St. Petersburg's New
Waterfront Master Plan and the Ordinance adopting it was up for first reading
at last Thursdays City Council meeting.
The St. Petersburg
Waterfront Master plan is exquisitely done. It details the process, the
participants, the stake holders, the objectives and the plan. You can see the
whole plan at Downtown Waterfront Development Plan .
“It’s like hitting the Lotto,”
Steinocher, president of the St. Petersburg Area Chamber of Commerce, said this
past week. “It’s going to be transforming in front of our eyes.”
You can read more in the St.
Petersburg Tribune, Steven Girardi, New pier is start of big changes for downtown
St. Petersburg’s waterfront.
Steinocher's reference is not
without merit, problem is the LOTTO winners will not be the citizens of St.
Petersburg. The winners will be the developers who will use the Waterfront Plan
to get access to property that normally would be out of their reach.
Why such enthusiasm by the CEO of
the Chamber of Commerce?
If you read carefully the plan
would be more accurately titled the "St. Petersburg Downtown Waterfront
Redevelopment Plan. Neatly tucked into this plan is the proposed commercial
development of a significant part of the water front.
There will be a lot made of the
fact this is just a "Plan" and it all requires approval but the
problem is the "Plan" will be trotted out as justification every time
some developer wants build on what is now protected waterfront.
All of this should be enough to
send you screaming to the Waterfront Charter Amendment Web site to get a Petition sign it and mail it in.
That's the only way you get a
Ticket in this LOTTO.
From the Water Front Plan
"The waterfront should
continue to be an asset
and venue for economic vitality for the entire community. Access to the water should be a source of social and economic value to the residential neighborhoods. The waterfront should be a place of economic activity for small business in niche locations to energize events and provide limited day to day comfort such as recreational rentals and sundries. And the waterfront should be leveraged as an opportunity
and venue for economic vitality for the entire community. Access to the water should be a source of social and economic value to the residential neighborhoods. The waterfront should be a place of economic activity for small business in niche locations to energize events and provide limited day to day comfort such as recreational rentals and sundries. And the waterfront should be leveraged as an opportunity
for job creating economic development to support the recreational marine industry, scientific research,
education, transportation, and cultural tourism."
Economically Vibrant
Downtown Places
·
Al Lang
Field redevelopment
·
Large
covered market pavilion
·
Conference/Hotel destination near the South
Basin
·
Arts
destination - art trail & art “anchor pieces”
·
Leverage
USFSP and other Innovation District institutions to improve K-12 opportunities.
A couple of the bullet points don't quite seem to fit the
"small business" profile.
As I said above this is an exceptional plan. And the plan is
needed. It's just like most of what happens when the waterfront is the issue,
good intentions and hard work of volunteers is quietly hijacked by special
interests.
As we have seen twice with the Pier, the public cannot trust the
Administration or City Council to look after their interests on the water
front. This Referendum puts you in the driver's seat.
There will be a lot of bleating about how this Charter Amendment will stifle
growth and make things too complicated. My answer is that's simply not true.
What it will do is force developers to produce projects that will
meet with public approval and that is a good thing.
E-mail Doc at mail
to:dr.gwebb@yahoo.com or send me
a Facebook (Gene Webb) Friend request. Please comment below, and be sure to
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