Tuesday, May 31, 2011

UMC Street Revocation - On Thursday's City Council Agenda

The meeting is slated for 10 a.m. in Council Chambers, but it's unclear when the council will get to this item:

39. CAL. NO. 28,457 - BY: COUNCILMEMBER HEAD (BY REQUEST)

Brief:

An Ordinance To authorize the revocation of dedication and transfer to the State of Louisiana of those portions of Cleveland Avenue between Squares 521 and 522; Cleveland Avenue between Squares 469 and 470; Cleveland Avenue between Squares 467 and 468; Cleveland Avenue between Squares 436 and 437; Palmyra Street between Squares 520 and 521; Palmyra Street between Squares 470 and 471; Palmyra Street between Squares 466 and 467; Palmyra Street between Squares 437 and 438; Palmyra Street between Squares 433 and 434; Banks Street between Squares 519 and 520; Banks Street between Squares 471 and Tulane Ave.; South Johnson Street between Squares 519 and Tulane Ave.; South Johnson Street between Squares 471 and 520; South Johnson Street between Squares 470 and 521; South Johnson Street between Squares 469 and 522; South Prieur Street between Squares 466 and 471; South Prieur Street between Squares 467 and 470; South Prieur Street between Squares 468 and 469; South Roman Street between Squares 438 and 466; South Roman Street between Squares 437 and 467; South Roman Street between Squares 436 and 468; South Derbigny Street between Squares 433 and 438; South Derbigny Street between Squares 434 and 437, and all the intersections included within said area; being generally bounded by Canal Street on the northeast side, South Galvez Street on the northwest side, Tulane Avenue on the southwest side and Claiborne Avenue on the southeast side, together with all improvements and appurtenances thereon, all in the First Municipal District in the City of New Orleans, and otherwise to provide with respect thereto.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Echoes of Robert Moses...in the UMC Footprint

"Before construction was to start, the state of New York hired an engineering firm, Day and Zimmerman, to study the feasibility of adding a mass transit line along the road's right of way.  Moses was so alarmed at the prospect of trains cluttering up his highway that he ordered construction to start before the report could be issued, borrowing $20 million from the Triborough Authority's slush fund to do so.  By the time Day and Zimmerman issued their report - which, of course, recommended the addition of a rail line - the subject was moot because to incorporate it would require the demolition of the work already completed."


"Moses also learned the trick of misleading the state legislature to get his projects underway.  He called it "stake driving."  He would grossly underestimate the cost of a project to get it underway fast.  Then he'd blackmail politicians into funding the rest, saying that their ignorance about the real cost of the project made them derelict in their duty and unfit for office."

*Both excerpts from James Kunstler's "The Geography of Nowhere"

We're seeing a loosely analogous "inevitability" situation play out - demolish away until there's no other option than to proceed.  But we'll see if the politicians in Baton Rouge ultimately play along with that set up.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Jones: "we will be dealing with expropriation lawsuits for years"

Well, there you have it.

Yet another benefit of pushing a hospitals into a heavily populated historic district.

The Lens tweeted last night's Special Committee on Hurricane Recovery held in City Council Chambers.  The state's Office of Facilities and Planning Control presented on the UMC - Jerry Jones flanked by Jim McNamara of BioDistrict New Orleans and Fred Cerise of LSU.

There were some other great quotes.  Like "there have been several business plans."

Kudos to City Council Member Kristin Gisleson Palmer for bringing a bit of skepticism to the table - the Times-Picayune certainly didn't.

Nobody has asked who the "community leaders" were that the Times-Pic referred to...a trio of UMC cheerleaders, including former Mayor Sidney Barthelemy, saying they were from "Dryades Street Public Policy Group."  What is this group?  I'm not sure.  A simple Google search reveals this:






Palmer brought up a policy letter from the NEWCITY partnership that questioned multiple aspects of the UMC design and site prep situation - and proposed improvements.  Jones said he never received the letter from the large coalition of community groups.  Palmer then read from an email showing that Jones and other top state officials had in fact been sent the letter.

Overall, Jones' presentation was yet another manifestation of the state's attempt to bluff its way forward.  Act bully, talk big, and everyone else will follow.

It's unfortunate that the project hasn't been built at this point, the delay in returning healthcare is an embarrassment.  But every delay, every hurdle can ultimately be traced back to the horrible site selection for both VA and UMC  - and the refusal to go back into Charity.  All of it.

And there are still positives to be extracted from this blunder.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

The Children's Clinic - Demolished


















O, the unbridled irony.  Demolishing functioning healthcare facilities to build an unfunded monstrosity that takes up massively more land than it needs - sounds sensible, doesn't it?

The push for a fait accompli continues. They'll just keep expropriating and demolishing despite the uncertainty over funding, despite the lack of a business plan, despite the displacement of businesses and residents. This is government at its absolute worst.

City of New Orleans to use additional federal dollars to fund moved VA house rehabs

Per a notice in the Times-Picayune, the city's Office of Community Development is amending the Consolidated Plan of 2008, which, as I understand it, governs the use of Community Development Block Grant (CBDG) monies in the city, to add the following moved VA houses to the Neighborhood Stabilization (NSP) Program, thereby providing funding to move the properties back into commerce:

613 N. Rocheblave
619 N. Rocheblave
627 N. Rocheblave
631 N. Rocheblave
633 N. Rocheblave
635 N. Rocheblave
1718 Bienville
1722 Bienville
1726 Bienville
1730 Bienville
1803 Bienville
1833 Bienville
2010 Bienville
2224 Bienville
2410 Bienville
2310 Iberville
2630 Palmyra
220 N. Derbigny
421 N. Miro
3000 Conti

These are the destination addresses of the houses in questions.  Significant amounts of work have already been done on many of these.  The total amount of funds involved is $2,302,208, but there are other properties involved that are not moved VA houses or Builder of Hope sponsored.  Builders of Hope is the sponsor for the houses listed above.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

A good point

As readers of this blog likely know, the LSU/VA footprint is located in a much larger footprint, the footprint of "The BioDistrict." 

Here's a good point about a lack of public awareness about the BioDistrict project from a letter in the Times-Picayune today:

'Readers have been privy to stories about chickens in the Seventh Ward, nutria couture and Nicholas Cage's French Quarter exploits, but we have not seen a single piece on a neighborhood organization's effort to escape "BioDistrict New Orleans."'

The local media really should do a better job of ensuring that the public knows more about things like the BioDistrict.  The same goes for many aspects of the LSU/VA undertaking that haven't been covered over the past year.

Inside the Footprint: Today in the UMC Footprint

















One of the few remaining families was moving out this morning on S. Johnson Street.


















Another demolition was underway - the recently functioning auto mechanic shop on S. Roman Street.


















And, while he's sold the property, Humble Rumble's American flag still flew.

"in the event Treme decides not to Treme itself, it will wholly get it wrong. Completely. They’ve written themselves into our recovery. Period."

Will HBO's Treme ultimately cover its own presence in New Orleans as the tv timeline and the real world timeline collide?

Jean-Paul Villere lays out the strange possibility of "Davis potentially watching Davis then watching Davis."

It's an interesting conundrum, the documentarian's dilemma.  And it's one that gets even weirder as you ponder how Treme touches on the LSU/VA Footprint.  Here are some photos of the shoot in the LSU Footprint from a few weeks ago that never made it onto the blog:






















As you can see, the filming required use of some of the now-vacant property in the LSU Footprint - contradicting what the location manager contact told me (that only the streets would be used).  The filming actually required messing up some of the lots that had been fully cleared:


















It gets interesting when talking LSU/VA because the greater hospitals controversy - not just the geographic setting as stage - seems to be working itself into the show.  This past Sunday, for example, the show's viewers saw a developer talking briefly about a map...which turns out to be the LSU/VA hospitals area.

And recent scenes this season, set in 2007, were actually shot in late 2010 in the VA footprint...including a shot near Outer Banks Bar that I watched as it was filmed, (and documented here).

So, at some point in later episodes, if the LSU/VA footprint/Charity theme continues...will viewers ultimately see the show depicting its own crew filming earlier episodes of the show in the crumbling VA or LSU footprints as residents attempt to move out?  And if the LSU Footprint is still largely vacant at that future date (which would be no surprise to many of us), will the show's crew return there to shoot/recreate such a scene?  The possible convergences of film, reality, and time are almost too much to handle all at once.

As Villere puts it: "Treme must Treme itself. Why? Because the whole point of the show is to tell New Orleans’ story post Katrina, and whether you want to admit it or not the diurnal tedium of our lives will forever be impacted by the concept and execution of this show paralleling and in effect documenting the fabric of our culture."

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Monday, May 23, 2011

Public Works Committee met today on UMC street revocation

It was an interesting presentation.  Here's the video - Item III - speakers toward the end of that period.  Be sure to catch Council Member Stacy Head's excellent commentary on the irony that the same people in Baton Rouge who pushed the anti-Kelo amendment also supported the Lower Mid-City plan that involved mass expropriation.  See her dead-on questioning regarding the UMC's failure to design vertically in an urban environment.

Viewers learned a number of items at the meeting.  As far as site preparation expenditures thus far, the numbers, roughly, total:

$11.2 million for professional services (including $3.7 million for legal alone - with 120 properties still in dispute)
$42 million for acquisition of properties
$1.2 million for relocation packages for people
Total:   $55.3 million

Just think of how absurd that last figure is.  The state has a gigantic, structurally sound building on hand...that it owns.  Charity Hospital.  It's a building that could meet the programmatic needs of a new, state of the art hospital if retrofitted.

Instead, the state spent $55.3 million on destroying a neighborhood.  And those costs will continue to mount as the legal challenges proceed.

Other items:

125 parcels cleared
107 in demolition process

26 houses were identified as "Builders of Hope" houses for potential moving, but apparently things are not moving forward on a house moving effort at this time.

The state says that all parcel acquisition should be complete by May 31.  By July 1, the site would be "demolished."

Jerry Jones suddenly backtracks on UMC delay

So...now construction ostensibly won't be delayed due to the action by the Ways and Means Committee of the Louisiana House of Representatives earlier today:

The governor's top construction adviser, Jerry Jones, initially told the committee the change would push back the hospital construction. He reversed his position later in the day, saying he was incorrect in his first interpretation.


Through a spokesman, Jones, head of the state Office of Facility Planning and Control, said the borrowing doesn't need to be approved though the construction budget and instead only needs approval from the State Bond Commission and the joint House and Senate budget committee.

Earlier in the day, he was saying this, repeating several times that the committee's action would cause delay:

"You'll delay the project substantially, and it's already been delayed," said Jones, head of the state Office of Facility Planning and Control.

The Big News

From the AP: Lawmakers strip money for Charity Hospital replacement

As a friend noted: "Ruh roh"

ADDED: This comment on the piece was too good to pass up:

ElCidDeEspana May 23, 2011 at 3:49PM


Ok, let's count it up:


1. It's 6 years since the storm and we don't have a hospital.


2. We torn down a historic neighborhood and a large swath of mid-city without trying to determine what caused its downfall.


3. We drove out thousands of citizens from their home and took property from those who had invested in the city.


4. Many connected people bought property on the cheap and then sold to make a quick, very nice and quiet profit.


5. WE STILL WON'T HAVE A HOSPITAL until at least 2016, 11 years post-storm, right?


6. Old Charity is still just sitting there, empty.


Really great going guys.


What a boondoggle.

Endemic

















"Restricted or peculiar to a locality or region."


The architecture peculiar to New Orleans continues to be destroyed in the LSU Footprint.

Eviction Notice

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Two Relevant Meetings this Week

I.

The City Council’s Public Works Committee will convene on Monday, May 23, 2011 at 1:00
p.m. in the City Council Chamber. The agenda will include the following


III. Discussion of Ord. Cal. No. 28,457, regarding LSU street dedication.
To appear: Cedric Grant (or designee


II.

AGENDA
Select Committee on Hurricane Recovery
May 26, 2011
New Orleans City Council Chambers 1300 Perdido Street New Orleans, Louisiana 70122 5:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Chairman: Senator Karen Carter Peterson


DISCUSSION OF HURRICANE RECOVERY ISSUES:
1. Presentation by the Office of Community Development/Disaster Recovery Unit and the Office of Facility Planning and Control on the New Facilities for the University Medical Center, New Orleans, LA
a. Site Acquisition and Control
b. Funding report/outstanding issues
c. Construction Timetable
d. Financial Feasibility Study

Quite interesting

Thomas Dutel, whose place of business was displaced from the VA Hospital Footprint, is making furniture named after other displaced residents - like "The Wally Bed" named after Wally Thurman, formerly of S. Tonti Street.

One of his most recent creations is the "Wally Bed" for the Green Project’s Salvations 2011 competition held in April. Of all the entries, the Wally Bed was recognized as one of the top six designs in the show and was awarded "Best Traditional Design."

This really is a great token of the strong community spirit that flourished in a neighborhood that has been destroyed.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

A Pile of Piles

















The contractors working in the VA Footprint are in the test pile driving phase at present.

Still, according to one source, neighbors came out last week along S. Rocheblave on the footprint border as the giant concrete piles (between the visible metal piles) were being pounded into place due to the noticeable noise and vibration.

But this is just the start.  In October or November of this year, the true pile driving will start.

And the VA's contractors will drive "a lot of piles" - 5,500 piles, in fact.

More water than usual






















The levees are still intact here in New Orleans.  But more water than usual was flowing from an open water pipe along Palmyra Street in the LSU Footprint in recent days.

Although, in a city where over 50% of drinking water pumped from the municipal utility is lost to leaks...perhaps this is nothing of note.

BioDistrict bill before legislative committee tomorrow

HB 576, by Representative Leger, will be heard tomorrow by the Committee on Municipal, Parochial and Cultural Affairs.

Among other things, the bill renames "GNOBEDD" something far more in line with what its more commonly known as - BioDistrict New Orleans.

There's been some discussion by folks in the know here in New Orleans about other aspects of the bill and what they will ultimately mean for the city and for the historic neighborhoods that stand to be impacted by the district.

For one, I'll note that the BioDistrict has attempted to mollify critics by providing some neighborhood representative seats.  That sounds nice, but the new representatives would not be on the Board of the BioDistrict itself...rather, they're seats on an advisory committee... that is clearly heavily controlled by parties favorable to the Board.  Additionally, the new reps must be appointed by the mayor - and the current mayor has shown he's bought the BioDistrict hook line and sinker.  Furthermore, those two reps come from a list submitted by the local legislators...who are all in the bag as well when it comes to setting up and supporting the BioDistrict.















So, the supposed injection of resident input is mere window dressing - not substantive change that gives meaningful representation to the thousands of people who will be affected by the district. Resident input is mediated and muted at least three different ways by the provision as written.

Salvage, sure, but a real loss

















This interesting house on S. Galvez Street started its descent toward destruction yesterday.  It was still very much livable, and it was occupied by several people in 2010.

Here's what it looked like.  Note both the elaborate ornamentation with unique brackets, moldings, and quoins on the facade.

But also note the strange form of the building itself - a scrunched type of camelback, as I've noted before.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Death of Deutsches Haus


















All too often, I hear an argument here in New Orleans. It's a variation on the adage that is often dragged out in the wake of a fire or tornado: "It's not the church building that matters, it's the people that make up the church that are important."

While I understand that sentiment, I think it's had its day in New Orleans given the demolition binge that is still underway.  In this city, it's not just about the people alone, just like it's not about the intangibles in the music or the food alone. It's about the distinctive physical place too, the physical geography and the built environment. They provide the peculiar stage that help to make the city's unique people what they are.  As one prominent local musician told me over Mardi Gras, it's the real pre-requisite for the "culture" that is so-often heralded and praised here as an invaluable asset. 

For example, with shotgun houses, as with passenger pigeons, we may not recognize the ongoing losses until its too late - until New Orleans is no longer really New Orleans.  There are so many shotgun houses.  They're so common here.  But after a certain point, the city would become so different in kind tht it would no longer be recognizable as the place that outsiders and residents alike can identify.

The loss today of the physical building that housed Deutsches Haus, a German cultural institution dating to the 1920s, was highly regrettable.  While the bulk of the building was initially constructed as a telephone company, the building accreted decades and decades of cultural significance.  The location told the story of the surrounding neighborhood, too - a place that was once largely German in its stock, something not readily apparent in 2007 as planner's blight set in inside the Footprint.  The continuity of annual Oktoberfests maintained the sense of tradition.  Place mattered.

As I stood on the neutral ground this afternoon and watched the pile of debris, a group of about five people stood nearby.  One man noted that he had been coming to Oktoberfest annually since 1956.  Another told the story of coming back after Katrina - and doggedly returning the building and the institution to life in the wake of the storm.

If this city wants to retain its authentic sense of self, if it wants to remain a place instead of a nowhere, it must stop the senseless and needless destruction of its historic architecture and the genuine, long-standing places that enshrine its culture - from the landmarks to the everyday residences.  And local people need to stand up for such a cause.

Buildings matter, too.  Especially here.



Three-Bay Going Down

*This post was deleted by Blogger on about Thursday of last week. It has re-appeared, as shown below:



















Here's what the house at 216 S. Johnson looked like yesterday.


The salvage crews have extracted a great deal from the building.

Here's what the building's facade looked like today:


























Just down the block, proving there's rarely a dull moment in the Footprint, a car was being searched by police.  The occupant was arrested for distribution of heroin.







Salvage yesterday - on the former Deutsches Haus




It looks like demo is starting today - after Willie White's crew salvaged yesterday.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

"Expansion"




































A fire extinguisher sits in the midst of cleared parcels in the UMC Footprint. None of the parcels supporting the buildings visible in this shot are actually necessary for the construction of the proposed first phase of the UMC hospital. 

Nevertheless, they will all be demolished.

Several other buildings that would have been visible in this shot a few months ago are already gone.

"I'm just so tired."

















Ms. T was moving out from her side of a camelback on Cleveland Avenue late last week, aided by one other person.  It was slow going in the white hot afternoon sun.  She is being forced to move into a temporary lodgings because the house she will ultimately move to is not yet complete.  She noted that the state is not paying her to move twice - even though that's what she is being forced to do.

The hasty timeline of the state, of course, is ironic and ridiculous given the lack of adequate funding and the continued uncertainty over design of the proposed UMC hospital complex.

Ms. T also informed me that someone had tried to start her house on fire last Sunday - and showed me the boards and fencing put up by the fire department.

The lower part of the UMC footprint has been plagued by fires in the past five years.  In 2007 and 2008, several suspicious fires in the area destroyed and damaged numerous buildings.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Positive rumblings on UMC house moving

Ostensibly, a request for bids has gone out - calling for the moving of 23 houses off the UMC or LSU Footprint.

That's great news.  We've been calling for houses to move off the site since a press conference on Cleveland Avenue in early October of 2010 - and even before that.

Unfortunately, it seems that the same method will be used for the house moving process.  Namely, the roofs will be removed.  The removal of the roofs was the key cause of problems with the last round of VA moves, and I hope that the parties involved will seek out more sympathetic methods to avoid damage to the homes.

A glance in the rearview mirror

Blogger was down for this particular site over the past few days, for some reason.  A few posts that I put up on Thursday were deleted for some reason.

Anyway, it was a busy week as usual, and I'll be looking back at a few of the key events this weekend.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Sliced






















The elevated cross-over that connected various parts of Dixie Brewery across S. Rocheblave Street (between Banks and Tulane) was removed a week or two ago.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

A Troubling Tipping Point

















Today, at this beautiful, 3-bay shotgun home at 216 S. Johnson Street in the UMC Footprint, salvage was underway.  The cornices above the windows are gone, though the brackets remain.

















While Mr. White and his crew are among the best salvors in town, it looks like this house is headed toward demolition instead of moving. Despite a lot of talk, I have yet to hear an actual plan for moving from the State of Louisiana, Jacobs Engineering, the City of New Orleans, or Builders of Hope. I'm grateful for any efforts that are underway to make something happen, but the fact that a house like this one appears to be heading toward destruction is not good.

I should note that the weatherboards on the side in the photo above have fallen away AFTER the state took possession of the house long ago.






















Inside the recessed entryway, it looked like woodwork the once surrounded an interior doorway had been stripped away.  Bricks were coming out the window as well.

More on filming in UMC Footprint

According to the locations contact, filming that begins tonight at 5 p.m. in the UMC Footprint is for HBO's Treme.

The contact also said that proper permits are in hand and that the streets alone will be used for shooting.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Signs - Filming Tomorrow and Wednesday in the LSU Footprint






















I have not yet called 504-799-0121 to find out what production is actually filming in the area along Palmyra Street near McDonogh No. 11 School.  Here's what's currently in production around town.

I would point out that the State of Louisiana does not yet own the streets in the area.  If any filming is occurring on properties that were acquired or expropriated by the state for the UMC project, I would demand that any and all profits gained by the state or its contractors from filming be disgorged and distributed to those residents and businesses who were forced from the footprint due to the hospital project.

That's especially true if a given property being used for filming would not have been available in its current state but for the unnecessary displacement.

Demolished, LSU Footprint

















A multi-plex building - not historic, but once home to multiple families - went down today in the 2000 block of Cleveland Avenue.

American Institute of Architects to hold multiple presentations praising the wonders of LSU/VA

Wow.  Some people clearly have no shame.  These presentations at the AIA conference, underway here in New Orleans this week, are basically trying to gild a lump of coal.

In the first presentation, for example, I hope there's mention of Jerry Jones' recent admission that the state/UMC is in direct competition with the VA for the labor necessary to complete its proposed facility - so much so that Jones and the state are trying to rush the start of the project.  Yes, there's all kinds of collaboration and synergy.  The euphemistic treatment of the hospital projects makes a person cynical.

"Regional Medical Center Design Case Study: VA and LSU Collaborate in New Orleans"

"Participants will learn how the co-location of the two medical centers creates a synergy vital to serving the New Orleans region, how the downtown location contributes to the revitalization of the city, and how the location and design of the center integrates sustainable design to connect a regional public health vision with regional environmental health."

Wednesday



"Restoring Urban Infrastructure: Project Legacy in New Orleans"

"This session brings together a design team member, a consulting engineer, and a technology leader to examine the challenges of replacing the Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System Replacement Medical Center in New Orleans. Topics inlcude integrating new construction with a historic building renovation, meeting advanced sustainability standards, and satisfying the VA's healthcare, education, research, and emergency preparedness guidelines."

Friday

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Demolished Yesterday






















The former Broadmoor Auto Parts, which relocated to Banks Street in the LSU Footprint post-Katrina.

















Here it was the day before, signs in the window announcing the latest move to N. Galvez Street outside the footprint.

Mid-City Neighborhood Organization - Opposes LSU Footprint Street Revocation

This letter to Stacy Head from MCNO is encouraging:




















According to Derrick Morrison of the Committee to Re-Open Charity, here's how things stand on the LSU Footprint street revocation after the City Council Meeting on Thursday:

"At the May 05 New Orleans City Council meeting, an ordinance, prepared by the City Attorney's office and based on Property Disposition 1/11 (PD 1/11) of the City Planning Commission, was accepted by the Council. The CC has to wait 21 days before taking any action, meaning that, at the earliest, the ordinance won't come up until the Thursday, June 02 meeting."

Friday, May 6, 2011

Desertification #2






















A lingering sign of life in the UMC Footprint.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

State legislature moves to assert authority over UMC financing

Interesting.

State of Louisiana, Jacobs Engineering tried to evade programmatic agreement, avoid public input on Charity Hospital adaptive reuse

On October 18, 2010, the State of Louisiana, using Jacobs Engineering as a facilitator, held a public meeting at City Hall regarding the adaptive reuse of Charity Hospital.  Numerous people and parties attended, and emotions ran high against the state's failure to retrofit Charity - or even discuss that option.  The facilitator was visibly shaken by the raucous experience.

Recently, several consulting parties have learned that they were not given actual notice of two public meetings held on March 16 and March 30 regarding the adaptive reuse of Charity Hospital.  Not a single member of the public attended either meeting - and, indeed, it's unclear whether the third meeting was only held because notice wasn't actual run in a timely fashion in the paper...or because not a single person attended the second meeting.  The BioDistrict and LSU had people on hand, but they apparently were not considered public attendees by the organizers, which is strange.  

Talking to several consulting parties, it seems nobody was even emailed by the state or Jacobs regarding these meetings.  The state did tuck at least one notice in the back sections of the Times-Picayune, however.  Here's the only one I can find.

This was very clearly an attempt to evade giving consulting parties and the public notice of the public meetings.  The state will argue that the fine print newspaper notices were sufficient to meet its obligations of notice, and that it has now fulfilled its public meetings requirements.  And perhaps that would or would not fly in a court of law.

But it's downright shady.  It's shady as all hell.  Mr. Bilyeu with Jacobs Engineering definitely has the emails of the consulting parties that are to be provided with notice per a September 2010 mass email he sent out regarding an adaptive reuse workshop (not a public meeting).  From my experience in several Section 106 processes, the federal agency or responsible entity typically emails the consulting parties regarding meetings.  Consulting parties have indicated that they have either a position or an interest that goes even beyond that of the public more generally when it comes to  participating in the process.

Keep in mind, too, that these March public meetings are coming AFTER a January Jacobs-headed meeting to issue an RFP for Charity - a meeting that consulting parties were not told about.

Here's the requirement in the Programmatic Agreement that governs the Charity adaptive reuse process:

FP&C will endeavor to promote adaptive reuse for those nine
historically significant buildings that neither it nor other state
agencies use. During this process, FP&C will give notice to the
SHPO and to those groups and individuals who participated in this
Section 106 process as Consulting Parties. Additionally, public
meetings and/or forums will be held at no less than 2 points in the
process of evaluating the reuse or transfer of these properties from
State control, to solicit input and comments from the interested
parties.

My overarching question: what are they so afraid of...?  Public meetings or forums on adaptive reuse don't even involve binding input.  To diverge from past notice practices to avoid attendance and to have zero attendance subsequently result shows an intentional desire by Facilities Planning and Control to keep the public from having a say as mandated in the programmatic agreement.

Now that the BioDistrict has been shopping around its own proposals for reuse of the building, it's all starting to make a bit more sense.  Mr. Jim McNamara, head of the BioDistrict, was at both March meetings.

Remnants of Life






















Furniture, clothes hangars, and boxes of all kind sit on the curb outside the row of three camelbacks in the 1800 block of Cleveland Avenue in the UMC Footprint.  Hardly any residents remain in the UMC Footprint.

More Demos - UMC Footprint is laid to waste






















The venerable Ellgee Uniform Shop is no more, to be replaced by parking ramp, parking lot or open space.

Here's what it looked like, flying by at night:














----

















The house on S. Galvez that sported a heap of gaudy flowers and, more recently, Mardi Gras beads - right nextdoor to Deutsches Haus - is gone as well.

This one.