayor Larry Mulligan said efforts to revitalize downtown also don’t center on economic development alone. Much time has been spent enforcing building and sign codes, repairing roads, fixing up and removing dilapidated structures and partnering with area schools to improve educational opportunities. It’s all connected to the city’s success. “We’ve always said it never happens overnight. We have many years to go yet, but we are preparing to turn a corner, and hopefully, we see this development take hold,” he said. MULLIGAN, ONCE AGAIN, NOT A CLUE. IT'S BEEN DECADES LAR. HOW MUCH LONGER DO YOU NEED TO KEEP RE-INVENTING THE WHEEL WHILE PRODUCING THE SAME FAILED RESULTS? MORE RAH RAH SMOKE AND MIRRORS FROM MULLIGAN AND COMPANY. THEY ALL SPEAK, BUT NOTHING OF ANY IMPORTANCE COMES OUT. |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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buckeye43719
MUSA Immigrant Joined: Jan 15 2014 Location: Middletown Status: Offline Points: 20 |
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The last time I walked the downtown area, it was a joke 2 years ago, and guess what , it still is. Empty store fronts and no matter what the Middletown cheerleaders are saying, it is still a disgrace.
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Jesus is the only way to Heaven
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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BeauVerre Riordan Studios teaches
art at its
workshops.
By Pamela Dillon Contributing
Writer When your business is the oldest of its
kind in the nation, you have a distinct reputation to uphold. Jay and Linda
Moorman do a fine job of that. They own BeauVerre Riordan Stained Glass Studios
at the corner of When you have a passion for what you do,
success comes easy. “I was in my 20s, and He worked for General Electric by day and
spent his off hours consumed with his new passion — stained glass. His mentor
was Walter Bambach of Riordan Studios in In 2002, Bambach sold Riordan to the
Moormans, who operated BeauVerre Studio at the time. They only had 3,300 square
feet of space in “The refurbishing had to be done within a
year; we barely made it. We had to move 80,000 pounds of glass,” Moorman said. For their hard work, they now have an
expansive, 24,000 square-foot space, comprised of three levels, plus a basement.
The BeauVerre Riordan Stained Glass Studio includes many tenants: artists,
photographers, a dance studio and a frame shop. The culture-minded couple also
purchased the “We try to do everything art related for
the studio,” Moorman said. They are deviating from that formula
somewhat; an upscale restaurant is planned for the first floor. They hope to
have it open by September. “They can come in and get a steak and some
crabmeat, a glass of wine and then take a tour of the studio,” Moorman said. The stained-glass workshops that were held
on the first floor will now be moved to a spacious room in the basement. The
next six-week class session will begin July 14. Contact contributing
writer Pamela Dillon at pamdillon@woh.rr.com. Stained-glass workshops
Where:
BeauVerre Riordan Stained Glass, Next
session: Cost:
$60 class fee, plus beginners kit: $133 or deluxe kit: $191 More
info: (513) 425-7312 or www.beauverre.net
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Mike_Presta
MUSA Council Joined: Apr 20 2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 3483 |
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"The culture-minded couple also purchased the
Huh??? Wait a minute!!! What happened to the Pendleton guy??? I thought that he was the only person in the world with the expertise to make PAC work and bring all of the promised economic windfalls that the City was promised as a result of the "investment" we taxpayers made!!! And what about the money we "loaned" to him??? Remember...the money that his son-in-law's construction company was paid...what happened to that???
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“Mulligan said he ... doesn’t believe they necessarily make the return on investment necessary to keep funding them.” …The Middletown Journal, January 30, 2012
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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I thought it went something like this.... The city leaders went to Paducah Ky. on boogdoggle number one. Found a guy named Jim Verdin who had a successful arts building there. The city leaders asked Verdin to establish an arts building in the downtown with the help of about $325,000 of taxpayer money. (I wish the car hoods were put up by the way) Where did Moorman show up in all of this? Need some clarification. Oh yeah, did Moorman ever pay back the loan from the city? Wasn't it around $60,000 or so? Sounds similar to the loan to the MMF for $75,000. Did that get paid back? |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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Well can anyone explain to me why they are having these candidates interviews at 8:00 am in the morning? I guess it's so the average Joe (whose money they are playing with) can't be there because we are out trying to make a living. The majority of the people the city manager "manages" won't have an oppertunity to ask the guestions we want answers to. The manipulation continues. And Judy will be glad to stay longer to make the transition easier. Really, don't you mean just in case it's not Les or Dougie so she can let the next sucker oh I mean the next city manager know where their bread is buttered? It would really up set their apple cart if any one other than the two lackey is chosen. So this has all been a setup farce and you already know how it ends. IMO
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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FRIDAY IS OUT OF THE QUESTION FOR MOST WHO WORK, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE SECOND AND THIRD SHIFTERS WHO COULD ATTEND THEN. I THINK ONE OF THE DAYS IS A SATURDAY. THAT WOULD GIVE SOME WHO WORK DURING THE WEEK, BUT HAVE WEEKENDS OFF, TIME TO ATTEND. 8AM to 1PM SEEMS A BIT ODD ON THE HOURS THOUGH. WONDER HOW THE CITY LEADERS IN ATTENDANCE WILL REACT TO CANDIDATE QUESTIONS LIKE THE LACK OF ECONOMIC DEVEL. AND HOW THEY WOULD REMEDY THAT ISSUE. HOW ABOUT THEIR IDEA OF HOW THEY WOULD GET JOBS IN HERE OR A QUESTION PERTAINING TO DOWNTOWN CONCENTRATION WHILE IGNORING THE REST OF THE CITY, MONEY WASTED AND LACK OF PROGRESS AND SEE HOW THEY WOULD ADDRESS THOSE ISSUES. TRANSPARENCY IN GOVERNMENT AND NOT SO MUCH ACTIVITY BEHIND CLOSED DOORS. OR HOW THEY FEEL ABOUT 1% OF THE PEOPLE RUNNING THE TOWN FOR THE OTHER 99%, WHO HAVE NO SAYSO. HOW THEY WOULD ADDRESS THE ROADS/INFRA. IN THE BUDGET. WHAT THEY THINK OF ALL THE SECTION 8 AND LOW INCOME BEING INVITED TO TOWN. ARE THE PEOPLE'S NEEDS MORE IMPORTANT THAN THE SPECIAL AGENDAS SET UP BY THE CURRENT CITY MANAGER. JUST A FEW TOPICS TO DISCUSS. |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Middletown
USA Bloggers
Over the past several years we have had many informative and even heated debates on this blog about numerous very important issues concerning our community. And sometimes as Adriane Scherrer has suggested above..maybe we do sound like CAVEMEN. Why do sound like CAVEMEN? Why do we get on this blog and waste our time expressing our views about what is happening in our community? The answer is simple…Because we care. After the above article was written the City of Since 2010 City Hall has spent huge amounts of tax payer’s dollars on their vision for “THEIR DOWNTOWN”. As I talk to other residents of the community, they can’t seem to understand why I’m so upset about the spending habits of City Hall. Then they say “after all they have only spent $500.000 buying the building from the Thatcher Estate for the Cincinnati State Deal.” WHAT!!....NO, NO, NO! So this brings us to my latest postings to this blog under the heading of “ I will complete this project with an article called “BY THE NUMBERS”. This article will be just what the title suggests…an accounting of what City Hall has really spent in the past several years on “THEIR DOWNTOWN”. WARNING!..This article could be hazardous to your health so make sure you take your blood pressure medication. And hopefully it will answer the above question, Why do we sound like CAVEMEN? We must fully understand what has happened in the past before we can make a better future for this community…Vivian Moon |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Land swap issue noticeably absent from council
agenda
Cabinet company still
hoping for deal
Staff Writer
The
deal would have seen the city purchase the former mall, The city council was set to hold a second
reading on an ordinance approving the land swap at its Tuesday, April 6
meeting, but the legislation did not make the final council agenda. Economic Development Director Mike
Robinette said the land swap was pulled from the agenda while staff “works on
some alternatives for the project.” “We’re trying to look at alternatives that
would allow them to move forward with the project they’re wanting to do, but
not have us involved in the land swap,” Robinette said. The
city became involved in the deal mainly over tax issues, Robinette said, as
Midd-Town Custom Cabinets initiated swap conversations in an effort to avoid
paying up to $15,000 in capital gains taxes. Midd-Town Custom Cabinets, co-owned by Jeff
Brown and Don Kennedy, is responsible for carpentry inside of numerous local
businesses, including the Middletown Public Library, Java Johnny’s and the
now-closed 56 Degrees Wine Bistro. Kennedy said the deal has always been
“designed to save the city money.” “Rather than paying $15,000 in taxes and
passing that along to the city in our sale price, we figured we could just do
an exchange,” Kennedy said. “It was an even deal as far as we were concerned.” Council raised questions about the swap
when it came to light the current owner of the Central Avenue property had
purchased it for $50,000 mere weeks before the deal was proposed. Kennedy
dismissed claims the proposed swap was a “good old deal,” as he said his
business is eating the $40,000 loss, not the city. “We were in talks with the bank to purchase
the land, but (Daniel) Diver made a bid on it and had already been approved,”
Kennedy said. “I was two weeks too late in planning this. I pretty much cried
my heart out.” Their three-man operation has been able to
survive for so long by picking from the corpses of larger carpentry operations
that went under during the recession. A move to the larger building would allow
them space to create a “drop-dead gorgeous showroom” and ideally hire on some
additional staff.
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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City steps back from contentious land swap
Staff Writer
City Manager Judy Gilleland asked that a
second reading of the ordinance be removed from the agenda to allow the city’s
economic development staff more time to “help facilitate the expansion of a
business without getting in the middle of a land swap.” “Hopefully in the next several weeks we
will return with a draft agreement that suits all parties,” Gilleland said. The proposed deal called for the city to
purchase the former Middletown Antique Mall, Jeff Brown, co-owner of Midd-Town Custom
Cabinets, spoke before the council during Tuesday’s meeting, saying no hard
feelings exist over the nixed swap, as he is “confident” something is going to
be worked out in the near future. “Hard feelings don’t give you anything but
hard times,” he quipped. “We want a business on Central and they want a
business on Central, so it’s just a matter of dotting the i’s and crossing the
t’s.” Brown recently decided to wander I see this as an opportunity for City Council also got an update on the
city’s 2010 street improvements project, with 13 local streets targeted for
repair in the coming year. Public Works and Utilities Director Dave Duritsch said the $2 million in
roadwork is the “first substantial paving program we’ve had in a few years.” As part of the project, property owners
along the impacted streets will be required to repair any defective curb and
gutter and sidewalks as determined by city standards. They will have the option of either doing
the work themselves, hiring a contractor or having the city do the work for
them and then paying the amount back either upon completion or through their
property taxes over a five-year period. Council will be asked to vote on an
emergency resolution approving the process at the group’s April 20 meeting,
Duritsch said, with paving contracts scheduled to be awarded in early July. Isn't the building on Vail still sitting empty? |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Land swap could cost city $95K
Staff
Writer In the third instance of the city
exchanging property with an area landowner in the past few months, council will
be asked to authorize the exchange of a tract of land located at The city does not presently own the “Midtown Custom Cabinets has been looking
to expand their business and we have been eyeing the site for demolition as it
is the only one remaining behind Barb’s Pub and the Studio Theater,” Robinette
said. “They’ll get a building to grow their business, we’ll be able to finish
clearing that area and will then be able to market it for redevelopment. It’s a
win-win.” The former Middletown
Antique Mall property — presently valued at $125,000 — was sold on Feb. 19 for
$50,000, according to the Butler County Auditor’s Office. Robinette said he has no qualms about
paying the current owner $45,000 more than he purchased the property for less
than one month ago. He said the property was recently appraised at $85,000. “This property was bought out of
foreclosure,” he said. “But if you look at what it was carried at value wise,
the market value for that is obviously much more than was paid.” The ordinance also
provides $5,000 to Midtown Custom Cabinet for what Robinette referred to as
“moving costs” for the company. As the city has a lot of interest in acquiring
the site, he said it has agreed to pay half of the estimated moving costs. “It’s not unusual to share moving costs
when you have a business moving because they’re going to expand and it’s in our
interest for them to move, to assist them in the cost of relocating their
business,” Robinette said. The ordinance will be considered as
emergency legislation, meaning it will circumvent the traditional process of
first and second readings as well as the 30-day wait to take effect. That also
means it needs at least six affirmative votes from the council to pass. With
Councilman Jim Armbruster still hospitalized after undergoing open-heart
surgery over the weekend, other council members will have to unanimously
approve it. Council meets at 5:30 p.m. in Council
Chambers on the lower level of the Middletown City Building, One Donham Plaza. |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Updated: No new stabilization funds for Middletown
But city still has $1.5M
left from last round for home renovations.
Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN — While Middletown may not have been tapped for more federal funds
to improve its neighborhoods, the city still has $1.5 million left from the last
round it has designated for home renovations this year. In the third round of Neighborhood
Stabilization Program funding, the U.S. Housing and Urban Development
department awarded $1 billion nationwide, $1,327,123 of which is headed to However, State and local governments can use NSP
grants to acquire land and property; to demolish or rehabilitate abandoned
properties; and to offer down payment and closing cost assistance to low- to
moderate-income homebuyers. The news that no new funds were coming to The 10 properties, located in neighborhoods
targeted by Money
from the sales would then go back into the fund and be reused for other
property acquisitions and renovations, Adkins said. “We plan to put them on the market and get
them refilled with taxpaying citizens soon,” he said. Contact this reporter at (513) 705-2843 or jheffner@coxohio.com.
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Updated: 8:54 a.m. No new stabilization funds for Middletown
But city still has $1.5M
left from last round for home renovations.
Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN — While Middletown may not have been tapped for more federal funds
to improve its neighborhoods, the city still has $1.5 million left from the last
round it has designated for home renovations this year. In the third round of Neighborhood
Stabilization Program funding, the U.S. Housing and Urban Development
department awarded $1 billion nationwide, $1,327,123 of which is headed to However, State and local governments can use NSP
grants to acquire land and property; to demolish or rehabilitate abandoned
properties; and to offer down payment and closing cost assistance to low- to
moderate-income homebuyers. The news that no new funds were coming to The 10 properties, located in neighborhoods
targeted by Money
from the sales would then go back into the fund and be reused for other
property acquisitions and renovations, Adkins said. “We plan to put them on the market and get
them refilled with taxpaying citizens soon,” he said. Contact this reporter at (513) 705-2843 or jheffner@coxohio.com. City Hall purchased the |
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spiderjohn
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jul 01 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2749 |
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Great job Ms.Moon!
Hopefully the new city manager candidates are reading this, and may understand the concern about and lack of trust in our current Council and Admin. These failed projects have cost taxpayers millions of $$ and decades of lost time. Pretty much everyone who opposed these projects has been purged(Becker,Laubaugh,AJ), and the top endorsing players(Mulligans, Picard, Scott-Jones, Judy G, Doug A, Marty K, Les L etc.) still remain. Hopefully the candidates will get ?s about these actions, and how they might do things differently and with much more transparency. Was riding down S Main the other evening. Didn't realize that not only are we ALL paying for the NEW FAKE street lights, the OLD LIGHTS are still in operation. So we are now paying for both! Don't remember that ever being an option. Maybe we will have a "new" vision and more inclusive direction soon? Let's hope so! More of the same simply won't work(again). |
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acclaro
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jul 01 2009 Status: Offline Points: 1878 |
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When thinking about the fake street lights, I recalled a post Ms. Moon made about a week ago. In that, she copied and pasted a Journal article associated with the Thatcher state being worth in excess of $15 Mm, with liability claims against it, for about $1.2 Mm, which Dan Picard was handling for First Financial Bank, which Laryy Mulligan is President, for Butler and Warren Cty.
My question is; Why would the city spend $500,000 to absorb the Manchester and other buildings, when the estate would have in excess of nearly $14 Mm after paying the claims against the estate? What would the creditors against the estate, GAIN, for forgiving nearly $800,000. in alleged claims against the estate? And how much federal money has been spent downtown, after the city bailed out an estate which had 15 times the assets to absorb any liability against the Thatcher estate, for .45 for every $ in alleged claims against the estate? Perhaps a question to the city manager candidates should be---would you have the city spend $500,000 to absorb an alleged claim on an estate, when the estate had the assets to pay for the liability? If so, why; if not, why not? Link the creditors and see a trail associated with a firewall. |
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'An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last.' - Winston Churchill
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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We just take taxpayers money and spend it to assure OUR vision downtown is NOT derailed by some "undesirable" entity stepping in. We must at all cost and expense (regardless of who's money) keep moving forward with OUR dream and we don't give a damm about nasayers. IMO
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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We
have had many heated discussions on this blog about the Section 8 Program over
the past several years concerning who did what when and why. Posted: How much is too much Section 8?
Staff Writer Today, this That’s a statistic that Fourteen percent of the
city’s housing stock, or 3,300 units, is subsidized housing, said Community
Revitalization Director Doug Adkins. Too much Section 8 “is not the root of our
problems,” he said, but it can impact the overall image of the city and hinder
progress and economic development. “The city can only support
654 housing choice vouchers within the (Middletown Public Housing Authority) program,”
Adkins said. “Any further saturation would … cross a tipping point where the
additional subsidized housing creates more problems than benefits to the city
as a whole. “At that point, families of
all incomes suffer because the city cannot provide adequate services to its
residents,” he said. But landlords like Jeff
Faulkner, who rents several of the properties he owns to Section 8 tenants,
disagree. They say Section 8 is big business in The city pays about $10
million in funds it receives from HUD to the hundreds of landlords who rent to
Section 8 voucher-holders. The city’s proposed voucher cuts would eliminate $6
million in payments to those landlords. Faulkner said Faulkner the city’s plan
would not only run hundreds of low-income residents out of the city, it would
also create an almost equal amount of vacant housing. That’s why he and other
landlords favor transferring the program out of the city’s control. “I think the Section 8
program needs to be moved to HUD had made a similar suggestion to The Middletown Public Housing
Authority, which is made up of all seven city council members and the city
manager, has told HUD it intends to proceed with its plan. About 1,300
vouchers, or less than 80 percent of those available, have been issued to date,
and that number will continue to decrease through attrition over the next five
years, officials have said. Adkins said the data shows
that — outside of the low-income housing tax credits — Middletown has almost
twice as many subsidized housing units as Hamilton County and more than four
times as many as other southwest Ohio housing agencies. He added that “The city suffers from an
overabundance of rental property, beyond what the existing market can support
and a corresponding lack of home ownership in distressed neighborhoods,” Adkins
said. “During the past 10 years,
the city implemented a policy of increasing the number of Section 8 vouchers to
assist low-income residents.” Before The city added 888 over
the next six years, with 56.9 percent of the vouchers having been added in 2000
and 2001. The last increase came on In March 2011, At about the same time the
city was changing program administrators, the Middletown Division of Police and
the Office of the Inspector General started an ongoing investigation of Section
8, which has so far resulted in the arrest of 10 landlords — five in 2011 and
five in 2012 — after they uncovered tens of thousands of dollars in alleged
improper rental payments made on behalf of voucher-holders, said police
spokesman Lt. Scott Reeve. The investigation, which is
being lead by “Crime was down last year for
the first time in a few years, and I think the Section 8 investigation has
something to do with that,” he said. “The program was not supervised at all for
many years, and when Doug took over the program, he enlisted our help to clean
it up.” Some of the charges included
landlords living in properties where tenants were to be living, or collecting
Section 8 money when the property was vacant, Reeve said. “There was a lot of abuse going on, in addition
to the fact we have a disproportionate amount of Section 8,” Reeve said. “It
hurts the crime rate, it hurts the school system, and it’s difficult to talk
about because it comes across that we’re anti-poor. We’re not anti-poor, but we
shouldn’t be disproportionate.” Real estate, rental and
leasing is the largest private sector service industry in the state, Adkins
said. And while home sales were on the upswing in the Cincinnati Metropolitan
Area, according to 2012 and 2011 data, “In the wake of the housing
market collapse and the decrease in available credit, the city of Councilman A.J. Smith, who cast the lone
dissenting vote on the city’s plan to cut vouchers, agrees there is a need to
fix the Section 8 program. But he disagrees with the way the city is going
about doing it. Smith said “But I don’t think it
(voucher reductions) should be initiated by us,” he said. “I think we have an
obligation to care for our constituents, and we should care for those who can’t
care for themselves.” Smith said the city’s Section
8 vouchers should be spread out better. While vouchers are peppered throughout “The way we’re doing (voucher
reduction) is by any means necessary,” Smith said. “I don’t think we’re taking
a very diplomatic approach.” Smith said he doesn’t think “I don’t think our message
should be to get rid of all the poor people,” he said. “That is what the
community is feeling City Hall is trying to do.” This is the first of a three-part series looking
at the past, present and future of Section 8 in Showing its age 52.7 percent of the city’s homes were built
before 1960 11.4 percent of the city’s homes were built
after 1990 ButlerCounty: 31.2 percent of the county’s homes were built
before 1960 32.3 percent of the county’s homes were built
after 1990 WarrenCounty: 16.6 percent of the county’s homes were built
before 1960 51.9 percent of the county’s homes were built
since 1990 Source: Residential sales Here is the 2011 and 2012 sales data on ButlerCounty: 2011 | 2012|% change No. of sales: 3,259|3,812|14.51% Average home price:
$134,464.00|$136,675.00|1.62% Median home price: $122,000.00|$125,000.00|2.40% Source: Multiple Listing Service of Greater
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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Could change the face of the city for decades.well that was 5 years ago and what has changed? Downtown? We could have done so much more with those funds. And now you probably won't get any more money from HUD because I don't think they liked the way Dougie used it before. IMO
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Cooper
MUSA Resident Joined: Apr 25 2014 Status: Offline Points: 62 |
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Any of the $ 1 Mm used as a reserve to pay for the city's million contribution to get a million from AG Dewine and the Land Bank? Were there vouchers tied to this, or not (8)? Becker seemed to get the reason Hamilton didn't go for the gold was there was a negative relationship between NSP 2 and the request? Right, wrong, maybe, don't know?
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over the hill
MUSA Citizen Joined: Oct 19 2012 Location: middletown Status: Offline Points: 952 |
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Well if Dougie declared the entire city at 54% poverty then they can use those funds any place they want again how nice for Dougie more job security. City manager job has a limited contract with options to renew. He could be out of here faster that he thinks if things change with council.(and it will). He might have more security where he is.Oh well, Roll the dice. imo
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