(What follows is the text of the testimony I was prevented from delivering in full at the Gloucester City Council's May 8 public hearing on the Fort hotel overlay district zoning (HOD) that would pave the way for the construction of a luxury hotel and conference center at the site of the historic Birdseye plant on Commercial Street.)
This is the third assault on a
neighborhood that has given, and continues to give, so much to Gloucester.
The continued attempt to jam a hotel into an economically viable and
socially and historically rich part of our city is not only poor planning, it
is immoral and unethical. It is poor
planning because it occurs at a time when the city’s Master Plan is ten years
out of date. It is immoral because you
do not target one neighborhood three times for radically inconsistent and
potentially damaging developments, like hotels and condos, and then attack the
residents and business owners for attempting legitimately to protect their
lives and their livelihoods.
What community in
its right mind would be talking about a hotel on the Fort when we haven’t
looked at our future in a comprehensive way for over a decade? More fundamentally, you do not put the cart
before the horse. You do not plan by zoning
or rezoning; you zone through planning. Zoning
was created to protect existing uses and to allow them to grow and prosper in
safety, not to undermine them as this proposed hotel overlay would do, creating
chaos in its wake.
The city is not
bankrupt and we have an excellent bond rating, so there is no reason to rush
into development without taking the long view and achieving the kind of
consensus a community needs. For without
that consensus we will have years of haggling and dysfunction.
One hotel on the
Fort will not appreciably increase the city’s tax base or make our schools any
better; nor will it provide the full-time jobs with benefits that maritime and
other industries provide. What will increase the tax base and provide
for excellence in education is comprehensive planning.
Those who believe
that a hotel can be contained without consequences in a marine industrial
neighborhood are seriously mistaken. One
overlay request will lead to another, both on and off the Fort. The current developer already owns other
parcels on the Fort, and at least one more Fort property owner has already
expressed a desire to apply for an overlay for his property. Make no mistake, there will be a domino
effect, and it could reverberate throughout the waterfront and the entire
city. It has already begun to happen on
the Back Shore, with yet another area of conflict
opening up.
There will be
social and economic consequences as well, as residents and business owners on
the Fort are squeezed. To treat
Gloucester’s most iconic neighborhood—the home to the some of the city’s most
successful and viable marine industries and a place that draws thousands of
visitors and has inspired generations of artists—like a pariah is not only
wrong from a planning perspective, it is unethical. We should be praising and supporting these
local Fort businesses for what they bring to the city in real products and
wages, rather than damning them for presumably standing in the way of progress.
We
need a downtown hotel. There is a welcome
consensus on that issue. Good planning
will help us to find the appropriate location for it. Planning and patience—virtues that are
necessary for sustainable growth—are what we need just now, not knee-jerk
reactions to overlay zoning or a hotel where it doesn’t belong and where it
will create more problems than it will solve.
The groundwork has
been laid for a new Master Plan with the Harbor Development plan, the Mt.
Auburn Report and the Maritime Summit.
However, the Harbor Plan is slated for revision and the Mt. Auburn
and Summit
reports are recommendations not plans.
They need to be integrated into a rigorous Master Plan through an
inclusive public process with maximum citizen input. Otherwise, we will spend years in meetings
like this locked into debilitating arguments rather than working together to
help our community grow and prosper.
The city is not in
an active, creative mode. Instead, we
are reacting to what others propose or try to impose on us. This does not make good economic sense, nor
does it foster a community’s sense of well-being. We must take control of our future. We can only do that by declaring a
moratorium, a conflict-free space in which we can heal and plan for the
potentially rich future this city faces, a future we must create together not
allow to be created for us by the demands of others. It is the responsibility of the City Council—you,
our elected representatives—to exercise due diligence and to protect us from
those demands that may on their face seem worthwhile, but will, in the end,
prove even more divisive and damaging.
For these reasons,
I strongly oppose the proposed Hotel Overlay District zoning for the Fort and I
urge you to vote against it.
Thank you.
2 comments:
Peter-your words of wisdom are greatly appreciated. Thank you for sharing your insight.
Keith Palazzola
Thank you Peter for posting and hope everyone will share your post widely.
The marketing and political strategy of this City has blurred and divided our community. It has and will continue, by dividing the issues into small pockets, create financial problems for the cultural community as well as the marine industrial community.
I believe the media distortion and manipulation of the system has done us all damage. YEAH and NAY sayers have BOTH brought wonderfully important changes for Gloucester and each will continue to. We can never wish to drown out one or the other, but it is a listening process which we call democracy and we will prevail in this process.
The planning board never answered the questions, nor did their research and passed the buck to the City Council. Some Council members were not able to vote their conscience or were told how and why to vote. This is not the first time nor was it reported with professional journalism in the GDT.
Money speaks loud and without proper planning could very well destroy our present industries and increase the value of property beyond what the majority living and working here now will be able to afford.
Please do the research. This is not a Fort issue alone, it affects us all across the whole community.
Anyone reading Peter's analysis, please review the link and study below... after a very similar situation of urban renewal concerning the harbor and community at large, further problems were created in Nantucket. Only four years ago they were dealing with these new problems... and now their needs in creating their satellite parking just to shuttle residents into downtown to work where it use to take them 5 or 10 min. to drive and park before. We are both islands, one by boat, one by two roads. Many of the decisions needed are strikingly familiar.
Watch the video and read the report to see what we may be leaving the next generation to deal with. In the "Briefing Book" report, 82% of Nantucket properties are now owned by non-resident taxpayers. [FN: 2008 Denby Real Estate, Inc., About Nantucket] Who's generation are we building Gloucester's future for?
http://www.remainnantucket.org/uli.html
Thank you Peter for being there and speaking up with the other Fort and Gloucester residents.
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