Posted: 5:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 31, 2016
Downtown Middletown Inc.’s director goes to
full-time
By
Mike Rutledge
Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN — Downtown Middletown Inc.
has taken a step toward accomplishing its biggest goal for this year: Joining
the list of cities across the country that are part of the prestigious Main Street
program.
Only
23 Ohio cities currently have Main Street status,
with 21 others, like Middletown,
having affiliate status. The status can lead to increased property values and
more downtown job opportunities, officials have said.
For
communities with populations larger than 5,000, one requirement of such programs
is that they have a full-time director. DMI’s board checked that off the list
Wednesday when it bumped up Executive Director Mallory Greenham from part-time
to full-time employment. The change takes effect April 1.
“That’s
been one of our goals for a long time, to be moving forward toward a Main Street
program,” said Phillip Harrison, president of DMI’s board. “This year, it’s
part of our strategic plan that we’re really hoping we can achieve that by the
end of the year.
“It’s
a lot to take on, but we’re trying to take the steps we can, and we’re moving
forward,” Harrison said. “I hope we get there,
or get very close.”
Harrison said Greenham is a strong leader of the
organization, largely because of the http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/new-dmi-director-has-local-roots/nkSPz/" rel="nofollow - passion for the city. She’s a 2002
graduate of Madison High School and an Ohio State University alum.
“She
brings what a lot of people that are downtown bring, and that’s the passion for
improving the downtown so that our community can have something to be proud of,
and to improve our identify here in this city,” Harrison
said. Also: She has “a willingness to work way beyond what we expect of her.”
“If
we become a Main Street
community, it should be a real feather on our hat,” Greenham said during DMI’s
recent annual meeting. “We will be opened up to heritage tourism, to grant
opportunities. We get national recognition. It should be something we all can
be proud of.”
Greenham
has had success attaining Main
Street status: Several years ago, she was the one
who filed Marietta’s successful application to
join the program, an accomplishment that Ohio River
city had hoped to attain for more than a decade.
Joyce
Barrett, executive director of Heritage Ohio,
the non-profit organization that administers the Main Street program in the state, said
the Main Street
program requires organizations like DMI to be sophisticated before joining.
The
national Main Street
program was founded in 1980.
“We look
at the factors that Main Streets special,” Barrett said. “I don’t know if you
can name a town that’s being successful at grass-roots downtown revitalization
who is really not in the Main
Street program, or hasn’t done the Main Street program
and dropped out — we’ve certainly had some of those we’re still friendly with.”
Among
other things, the community’s Main
Street manager, under the national requirements,
is required to track economic statistics, because “you can’t do strategic
planning without the statistics in place to understand your job creation and
your reinvestment,” Barrett said.
Main Street organizations must have
strategic plans, must be grass-roots organizations, and must undergo annual
reviews to remain in the program. Significant amounts of training are required
for staff throughout the year, so they keep up on successes other cities are
having.
A
lady from one Ohio
city recently asked Barrett, “Why should we join Main Street?” she said. “And I just said
to her, ‘Well, how’s it been working for you without Main Street for the past
3o years?’ because we’ve been going to that particular town year after year
after year, and they never join, because every time you leave, they go, ‘Oh, we
can do that without them.’”
“When
you visit a community and they think they know everything, and your downtown’s
pitiful, and you already know everything, I think you need some outside
information,” Barrett said. “You know upper-level housing (in downtown
buildings) is critical, but why isn’t it there, and how are you going to get it
there? You’re going to go out (in seminars) and you’re going to learn from
other people how to get it there.”
DMI
has aspired to be a Main Street
organization since at least 2010. The organization is funded by revenue it
generates through events it hosts, sponsorships of the organization. The
organization also receives $25,000 from Middletown
to administer its building-facade grant program.
MIDDLETOWN FACADE-GRANT APPLICATIONS NOW
AVAILABLE
April
1 is the first day to apply for this year’s first round of Middletown’s downtown facade grants.
There
are two to three rounds of applications each year. Applications for this round
are due by noon April 29. Some $35,000 will be available for this round.
The
program matches the costs of up to 50 percent of facade-improvement costs for
buildings that are in the downtown area.
For
more information, visit www.downtownmiddletown.org.
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