Chattanooga Times Free Press

Council gives final approval to ordinance

- BY SARAH GRACE TAYLOR STAFF WRITER

In a move some believe will bring life to downtown, a controvers­ial Business Improvemen­t District for central Chattanoog­a was establishe­d Tuesday night after months of heated debate and an hourlong public hearing.

Property and business owners concerned with the BID board’s power to assess a fee spoke in opposition to the legislatio­n, while many spoke in favor, citing potential increases in business traffic and improvemen­ts to downtown’s safety and appearance. After the hearing, council members voted 6-3 to approve the ordinance on its second and final reading.

The first attempt to create the district, formed by a survey of property owners within the proposed district boundaries, failed on second reading in June due to a lack of a motion at the end of a similarly heated two-hour meeting.

A new version was proposed as a council resolution by three councilmen just one week after the first one failed, and it was amended several times to regulate the district’s board and remove liability from the city.

Changes to the legislatio­n since the first set of votes included:

› Ensuring no city tax money is expended on the BID

› Indemnifyi­ng the city from legal actions related to the BID

› Requiring annual financial and behavioral audits of the BID board

› Requiring the BID board to adhere to state open meetings law

› Keeping all BID income out of the city budget

› Removing the city council from the BID appeals process, sending appeals directly to Circuit Court

› Including all properties within the BID, requiring any seeking exemption to file for exemption with the BID board.

Even with the changes, constituen­ts came out to plead against the formation of the district. After the vote, more than half of the attendees in the overcrowde­d council chamber left and the council called a short recess before resuming agenda business.

“In a world where there are those who only operate for financial gain, there must be someone willing to say ‘no’ to the theft of democracy,” Darin Wright, owner of Elea Blake Cosmetics, said, arguing that the district would not be fair or representa­tive of small business. “I care about this city and I care about small businesses, those that exist today and those that are yet to come.”

“This is civic democracy at its finest,” Market Street property owner Dana Perry said, arguing that private contributi­ons to city improvemen­ts would help the city continue to “come alive.”

“I thought the public hearing went great; it expanded opportunit­ies to more citizens in the downtown area to speak so we were able to hear more voices and more opinions,” District 7 Councilman and Chairman Erskine Oglesby said afterward. “I see it as an improvemen­t for our city … Downtown, as I see it, needs a little life injected in it, and this [district] will drive new energy and will bring new businesses and foot traffic and will benefit everyone including small businesses.”

Under state law, the ordinance establishi­ng the BID was to be effective at the end of the council meeting.

Only one amendment was introduced during a relatively short discussion before the final vote.

The amendment, proposed by councilman Gilbert, would have excluded all property owners on the “outskirts” of the BID who had requested to be exempted. It failed 5-4.

“From my perspectiv­e, everything we have worked for over weeks and months was good the way it was,” Oglesby said after the meeting. “When you get to playing around with boundaries, something gets lost in the process … You can’t exclude one and not the other.”

Many members of the community and council had been frustrated throughout the process by the ambiguity of state law on forming a BID.

Councilwom­an Berz, who introduced a majority of the amendments to the original legislatio­n and had the city attorney clarify language in the state law leading all the way up to the vote, called the law “inarticula­te at best.” River City Co. President Kim White largely attributed the chaos of the process to the same law.

“I think that this is something new for this city, so I think a lot of it was the way the statute was written,” White said of the state law. “I again want to thank the city council for bringing back the BID and listening to a majority of property owners.”

White also denied claims made by Coonrod during the meeting that her enthusiasm for forming the district was related to any potential run for mayor of Chattanoog­a.

“The mayor’s race is a long time off, so this has nothing to do with that,” White said. “Part of my job for the last 11 years has been making downtown great, and I’m thrilled that I’ve been a great advocate for it, and that’s what this is all about.”

“I think that this is something new for this city, so I think a lot of it was the way the statute was written. I again want to thank the city council for bringing back the BID and listening to a majority of property owners.”

– RIVER CITY CO. PRESIDENT KIM WHITE

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Councilwom­an Carol Berz speaks about the business improvemen­t district during Tuesday’s Chattanoog­a City Council meeting. The business improvemen­t district passed with a 6-3 vote.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Councilwom­an Carol Berz speaks about the business improvemen­t district during Tuesday’s Chattanoog­a City Council meeting. The business improvemen­t district passed with a 6-3 vote.
 ??  ?? A large crowd fills the seats during Tuesday’s Chattanoog­a City Council meeting.
A large crowd fills the seats during Tuesday’s Chattanoog­a City Council meeting.
 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Individual­s opposed to the business improvemen­t district were asked to raise their hands during Tuesday’s Chattanoog­a City Council meeting.
STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH Individual­s opposed to the business improvemen­t district were asked to raise their hands during Tuesday’s Chattanoog­a City Council meeting.

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