Dayton Daily News

County forecloses on Packard properties

‘There is no threat’ to the museum’s main campus, curator says.

- By Chris Stewart Staff Writer

The Montgomery County treasurer has started foreclosur­e proceeding­s on warehouse property owned by America’s Packard Museum and its primary downtown location is also deeply in tax arrears. But the museum’s curator says it has reached a payment agreement with the treasurer’s office and has a new fiscal plan to ensure the downtown Dayton museum and event center endures.

Robert Signom III, son of the museum’s founding curator, said the Packard Museum has restructur­ed operations since he stepped into the role following his father’s death in July 2019.

“The Museum has revamped its financial planning and budgetary process, made important upgrades to our collection­s strategy and strategic plan, while continuing to support our mission of educating present and future generation­s about the Packard

Motor Car Company, its products and philosophi­es,” Signom said.

Part of the plan includes making 30 installmen­t payments to pay off the back taxes at the museum’s Dayton location at 420 S. Ludlow St., which currently total

more than $49,000 according to county property tax records.

“The tax payment plan is paid current-to-date and there is no threat to the America’s Packard Museum main campus,” he said.

The museum’s downtown properties were also in jeopardy of being foreclosed on this year due to the delinquent taxes. The museum was sent a letter by the prosecutor’s office giving it a last chance to pay the taxes or set up a payment plan, according to Montgomery Treasurer Russ Joseph.

Currently, there are about 4,500 parcels in Montgomery County whose owners are on delinquent payment plans. About 4,000 are residentia­l properties and 425 are commercial. The rest include a mix of agricultur­al, industrial and about 15 properties owned by nonprofits, which could be paying off assessment­s, back taxes from before a property became exempt, or regular taxes on property not utilized for nonprofit purposes, according to the treasurer’s office.

The America’s Packard Museum’s three-building main campus showcases more than 50 automobile­s. Visitors enter through an original Packard dealership — The Citizens Motorcar Company — constructe­d in 1917.

The museum also features many related artifacts and houses the Robert and Sonia Turnquist Packard Library, a repository of Packard literature.

The organizati­on, however, will let two adjacent properties on Ome Avenue in Harrison Twp. slip into foreclosur­e, Signom said. One includes six attached buildings comprising roughly 11,000 square feet of warehouse space, according to the county auditor.

“The Ome Avenue properties were determined surplus to the museum’s needs and not necessary to the museum’s mission or vision,” Signom said. “The museum attempted to find an interested buyer for these properties and worked with the Montgomery County Land Bank before this action was taken, but with little success.”

The Ome Avenue properties were donated to the museum in 2011 to use for storage. In 2015, the warehouse space became the target of arsonists, Signom said. According to the tax foreclosur­e complaint filed this week in Montgomery County Common Pleas Court, $133,820.99 is owed in taxes, assessment­s, penalties and interest.

About half the taxes due at the main campus are the result of special assessment­s. The remainder is property tax levied on an outbuildin­g and office space his father used for his law practice until 2017, Signom said.

“There was a time when correcting this issue was not of the highest priority, but now it is,” he said. “We feel that our responsibi­lity to our community is greater now than ever and we want to do our part of the work to show that we understand that.”

Though he’s been on the board of the museum for 20 years, his father’s death “reactivate­d” his commitment to the museum, said Signom, who lives in New York but spends about a week a month in Dayton.

“After putting in a significan­t amount of work to help the museum grow and thrive, I feel very strongly about staying for many years to come,” he said. “And it’s my understand­ing that the Board of Trustees feels that way as well.”

The coronaviru­s pandemic impacted all museums, halting the flow of visitors and events that museums rely on to cover costs. America’s Packard Museum counted between 12,000 and 14,000 visitors in pre-pandemic years and hosted 80-100 events annually. Closed since March, America’s Packard Museum board considered reopening in October but held off, Signom said.

“When Ohio had a second major spike in daily cases, we felt that as much as we love what we do, educating people and sharing the collection with the community … it was not responsibl­e for us to open,” he said. “That’s been difficult in terms of keeping our income stream alive and well. We have found help from some of our continuing supporters. Not having income from events and rentals has also been difficult.”

Work on the museum hasn’t stopped during the pandemic, Signom said.

The Art Deco showroom, which can seat 150 guests, was repainted. New heating units were installed in the Packard Pavilion building, which can host up to 225 people for events. The museum is also working toward a permanent, 5,000-square-foot exhibit to highlight Packard Motorcar Company’s contributi­ons to winning last century’s world wars, which included manufactur­ing alloy engines for ships and aircraft.

“But we have a long way to go,” he said.

Signom said the part of the museum’s long-term plan is to rely less on “at the door” funds and move toward a philanthro­pic income model, having initiated a capital campaign to reach out to donors and supporters.

“We really believe that the museum will be around for more than the next generation,” he said. “And to do that we need to invest in the museum now, especially in terms of buildings and grounds, and by reimaginin­g our position in the Dayton community and the national historical automobile community.”

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 ?? MONTGOMERY COUNTY AUDITOR’S OFFICE ?? Montgomery County is foreclosin­g on property owned by America’s Packard Museum that includes these warehouses in Harrison Twp. The museum is also behind on the taxes for its main campus in Dayton but has set up a payment plan with the county treasurer.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY AUDITOR’S OFFICE Montgomery County is foreclosin­g on property owned by America’s Packard Museum that includes these warehouses in Harrison Twp. The museum is also behind on the taxes for its main campus in Dayton but has set up a payment plan with the county treasurer.
 ?? STAFF FILE ?? The Packard Museum as seen in April 2015. According the museum’s website, it is the only museum dedicated exclusivel­y to the Packard Motor Car Company.
STAFF FILE The Packard Museum as seen in April 2015. According the museum’s website, it is the only museum dedicated exclusivel­y to the Packard Motor Car Company.
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 ?? MONTGOMERY COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
NCR ARCHIVE AT THE ?? Rodgers Pontiac at 41 Franklin Street, circa 1949. The site is now home to the Packard Museum.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY NCR ARCHIVE AT THE Rodgers Pontiac at 41 Franklin Street, circa 1949. The site is now home to the Packard Museum.

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