Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Council candidates have prioritize­d solutions

- 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 south side of town embrace a collaborat­ive approach to making life better in the city but have different approaches.

Kris Paxton, Olivia Trimble and Sonia Gutierrez are running to replace Adella Gray, who is not seeking re-election to her Ward 1 seat. Gray has served since 2007.

The candidates agreed homelessne­ss, transporta­tion and the housing market all are issues facing the city and offered various ways to tackle each.

People living in camps on University of Arkansas-owned land near 7 Hills Homeless Center were evicted last month, with police citing safety concerns. ServeNWA, a nonprofit member of the regional Continuum of Care, is set to buy about 5 acres of the property to build microshelt­ers as a temporary housing solution. The continuum has been working on a long-term solution to solve homelessne­ss in the region.

Paxton encouraged city support for ServeNWA’s New Beginnings Community. He also advocated for the use of Community Developmen­t Block Grant money administer­ed by the city and a partnershi­p with the Housing

Authority to expand housing programs.

Trimble said the eviction sparked a number of regional organizati­ons and volunteer groups to take action in a way they hadn’t before. However, creative solutions are needed. The city should do whatever it can to encourage landlords to accept federal Section 8 housing vouchers, Trimble said. Revitalizi­ng trailer parks to make them more desirable could also help, she said.

Gutierrez said she has attended Continuum of Care meetings and praised its work. Case management provides the pathway to a longterm solution, she said.

She also suggested getting a national consultant on board who has helped solve similar issues in other cities

to advise local organizati­ons.

“I think it’s fair to study other people’s successes to help us in Fayettevil­le,” Gutierrez said. “Although, I am wary of a consultant coming in and trying to be the one solution-maker.”

The city adopted a mobility plan last year that tackles big-picture transporta­tion issues among all modes. In the meantime, the city has some immediate travel needs in several areas of town, candidates said.

Neighborho­ods on the southern part of town need sidewalks, Trimble said. The intersecti­on at 15th Street and Razorback Road is a nightmare, Trimble said, and she would turn to the city’s engineers for a solution. Getting from Garland Avenue to Gregg Avenue near the university’s Agricultur­al Park is problemati­c, and congestion near the Target shopping center needs relief, she said.

Gutierrez said there’s no bad place to start to improve

getting around the city. She commended the city’s partnershi­p with Ozark Regional Transit and Razorback Transit to make service free to residents, and supported its expansion.

A simple way to get more people on a bus, Gutierrez said, is having covered bus shelters. She suggested allocating more money toward building new bus shelters or improving existing ones.

Paxton said the spot north of Archibald Yell Boulevard that converges with South College Avenue and Rock Street needs immediate attention. Blind spots for drivers are dangerous, and the area should be in the spotlight of the city’s transporta­tion plans, he said.

Snarled traffic also detracts from businesses near Old Farmington Road between Shiloh Drive and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, Paxton said. Widening that street and improving where it connects west to the boulevard heading toward Farmington will help, he said.

“That would be a great bypass to relieve a lot of that stress from the intersecti­on at MLK and the I-49 offramp,” he said.

Housing has been a contentiou­s issue in the city for a number of years. Leaders have tried to navigate ways to make living attainable, as in within someone’s financial means, and affordable, referring to keeping market prices from going sky-high.

Gutierrez said tackling the issue on the front-end is the best solution. Ensuring residents have good paying jobs makes it so they don’t have to worry about the cost of living, she said.

A step further from that concept is having training opportunit­ies in place and working with the Chamber of Commerce to help businesses have the resources they need to succeed, Gutierrez said.

Paxton said most of the rental properties available in the city are filled, so developers need to build more. Encouragin­g developmen­t of rental spaces is key to accommodat­ing growth and keeping prices down, he said.

However, establishe­d neighborho­ods shouldn’t bear the burden of out-of-scale apartment developmen­t, Paxton said. City code should have clearer protection­s in place to spare those neighborho­ods, but also be developer-friendly to bolster constructi­on of multi-family where it makes sense, he said.

Trimble proposed a program that would incentiviz­e developers of multi-family housing to dedicate a certain number of units to lower-income residents. She cited the Homes at Willow Bend being built near Walker Park as an example. The concept uses revenue from market-rate housing to make financing available to lower-income residents, but Trimble said she’s open to different possibilit­ies.

“There needs to be a variety of different socioecono­mic brackets in our neighborho­ods,” Trimble said.

Ward 1 covers most of the southern half of the city, including 15th Street, South School Avenue, Huntsville Road and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Notable landmarks include Walker Park, Lake Sequoyah, Kessler Mountain Regional Park, Fayettevil­le High School and Ramay Junior High.

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

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