The Journal did a good job capturing viewpoints in this story, but I feel the mayor is way too pessimistic. We still have many unused tools to encourage redevelopment. Some of these are; flexible new zoning, waiving impact fees, fast-track building permits, reduced permit fees for projects that meet community goals, and free stock building plans. In fact, what we have been doing is just the opposite of encouraging free-market revitilization. Ironically, we’ve maintained a construction moratorium in this area during the last 14 months, at a time when buildable land is scarce and land values are soaring.
And I disagree with the suggestion that the city not spend budgeted money for highlands public infrastructure merely because the Community Renewal Act (CRA) failed. The first million dollars of highland money was set aside during the Jesse Tanner administration, when there was no talk of CRA. This money can be used to fix crumbling sidewalks and inferior pavement which has made it difficult for even the most motivated property owners to obtain curbside appeal. And the CRA, formerly known as the Urban Renewal Act, is not always effective. Historically, half of the time CRA has been used across the nation it has made things worse, not better. It’s had an even worse record where an organized faction of the community is working against it, as has been the case in Renton. I question whether CRA is even appropriate in an area such as Renton Highlands, where market forces are already pushing land values to one million dollars per acre at current conditions, and individual duplexes have been selling for $300,000 to $400,000.
There is no reason that we can’t clean up the highlands quickly using the tools of the free market, collaboration with residents and property owners, and city support and incentives. Enough pessimism and grief. Let’s get it done, and as a partnership!
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Renton backs off Highlands threat: Mayor says by not using power of eminent domain, progress could be slowed
By Dean A. Radford
Journal Reporter
RENTON — In a retreat from what some residents saw as threats to condemn their private property, Mayor Kathy Keolker is recommending that the marketplace become the driving force behind redevelopment of an aging part of the Highlands.
However, not using the city’s power of eminent domain under the state Community Renewal Act could slow the progress toward a healthier and safer neighborhood, she argued, with less public money available for the job.
It’s a course that some on the council favor and certainly one that citizen activists with a strong belief in private property rights support.
Rarely, if ever, have city officials — and the community — faced such an emotionally charged issue as revitalizing the Highlands.
It has soured some relationships within the council, the mayor and some of the people they represent.
“We just need to take a break,” said Keolker, who said she’s saddened by the situation she faces.
“The vision is good. The goal is good. We can’t get there right now,” she said.
The use of the city’s power to condemn property became a rallying point for some neighborhood activists, even though the city offered assurances it would only use such power as a last resort and only to protect public health and safety.
Without a plan for Highlands revitalization in which the city is a major player, Keolker said, it’s unlikely she would recommend spending the $1.5 million the council has set aside for street, sidewalk and stormwater improvements there.
Her recommendations are now before the City Council, which include working with the Renton Housing Authority to redevelop its affordable housing.
And the city would continue to “vigorously pursue” violations of city codes involving “unsafe, unhealthful, derelict or nuisance properties,” she wrote the council.
Keolker has asked the council to still pursue the concept of an urban village for about 360 acres of the Highlands near the Hi-Lands Shopping Center off Sunset Boulevard just east of Interstate 405.
Through new zoning yet developed, the city would increase the housing density in the Highlands area, helping to spark economic development, while still providing affordable housing.
The housing there now — some single-family homes but mostly duplexes and triplexes — was built about 60 years ago to temporarily house World War II workers at the Boeing plant in Renton and their families.
Keolker has taken the brunt of the criticism from those Highlands’ activists who say the city is being heavy-handed in its drive to redevelop the neighborhood.
She points out that this is the city’s policy — not hers — and the City Council told her to act boldly and aggressively in the Highlands.
The council was 100 percent behind the policy, but that support has waned, in part because of misinformation spread by neighborhood activists, she said.
Those scare tactics, Keolker said, have prevented a discussion about affordable housing for those on lower incomes who live in the Highlands.
Prominent among those activists is Inez Somerville Petersen, the secretary of the Highlands Community Association. The group, she said, was to lay out its next moves Tuesday night at a board meeting, but she said they won’t drop their appeal of land-use decisions the city has made in the Highlands.
She denies spreading misinformation either at City Council meetings or through her numerous e-mails. Her information, she said, comes from official city sources.
To understand Keolker’s message, Petersen said, you have to read between the lines.
“The declaration of blight is taken off the table, but only temporarily,” Petersen said. She points to a line in Keolker’s letter:
“In time, we may find that some of our original ideas will become necessary to bring about widespread improvements,” Keolker wrote.
To Petersen, that means that Keolker “is not really conceding anything here.”
It’s too early to say how property owners and prospective developers will respond to redoing the neighborhood. But ultimately the city may have to step in “unless some miracle occurs,” Keolker said. “You can always hope for miracles.”
Angering Petersen, too, is the loss of the city’s official recognition of the association because she lives along Lake Washington, not the Highlands. It’s city policy that board members of its neighborhood associations actually live in the neighborhood.
“She (Keolker) has tried to buy herself some time to get her own cronies in a housing association that will go along with her ideas,” Petersen said.
Keolker said there are plenty of Highlands residents who support revitalization, some of whom don’t like the direction the Highlands association has taken or its political activism.
“We would like to have a positive relationship with the people who live in the Highlands,” she said.
Keolker won’t place a deadline on when she wants to see real progress in the Highlands, something, she said, that might look like an “implied threat.”
And Petersen said “there is no timeline on private property rights.”
Randy Corman, the council’s president, said from his viewpoint there is no timeline to get things done in the Highlands by the private sector. However, redevelopment will occur and some residents will fix up their homes.
“We won’t be able to force it,” he said.
Dean Radford covers Renton. He can be reached at dean.radford@kingcountyjournal.com or 253-872-6719.
Last modified: June 28. 2006 12:00AM
Mayor backing off
I think this whole experience has been a wonderful and painful example of Democracy in action. I plan to author another letter to the Editor of the King County Journal expressing my thoughts about the latest event. I appreciate your level headed response to these activities. After reading your Web Page, I understand why you have responded in this way. We are pushing to elect you as Mayor next time. I may run for Council if I can get enough support. Thanks again. Shirley Gaunt-Smith (resident of Renton)
Re: Mayor backing off
Thanks to you all for the kind words of support. It makes it all worth it.
Well, well, the city council DOES have a mind of its own!
What a breath of fresh air Mr. Corman’s comments are. Until I saw this, I thought the mayor was a dictator and the city council were just figureheads. It’s refreshing to see the council members actually have brains and thoughts of their own and aren’t just the mayor’s puppets.
I don’t live in the Highlands, but have been following this because of the property rights involved. I must say, if the mayor succeeds in stealing the property in the Highlands through eminent domaine, then a lot of other Renton properties won’t be far behind, because there are other areas of the community that probably don’t meet her standards either. (And some are worse than the Highlands!) Beware, beward Rentonites, you could be next!
Renton Highlands Revitalization
We are so encouraged here at “HCA Headquarters.” I posted this message
at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Renton-Political-Action-Network/message/2599?l=1
to make sure all the readers of the RPAN were alerted to all the good news.
Of course, we are keeping a history at our HCA website too at http://hca-renton.org.
I have two philosophies, First, don’t put off until tomorrow what you can do today. And, will it matter in 10 years? If the answer is YES, then it’s important. And the proper Highlands redevelopment strategy is so important.
Your leadership and vision are so appreciated.
Sincerely,
Inez Somerville Petersen
HCA secretary