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Private
Greed & Public Ignorance, a Recipe for disaster.
The
Sixth Street Marketplace opened September 18, 1985. Located in
the heart of downtown, the Marketplace was the result of years
of work by Richmond
City Council, Mayors Henry L. Marsh III
and Roy
A. West, Richmond
Reanaissance (which was
founded in 1982) and Enterprise Development Company,
the developer of the 6th Street Marketplace.
At it's completion, city leaders felt strongly that this development
signaled the beginning of a new era in Richmond. It was claimed
by leaders that the Bridge symbolically united the races over
Broad Street, which for years had served as the boundary line
between the black and white communities.
Unfortunately,
the new era that seems to have been inaugurated is the era of
big business interests determining how public money is to be spent
on commercial development. Nevermind, that there are REAL needs
in this city. Just recently, City Council refused to grant the
School Board the funds it requested; yet the city has also agreed
to pay up to $3 million each year to repay bonds if Broad St.
CDA projected revenues fall short. The amount
requested by the School Board was $3 million.
One
of the things that makes me angry about the plan to destroy Sixth
Street Marketplace is that it is a perfectly fine structure. It
has space for 80-85 shops according to articles written at the
time of its opening. With proper management the city could finally
make a success out of the 6th St. Marketplace.
Why
would the City want to tear down the Marketplace within a year
of opening the brand new $160 million dollar Convention Center
that is one block away? It's ridiculous. The building
isn't even 18 years old. It's one of the few public spaces downtown.
And it could actually be generating money in the form of rents
and tourism spending. But the current plan is to make it into
a street.
The
Marketplace cost $25 million to construct ($15.5 million of that
was public money). According to Richmond.com, it would cost closer
to $40 million to build today. The Marketplace is also schedualed
to be paid off within a couple of years whereas the new plan plunges
the city into 30 years of debt.
The
more closely one looks in to the plan, the more clear it becomes
that this action is being taken under the pretense of the "Broad
Street Community." The 6th Street Marketplace
is a part of the community. It's failure was due to the closing
of Thalheimer's and Miller & Rhoads,
poor management by the city afterward, and adverse economic conditions
in immediate area caused by LAND SPECULATORS who bought up property
cheap in the 1980's & 1990's and then did very little to even
maintain their buildings adequately. However, the people that
continued to use Broad Street were POOR and AFRICAN AMERICAN.
The
Broad Street Community Development Authority (CDA)
was created by a unanimous vote by council. Only three citizens
spoke in opposition, and 11 people from Richmond's economic community
spoke in support of it. The Broad St. CDA is the group that has
hatched the plan to destroy the Marketplace. To quote Mr.
Will's paper, "Of the five [members that make up the
CDA], four were developers and landowners who will directly profit
from the work of the CDA." The fifth member is the assistant
director of Richmond Renaissance, the same group
that spearheaded the Sixth Street Marketplace development.
The
Sixth Street Marketplace belongs to the people of the city.
It is a valuable asset, and a treasure to the community. It does
not belong to City Council or Richmond
Renaissance to do with what it likes.
Fellow
Citizens:
Because
we do not have money,
the
only thing we can do is contact our elected officals and let them
know:
"This is not what we want. This is not good for our community."
View
the members of Richmond City Council that participated in this
scam. |