Medicine Hat News

CCDA, city council liaison say new mandate needed

- COLLIN GALLANT cgallant@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: CollinGall­ant

Both the head of the City Centre Developmen­t Agency and city council’s liaison with the business improvemen­t district say a new mandate for the organizati­on is needed and perhaps a more solid line drawn between it and city hall.

CCDA chair Jeremy Silver, however, says the city can’t have it both ways considerin­g a growing controvers­y over the group’s new budget and confusion among downtown business owners.

“There’s been a lot of feedback and it’s not positive,” said Silver on Tuesday.

The document deletes $100,000 from the city that previously went toward a grant program for leasehold improvemen­ts and general street beautifica­tion.

It gives funds to the newly formed Invest MH office at city hall and earmarks them for its own Riverfront Developmen­t plan, which includes portions of the downtown.

Silver said the CCDA board didn’t see a final draft of its own budget that was changed substantia­lly and then forwarded to council for approval.

Coun. Kris Samraj represents council on the board, and said CCDA ratepayers should take the opportunit­y to redefine their organizati­on.

“How that was communicat­ed was definitely a mistake,” said Samraj. “We’ll fix that by taking two weeks (before the public hearing on Jan. 18).”

Silver said to this point downtown business owners are out of the loop and it’s not clear to him how much control or influence Invest MH would have in downtown matters.

He felt that given a choice, stakeholde­rs would side with more autonomy.

“The stakeholde­rs have a right to be upset, and are asking, ‘Why is the city taking its money out of the downtown, then having Invest micromanag­e it?’” he said.

Two years ago, council signalled that it would reconsider the $100,000 annual payment that paid for a CCDA-administer­ed grant program and for street maintenanc­e, hanging baskets and general beautifica­tion efforts.

Samraj says the grant also left an impression as a major contributo­r to the CCDA’s budget, the city had or should have a greater hand in guiding the agency that’s mostly paid for and legally governed by ratepayers.

“There are some structural things that we need to change and this budget accomplish­es that,” Samraj told reporters on Monday.

“There’s a conception that city council is somehow controllin­g of the Business Improvemen­t Area, and there’s probably some truth to that, which is one thing to untangle,” he said.

“But BIA’s should have very little to do with council… it works well elsewhere and there’s space to decide whose responsibi­lities are what.”

 ?? NEWS PHOTO COLLIN GALLANT ?? City council and the head of the City Centre Developmen­t Agency both say its time for the downtown developmen­t group to redefine its role in promoting the central business district.
NEWS PHOTO COLLIN GALLANT City council and the head of the City Centre Developmen­t Agency both say its time for the downtown developmen­t group to redefine its role in promoting the central business district.

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