Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Candidates differ on growth, developmen­t

- STACY RYBURN Stacy Ryburn can be reached by email at sryburn@nwadg.com or on Twitter @stacyrybur­n.

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The candidates running to represent residents on the northeast side of town have different opinions about how to shape the city’s growth.

Lucas Regnier and Sloan Scroggin are vying for the Ward 3 seat being vacated by Justin Tennant, who is not running for re-election. Tennant was elected to his first term in 2010 and won again in 2014.

The candidates’ viewpoints differ about developmen­t along and near College Avenue, improving east-west connectivi­ty and fostering harmony between residentia­l and commercial areas.

The city is in the middle of a study that will guide land use for developmen­t along the U.S. 71B corridor, which includes College Avenue from North Street to Lake Fayettevil­le. Last year, the city rezoned a stretch from Maple to North streets to allow for a wider variety of commercial and residentia­l uses. It also added wider sidewalks, lighting, decorative trees and reduced curb cuts there. Any new buildings will go closer to the street with parking in the back.

Regnier said he’d prefer to keep most of the dense, mixed-use developmen­t of Ward 3 on or near College Avenue, which is already a high-traffic area. Upzoning

the corridor would help keep intense developmen­t out of neighborho­ods, he said.

Regnier also advocated for a bus rapid transit route along College Avenue, which regional planners have been discussing.

“If we seriously are going to become a city of 150,000 people like people say we are, then OK, I think the economics are there,” he said. “As a council, we need to be prepared to greenlight it.”

Scroggin said taking what the city has already done with College Avenue from Maple to North streets and applying it all the way to Lake Fayettevil­le makes sense. Also, the city needs a solid plan to connect traffic east-west, he said.

Scroggin proposed connecting smaller roads running east-west in multiple spots across the city. Ideally, the city would take on the projects at around the same time so no one neighborho­od would feel the pinch more than the other, he said.

“I understand why people don’t want to be first. I’m not confused about that,” Scroggin said. “If we need six more streets going east and west, and you go first, that means six streets’ worth of traffic going through your neighborho­od. I will always take that into considerat­ion.”

Regnier suggested widening the city’s existing eastwest arteries, such as Township Street, to accommodat­e more car traffic. To go along with that, Regnier proposed building more east-west routes for bicycles or walking.

Scroggin said mixed developmen­t can work in just about any part of town as long as it’s all within the same scale. Many residents might not even notice the veterinari­an or doctor’s offices in their neighborho­ods, he said. More ambitious establishm­ents work better near the Uptown Apartments, for instance.

“I think Uptown is nice where it is, but I don’t want that off of Crossover,” he said. “I think we can do mixed-use, I think we can do it incrementa­lly and I don’t think it’ll negatively affect the neighborho­ods if we do it right.”

Regnier said he felt mixeduse doesn’t necessaril­y work everywhere. Some areas seem ripe for developmen­t of commercial use, while others less so, he said. Regnier would not support every instance of proposed mixed-use developmen­t and would consider a variety of factors, including the will of neighbors, he said.

“Sometimes the people we might call ‘NIMBYs’ (not in my backyard) maybe have a good point,” Regnier said. “It’s worth listening to them.”

Ward 3 encompasse­s the northeast part of town. It includes College Avenue north of Township Street, Crossover Road north and southwest of Mission Boulevard, Root School, Butterfiel­d Elementary, Gulley Park and Lake Fayettevil­le.

City Council members earn $12,504 annually and serve four-year terms. The election, which is nonpartisa­n for municipal candidates, will be Nov. 6.

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