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Friday, November
05, 2004
By Dave Alexander
CHRONICLE BUSINESS EDITOR
The Community
Foundation for Muskegon County has given a local economic
development agency a substantial two-year grant to
help coordinate downtown redevelopment.
Muskegon Area First has
received an initial $50,000 from the foundation's
Community Economic Development Fund -- established
with federal money from the Michigan State Housing
Development Authority. Funding for a second year is
guaranteed for an additional $30,000 or up to $50,000
depending on the status of the MSHDA program.
"It
is so clear that the future of the downtown will drive
the success of Muskegon," said John Workman,
a local industrialist and chairman of the foundation's
Community Economic Development Fund advisory committee.
The foundation has direct interest in downtown development
as one of three nonprofit organizations that have
formed Downtown Muskegon Development Corp. -- the
owners of the 23-acre former Muskegon Mall property.
Muskegon Area First President Jim
Edmonson said his agency will not expand staff beyond
the current five. However, staff will put more time
toward downtown issues, which inevitably will take
time away from other economic development efforts
countywide.
The Muskegon Area First board of directors
endorses the grant and the shifting of resources,
he said.
"They realize the job of manufacturing
recruitment and retention is difficult if there is
no downtown," Edmonson said. "This is critical
to the whole growth of the entire region. Downtown
is the heart of the county -- still is and always
will be."
The image issues created by demolition
of the mall, leaving a sand lot in place of what was
Muskegon's historic downtown along Western Avenue,
were driven home by a Washington Post Magazine cover
story this past Sunday.
"Muskegon is a hurtin' place,"
the Post reporter wrote, in a story about a local
man who is a nonvoter. "Its downtown is desolate,
the most impressive landmark being a pair of enormous
sand dunes, six stories high, in an empty lot right
across from the tattoo parlor. They're pulverized
concrete, all that remains of a downtown mall that
was returned into dust after the businesses fled for
the 'burbs."
Those first-time visitors' impressions
of downtown point out the work ahead of Muskegon Area
First and other supporters of downtown Muskegon. Edmonson
said the goal for the next six months is to put funding
together for streets and utilities that are expected
to be built beginning next spring. And then there
is a need to begin selling land for the initial redevelopment
efforts.
Edmonson said Muskegon Area First
-- which has assisted Downtown Muskegon Development
and the Muskegon Area Chamber of Commerce on developing
a marketing plan for the former mall site -- also
needs to bring divergent parties together for a consolidated
downtown effort.
Besides Downtown Muskegon Development,
those interested groups include the Main Street Initiative,
Neighborhood Investment Corp., the chamber, community
foundation, Neighborhoods of Choice program and the
city of Muskegon.
"Hopefully, in two years, we
will have left the downtown in the hands of good leadership
and staff," Edmonson said.
© 2004 Muskegon Chronicle.
Used with permission
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