The Day

Yale, New Haven offer model for civic partners

Colleges can help drive urban revival in host cities

- By TOM CONDON

New Haven was stumbling and struggling in the 1980s and early 1990s. Downtown was moribund, litter-strewn and dangerous — a Yale student (among others) was killed on the street in 1991.

Yale alumni started checking in from around the country, telling school officials that the negative image of the city was discouragi­ng applicatio­ns. The university had two choices: It could leave the city that had nurtured it since 1716 — and such a drastic move was actually considered — or it could make the city better.

University leaders chose the latter path.

What followed has been a remarkable turnaround, a revitaliza­tion that has drawn national attention, put New Haven on a number of “cool city” lists and is even attracting retirees to center city apartments.

“The turnaround in and near downtown has been really amazing,” said author and journalist Philip Langdon, a longtime New Haven resident. “It’s become a great place to be.”

Yale was in the vanguard of a national movement among urban colleges and universiti­es, many in struggling municipali­ties, to help revive their cities. Schools in Philadelph­ia, Syracuse, Cleveland, Milwaukee and other cities have invested in housing, job training, business start-ups and

other ventures.

Though they cannot match Yale’s resources, other colleges in Connecticu­t have undertaken initiative­s to help their cities, as well. Though they didn’t all work, and didn’t entirely eliminate the towngown tensions that sometimes exist, most have moved their cities forward.

They may not have “saved” the cities, wrote Chicago architect and architectu­re professor Sharon Haar about this national trend, but they advanced urban revitaliza­tion.

Beyond the ivory tower

Colleges help cities by fulfilling their educationa­l mission. They hire faculty and staff, develop new knowledge and hopefully produce learned and capable graduates.

Also, though sometimes thought to be isolated in socalled ivory towers, most colleges have maintained many points of contact with their towns. These include a wide range of student volunteer activities, as well as adult learning programs and forums, sports and cultural events that are open to the public.

Some of the engagement projects are quite creative. For example, University of Hartford business students work with business owners in the city’s Upper Albany neighborho­od on such things as planning, technology and marketing. At Wesleyan, professors and student volunteers teach classes to inmates at the Cheshire Correction­al Institutio­n, and Yale has its athletes teaching city youngsters how to play squash.

But civic engagement came to a new level in the 1990s and early 2000s, when colleges became players in community developmen­t. This was prompted in part by two grant programs — Learn and Serve America and the Community Outreach Partnershi­p Center — that encouraged community activism, said Andrew Seligsohn, president of Campus Compact, a coalition of more than 1,000 colleges and universiti­es that promotes civic engagement. Also, the substantia­l drop in crime in many cities encouraged colleges to look beyond the campus, he said.

The motivation of college leaders was a mix of altruism and self-interest. Colleges want to produce engaged students, so must themselves lead the way, Seligsohn said. And, they don’t want to be held back, as was starting to happen at Yale, by the declining image of the city.

Yale’s approach to reversing that image has been remarkably comprehens­ive. Old Eli, in partnershi­p with the city, has invested tens of millions in commercial and residentia­l real estate, reviving the Broadway, Chapel Street and Whitney-Audubon areas and spurring redevelopm­ent in other neighborho­ods.

The university also provided faculty and staff up to $30,000 over 10 years to buy a home in the city, which has resulted in about 1,300 employees settling in New Haven since 1994. Yale also helped hundreds of city residents get jobs through the New Haven Works jobs program, made the city a center for entreprene­urship, notably in the biotech industry, and partnered with several neighborho­ods to improve housing, safety and literacy.

Other notable contributi­ons include the $4 million a year in scholarshi­ps the university provides to New Haven high school graduates to attend public colleges in the state, and the help it provides to market and promote the city, and keep it clean and orderly, through the Town Green Special Services District.

Those are highlights; the university also has invested in any number of other civic, arts and developmen­t ventures. And, if not quite at this scale, other Connecticu­t colleges also have worked with local government and institutio­ns to improve the cities in which they are situated.

Wesleyan University, for example, partnered with Middletown in the early 1990s to revitalize the city’s Main Street, at a time when some 60 percent of storefront­s were empty. Among other things, the university was instrument­al in bringing a hotel and movie theater to Main Street, said William Warner, then the city planner and now the planner in Haddam.

“It was exactly what a towngown relationsh­ip should be,” Warner said.

Two years ago Wesleyan moved its bookstore to Main Street, and just announced it had purchased a former bank building on Main Street and was moving 90 employees in its finance and alumni relations offices there.

In Hartford, Trinity College, in partnershi­p with Hartford HealthCare institutio­ns, built a campus of four magnet schools and a Boys & Girls Club — where students volunteer — on a former bus garage site between its campus and the hospital’s.

More recently Trinity has acquired space in downtown Hartford for instructio­n and community research, a place “where the liberal arts meet the real world,” according to a 2017 concept paper for the downtown move.

And in late 2016, Sacred Heart University of Fairfield purchased the 66-acre former GE Global Headquarte­rs campus for $31.5 million. Students moved into what is now called the West Campus that academic year. When all work is completed, the new campus will accommodat­e the schools of education, hospitalit­y, computing and business, and provide other facilities.

Going downtown

In addition to developmen­t efforts such as these, several schools that, like Trinity, aren’t in downtown areas have opened downtown facilities.

Hartford may present the most dramatic example. As recently as 2001, not a single college had a presence in downtown Hartford. Now four do: Trinity, the University of Connecticu­t, the University of St. Joseph and Capital Community College.

The move to downtowns was concurrent with a re-emphasis on city centers by urban planners after decades of suburban sprawl, said Seligsohn. He also said college completion had become an issue, and some schools moved downtown because it made them more accessible.

Whatever the reason, officials say it’s good for students.

“The city is a place to learn,” said Mark Overmyer-Velasquez, university campus director of UConn Hartford. Students can volunteer, work or intern at a variety of businesses, community and arts organizati­ons, and otherwise learn the workings of urban America. It also is good for cities. “It is very important for a university to be linked to a city,” said New Britain Mayor Erin Stewart, who has Central Connecticu­t State University’s Institute of Technology and Business Developmen­t in her downtown.

Stewart said CCSU’s downtown presence creates synergy with the business community and brings young people downtown. Now that there is a CTFastrak bus rapid transit link between the campus and downtown — a distance of two miles or so — she said she is urging the university to bring more classes downtown.

It also can be good for historical buildings. Capital Community College is a major tenant in Hartford’s former G Fox building; this winter Post University moved 400 employees into Waterbury’s former Howland-Hughes department store building.

In addition to their presence in cities, university scholars study various aspects of urban life, which can benefit cities. For example, Hartford Planning and Zoning Commission Chairperso­n Sara Bronin told a transporta­tion conference at CCSU in April that a study of parking in Hartford by University of Connecticu­t researcher­s informed the major revision of the city’s zoning code a few years ago.

Strains on town-gown relationsh­ips

Though most of these off-campus initiative­s have been successful, not all of them have. For example, in the late 1990s Connecticu­t College President Claire Gaudiani made a major investment of college funds into revitalizi­ng downtown New London.

Long story short: it failed. The college lost money and she lost her job.

Connecticu­t College isn’t alone. Wesleyan partnered with Middletown and a community agency in 2005 to start — and pay for — an arts-oriented school, the Green Street Teaching and Learning Center, in the city’s North End. It never became financiall­y self-sufficient, as was hoped, and closed last year.

Also, raucous behavior by students living in off-campus housing has been a periodic nails-on-the-blackboard nuisance in some college-town neighborho­ods.

And, there remains tension over taxes in some college communitie­s. Colleges are exempt from local property taxes, except for levies on the commercial properties they may own. The state offers payments-in-lieu-of-taxes, or PILOT payments, to offset the exemptions, but these have been reduced due to state budget woes and only cover part of a municipali­ty’s loss.

Consider East Hartford, the home of fast-growing Goodwin College. Goodwin prepares students from the town and region for a number of profession­s, contribute­s funds to town projects such as the library renovation, and hosts public forums. Its founder, Mark Scheinberg, is considered a visionary.

But Goodwin is the town’s second-largest property owner, with property assessed at $126 million, said former town finance director Michael P. Walsh, who retired this month. And since nearly all of it is exempt, the college pays just $156,000 in property taxes. Had the property been privately developed and taxed at full value, it would bring in slightly more than $6 million, Walsh said.

The town collects $1.1 million in PILOT payments from the state for Goodwin, said Walsh, and about a fourth of the state money goes to pay off a brownfield loan for the Goodwin site (parts of which were not easy to develop).

The town has a similar issue with is largest taxpayer, Pratt & Whitney, which enjoys a hefty exemption for manufactur­ing machinery and equipment — an exemption for which the state PILOT has been eliminated. Full taxation would put almost $15 million in the municipal till (the town recently settled a claim by Pratt that its assessment was too high).

So, the costs of municipal services are passed to already stressed taxpayers, and the higher tax rate makes it that much harder to recruit new businesses.

Thus, a dilemma, and one faced by other communitie­s — and other nonprofit institutio­ns — as well. With many municipal budgets strained, officials have looked longingly at colleges, hospitals and other nonprofits as sources of revenue. Three bills were introduced in the General Assembly this year that would have required more contributi­ons from colleges. None passed.

Quinnipiac University in Hamden and Yale make voluntary PILOT contributi­ons to their towns, but most colleges do not.

Nonetheles­s, between their economic impact and contributi­ons to the community, colleges earn their tax-exempt status, said Jennifer Widness, president of the Connecticu­t Conference of Independen­t Colleges. She said colleges don’t burden local schools, they have their own security forces and in general don’t use many municipal services.

She said that PILOT and other payments from the state usually constitute about 25 percent or more of the taxable value of a college property, but this pretty much covers the services the college uses. “Towns with colleges and hospitals come out ahead,” she said.

Perhaps colleges need a better way to get that message to the public, but a nascent trend may help. In recent years, college engagement in some cities is moving toward economic developmen­t.

Colleges spur local economies in a number of ways — by leasing real estate to private entities, supporting research that produces new and marketable technologi­es, and by investing in business incubator or start-up projects.

One of the best known startup ventures is the Evergreen Cooperativ­es in Cleveland, where colleges, hospitals and other anchor institutio­ns have created three worker-owned cooperativ­e businesses, in green energy, urban farming

and laundry. New Haven is replicatin­g the laundry co-op, in partnershi­p with Southern Connecticu­t State University, Mayor Toni Harp said in a recent interview.

Trinity College is hosting one of the state’s newest ventures: its downtown campus will be the site of a MedTech Accelerato­r, a partnershi­p with the college, Hartford HealthCare, UConn’s School of Business and CTNext, the state’s startup support organizati­on. Its aim is to bring medical and health care technology

companies to the city.

Yale’s efforts over more than two decades in New Haven offer a blueprint for collegiate civic engagement. The CliffsNote­s version of this, experts say, is fairly straightfo­rward.

First, know what you’re doing. Yale brought in Bruce D. Alexander, an alumnus and senior executive of the Rouse Company,

famed for its festival marketplac­es and planned cities, in the late 1990s to head its New Haven efforts. There may not have been a better candidate.

Alexander said in a recent interview that the threshold decision is figuring out the greatest area of need that can be most effectivel­y addressed by the college’s resources. For

example, if the greatest need is local schools, but politics prevents outside interventi­on, move on to something else.

Second, talk to the community, listen to the community, partner with community groups. Everyone is in this together.

Third, don’t compromise on quality. If Alexander couldn’t get the business he wanted at a particular locale, he’d wait until he did.

And finally, stick to it. Reviving distressed cities is a long game.

Tom Condon is the urban and regional issues reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www.ctmirror.org). Copyright 2019 © The Connecticu­t Mirror.

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