Springfield Business Journal

MARCH 27-APRIL 2, 2023 SPRINGFIELD BUSINESS JOURNAL · 29 NEWS by Karen Craigo · kcraigo@sbj.net Springfield City Council member Craig Hosmer went solo March 16 in a town hall meeting he called with city residents. The meeting, held at National Avenue Christian Church near the intersection of National Avenue and Sunshine Street, was established to discuss neighborhood issues about development and to answer questions about city processes, according to an invitation originally posted by Hosmer and shared in various social media groups. Roughly 100 people turned out for the listening session. Hosmer said he was in favor of strong neighborhoods. “Some people on City Council see neighborhoods getting up and arguing against something, and they think those are the people that don’t want something in their backyard,” he said. “I think that’s exactly the opposite. If we have people that don’t care about their neighborhoods and don’t come to the City Council and are not passionate about why they want to protect their neighborhoods, we’re in trouble as a city.” The meeting was in response to a Jan. 23 council decision that tabled consideration of Hosmer’s resolution proposing a 210-day administrative delay to gather input on a proposed development on the Sunshine and National corner in the University Heights neighborhood. At that council meeting, more than three dozen city residents showed up to weigh in on the resolution and the proposed development, a mixed-use residential and commercial structure called The Heights that could be as large as 200,000 square feet and six stories, by development group BK&M LLC. Councilmember Abe McGull made a motion to refer Hosmer’s resolution to council’s Plans and Policies Committee. McGull cited concerns about liability from council giving the appearance of trying to halt a specific development. Council voted 6-3 in favor of remanding the measure to committee. “They put it in a committee that hasn’t had a meeting in months,” Hosmer told the town hall audience. “And so, the purpose of that referral to committee was … kill the bill.” Hosmer said similar proposals for an administrative delay had been approved during his time on council, including delays in Galloway Village, Phelps Grove and Rountree. “Vote it up or down,” he said. “But to deny an opportunity for people to be heard in their own city is an embarrassment.” Hosmer apologized to those who attended the council meeting but were not given a chance to speak because of the vote to remand the resolution. “That was not City Council’s best day. That was wrong,” he said. Some attendees asked him how to get City Council to listen to residents. Hosmer suggested contacting members directly by email or even reaching out with a direct invitation to visit a neighborhood, rather than assuming that council members aren’t interested in engaging. “You have to sort of change your mindset, too,” he said. Is your child at risk? 417-799-7474 perimeterspringfield.com Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, including holidays, for children ages 6-17. The K.I.S.S. principle. [keep it simple subscriber] Email subscriptions@sbj.net to get started today! Simplify your Subscription! If your company has two or more subscriptions, contact us today about our Managed Corporate Subscription program. Council: $17 million in ARPA grant funds must be spent by conclusion of 2026 Continued from page 7 Member apologizes for council’s failure to listen to residents 100 Estimated attendance at Craig Hosmer’s town hall meeting 42 townhomes to 22 single-family dwellings. The development also included the transformation of a gymnasium owned by Baptist Temple of Springfield into a 33-unit apartment building. ARPA projects begin The city submitted numerous applications to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources for federal American Rescue Plan Act funding provided through the state’s Water Infrastructure Community Grant Program. “I’m happy to report that the city was successful in 14 of these applications, totaling near $17 million,” said Chris Dunnaway, principal engineer in stormwater management for the city. Dunnaway introduced the first council bill to accept these grant funds into the budget, and council approved the $608,000 request for stormwater improvements on Delmar Street and South Roanoke Avenue. Dunnaway said the project will include the relocation and reconstruction of a stormwater box culvert that collapsed in 2022, for a total project cost of $900,000. Councilmember Andrew Lear noted the city has stormwater problems in many of its neighborhoods, and he asked how the $17 million worth of improvements would be rolled out. Dunnaway said the ARPA grants through MDNR have strict timelines and must be executed by the end of 2024. “So, we have just under two years, and all of the ARPA funds have to be spent by the end of 2026,” he said. “But more of the time-critical path will be getting these agreements in place with DNR.” Council accepted the funds, and they also heard the first reading of a bill that would allocate $1.53 million for the city to begin design work for six of the remaining 13 projects that will receive the $17 million in ARPA funding. Dan Smith, director of Public Works, said the allocation would come from the 1/4-cent capital improvement sales tax and the 1/8cent transportation sales tax and would be used to fund the design and acquire rightof-way acquisition for six projects receiving $6.2 million in ARPA funds. “To meet the deadline that has been placed on these ARPA funds, we need to begin the design work now,” he said. The goal is to have the projects ready to bid and be under contract by the end of 2024, Smith said. The six projects are Scenic Avenue between Catalpa and Sunshine streets, Hilton Avenue between Mount Vernon and Walnut streets, Pacific Street between Colgate and Golden avenues, Clifton Avenue between Kearney and High streets, Nichols Street between Hutchinson and Dickerson avenues, and Scenic Avenue between Olive and Catalpa streets. Smith said the improvements will include the addition of curb and gutter, stormwater inlets, storm pipe and sidewalks. Council will vote on the design allocation at its April 3 meeting. Other action items • The rezoning of nearly an acre was approved at the intersection of North Farmer Avenue and North Scott Street to residential townhouse district from single-family residential. Horton said the block in question, located near the new York Elementary School, is completely transforming. “It’s going to attract a lot of folks to that particular area – in an area that really needs it,” she said. • Council accepted $400,000 in an MDNR Section 319 Nonpoint Source Pollution Grant for the Westport Branch Green Infrastructure Project, which will address pollution on the Westport Branch of Wilson’s Creek near West Chestnut Expressway. • Surface Transportation Block Grant funds from the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission were accepted for two projects: $451,000 for the intersection of Kansas Expressway and Walnut Lawn Street and $411,000 for Kansas Expressway and Sunset Street. The work will improve turn lanes, add new signals and provide better sidewalk connectivity at the intersections. The city’s half will be funded partly through STBG funds (80% of match) and partly through the 1/8-cent transportation sales tax (20%). •

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy NTU2Njc4