Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, October 19, 2011, Image 7
WHAT’S UP IN NEW DEVELOPMENT At the very (east, the intensity of the politics over the last year has revealed most of the major faults that this community has been dancing around. We've seen a county commissioner chew out unelected managers over the use or alleged abuse of their power. We've seen the working relationship between the mayor and the commission stretched thin. We've seen what a commission with no leadership looks like. There's also the dust-up over redistricting and superdistncts, which raises some big questions about the shape of our government, and then there are the many issues surrounding economic development that continue to plod along In particular, there's that old fault between those who want good corporate neighbors and those who champion business-friendliness. And don't forget some big questions about transportation via T-SPLOST, the future of downtown via the Classic Center, and many sparring matches over the importance of com munity natural resources like Sandy Creek. We've even been forced to consider what many around town might call a worst-case scenario: rumors of Walmart, a symbol of the destruction of Main Street busi nesses, looming on the edge of our down town jewel. Now, more than ever, we need to get past the reaction ary cycle we find ourselves caught in, and put a real vision for our community on paper. It caught my eye recently that one of the few news sto ries related to ail our local political intrigue to make it into the Atlanta media market was the one about a development morato rium in downtown Athens. That move by the ACC Commission, to some degree a reaction to rumors of the aforementioned Walmart, is an instance of the reactionary approach that contributes to our "business-unfriendly" reputation, and it's what the outside world is hearing about us. Taking this one issue as an example, if one end of the community thinks that planning by moratorium is running off potential businesses, and the other end only wants businesses that have a strong culture of working with a community, then those two sides must come together to identify and attract the right kinds of businesses. If the folks who've been soaking the wicks on their torches and sharpening their pitch- forks in anticipation of a knock-down-drag-out campaign against Walmart are really serious about protecting this community, they should be storming City Hall and demanding a proper vision and master plan. Same goes for the "business-unfriendliness" whiners who would rather take our community back to the laissez- faire days of the Industrial Revolution, when they could build factories on top of streams, unencumbered by city-mandated bike racks. There's an easy solution here, and it's to look forward for once. If the leadership, elected or appointed, isn't smart enough to recognize that and get started, then it's on us for not giving them the support they need to move in that direction. We know what our local assets are. The most creative city in the region has all the resources in place to kickstart this effort on a shoestring budget. It would cost almost nothing to pull a committee together to start talking about what we want. We can go through consultant after consultant, but the story will always be the same: we have a strong university, a strong medical industry and a great arts community; now we must decide on our values, pick a strategy and run with it. Unfortunately, these simple facts, so often repeated, are being ignored again. The Athens Economic Development Foundation, after backing off the River District concept, is back to studying a more generalized approach of developing incentives Tor the county, ignor- j ing these obvious assets and looking for a new consultant to tell us what we already know. It certainly begs the question of what the EDF is there for. and what it's done for the last decade, if only now is it asking someone from outside (apparently lacking the expertise or ability internally) to come up with ideas for incentives to attract businesses to the county. Of course, the EDF doesn't seem to have much interest in being accountable to the community (see last week's City Dope for details regarding the illegal closed meeting the EDF recently held), governed as it is by a mayor more content to keep secrets for out-of-town develop ers than driven to steer the community forward, and a trans parency-championing commissioner who is just along for the ride, among others. Do the EDF and its non-Athens- resident director Matt Forshee really know this community and what sorts of jobs it wants for itself? Or is the EDF just another entrenched faction, unwilling to reach a hand out and perform the type of multi-constitu ency coordination that modern-day projects require? Smokestack chasing isn't the way of the future, but neither is NIMBYism or planning by moratorium, or any of the usual traps that this community seems to fall into. Athens has been stuck for a long time, and it's clear that the people in charge, given ample time to try something different, haven't had the follow- through to do so. It seems that it's on the citizenry to drag our leaders forward into the 21st century, or at least to make enough noise about articulating a proactive and proscriptive approach that those leaders feel like they've got the mandate to do so. If the business community hasn't reached out to the folks who are running off their businesses, and the reactionary folks haven't reached out to the business community, then everyone has only themselves to blame. It's pretty clear that no one will do this for us, Kevan Williams Cohesive, forward-thinking development strategies for Athens are being held hostage by aversion to ac tion and stubborn factionalism 4 CAFE HAPPY WINGS 39$ 3-6 Mon thru Fri with the purchase of a beverage Orders of 10 at a time Dine-in Only. 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