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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-R-32 Part III Three-Year Strategic Plan Historical Development Jeffersonville has a manufacturing-based economy whose recent growth has only underlined its protracted problems with affordable housing, secure jobs and a viable downtown. Contradictions abound. It is a short walk from the new $8.6 million Town Place Suites construction site to the local soup kitchen. Most of the city's recent growth - the $200,000 homes, new industrial sites, national retail chains - has been to the east, away from downtown. This repositioning of activity began in the 1960s and continues to this day. It has pulled jobs, businesses and people from the city's core, leaving behind empty storefronts and deteriorating homes. In the past, the city has failed in its attempts to revitalize its core business district and neighborhoods, but community leaders are determined not to squander recent signs of progress downtown. A series of passages from The Louisville Courier-Journal and Jeffersonville Evening News track both long-lingering problems downtown and the recent surge of optimism: · From 1979: "Businessmen giving up hopes for down~own Jeffersonville" A couple of years ago there was talk of revitalizing downtown Jeffersonville, of getting the business district back on its feet, of competing with the shops in the suburbs. Lots of people were enthusiastic then. They're not so happy anymore. · From 1997: "Spring Street: The secrets of its success" In the past, the revitalization of Jeffersonville's downtown Spring Street has been a case of two steps forward and three back. Revitalization would start, then for a variety of reasons, stall. New businesses would open only to have to close their doors a few years later. Things, however, are changing. · From 1998: "Town's growth phase takes shape as buildings, confidence rise" I cannot recall this downtown having found itself again more than now. And I am not alone. Jeffersonville, a port on the Ohio River opposite Louisville, was incorporated as a city in 1839. The county seat of Clark County, Jeffersonville grew into a shipbuilding center. During the city's long history local manufacturers produced everything from steamboats to submarine chasers to barges. Some shipbuilding continues in the city, as does the production of soap, sporting goods, plastics, electronic components, cabinets, steel and processed foods. Historically, Jeffersonville had a blue-collar, manufacturing-based economy. But that market sector, both in the city and across the world, has undergone fundamental changes in recent times. Corporate globalization, downsizing, "The Rust Belt" and other factors all eroded Jeffersonville's traditional economy. But the city is reawakening to its histodc roots and economic potential. The downtown commercial and riverfront residential areas comprise a local historic preservation district, which, along with an extensive adjoining residential neighborhood, is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places. An exciting new commercial node has sprung up on the riverfront that includes restaurants and hotels. Unfortunately, many scars and lingering problems remain from less prosperous times. One example of an old blemish is the Quadrangle, a once beautiful complex of brick buildings that formerly occupied 10 blocks and provided jobs to hundreds of men. Most of this 125-year-old compound is now in a state of disrepair and is underutilized. In 1993, a fire destroyed a large portion of the southeast corner. Other problems are more recent and far-reaching. Jeffersonville is growing, with an ongoing boom in both new homes and new companies. In essence, Metropolitan Louisville has jumped the river. But that economic expansion is centered east of downtown or in other parts of the county. This transformation started in the late 1960s when the construction of two malls in Clarksville and the Youngstown Shopping Center drained the vitality of downtown retail shops. Another blow was the loss of Indiana University- Southeast, which was once housed in Jeffersonville. In the '70s the campus was lured away to New Albany, and with it went not only a well-paid, well-educated 2 workforce but also the ripple effect to local businesses - the coffee shops, records stores and restaurants that thrive in every college town. Jeffboat, one of the city's largest employers, was in financial trouble 15 years ago and reduced its workforce from three shifts to one. At the same time other downtown manufacturing and retail businesses were downsizing or closing. The cumulative loss of downtown jobs meant people moved out of the area. The real estate market plummeted and many homes fell into disrepair or were used for Iow-income rentals. Most new, affluent residents moved to suburban locations such ~s Oak Park and North Haven. Fewer manufacturing jobs downtown meant fewer people living nearby, which led to fewer customers for local shops. When a retail area is teetering, every loss has large repercussions. For example, when Vision World, a one-hour glasses service, closed, the restaurants and other shops that served its customers while they waited for their glasses also quickly folded. The aforementioned newspaper articles recounted local government's inability to reverse downtown's fortunes in the past, but there also have been recent private sector efforts. Unfortunately, results were mixed, in part because there was no unified vision or overall manager. Instead, a few entrepreneurs were interested in a few specific buildings. For example, the former JCPenny's building, which had been boarded up for years, was converted to a flea market. Three major structures along Spring Street followed suit and were converted to second-hand stores. A few blocks away; a historically significant flatiron building was closed except for a small store that sold diet aids. Since then, private developers saved that building with help from Jeffersonville Main Street Inc. Only in the past year or two has there been equal interest in revitalization by local government, private developers and not-for-profit organizations. While the work of these dedicated parties is creating many exciting projects, no one group is addressing all of the socio-economic factors that continue to oppress Jeffersonville's poorest neighborhoods. For instance, the Downtown Main Street program has been extremely successful in restoring treasured buildings and other revitalization efforts, but creating jobs is a by-product, not a direct goal, of their work. To reach its most disadvantaged citizens and its most derelict buildings Jeffersonville needs to unite all the disparate public and private revitalization efforts under one vision. It needs a new organization that can uncover gaps in services and bring together partners with overlapping interests. The Jeffersonville Urban Enterprise Zone would be dedicated to these goals. 3 Limitations to Development Describe the limitations to development in the zone area. Indicate what features of the zone have mitigated your efforts to redevelop this area. These features should include: the extent they are a problem, a discussion of crime, description of skill level of the labor force, ownership of property, permitting procedures, zoning, statutory restrictions, infrastructure, water quality, water supply, geographic barriers, financing and bond rating. Most of Jeffersonville's protracted and troubling problems with economic, physical and social issues are within zone boundaries. The area contains most of the community's dilapidated houses, rusting brownfields and empty stores. For example, it holds 100 percent of the public housing. Outside of the proposed zone area, the city could point to almost nothing but economic progress in recent years - the rows of new executive-level homes, the almost $150 million in new manufacturing investments and other exciting signs of progress on the city's East Side. But it is the zone that holds many of the remaining locally owned businesses, histodc structures and, of course, the thousands of residents who helped this traditionally blue-collar community lay the foundation for growth. Instead of "writing off' this core area of the city, the community is determined to revitalize it. The challenges are both clear and formidable as the proposed zone faces economic, physical and social limitations to development. Economic issues are probably the most troublesome, and start right at the homes of zone residents: · 75 percent of the residential property is in need of rehabilitation · More than four out of 10 dwellings are not owner occupied Almost 8 percent of the dwellings are vacant Housing needs are well illustrated by statistics from the Jeffersonville Housing Authority. The organization manages 762 units, which includes 381 Iow-rent houSing units - comprised of 185 family units and 196 elderly units - 200 Existing Section 8 Housing Certificates and 181 Housing Vouchers. There is a backlog of applications for housing assistance. The housing authority's Annual Report for f998 had 178 on the waiting list. Haven House Services Inc. is a not-for-profit organization that formed in 1996 to respond to the epidemic of homelessness in Southern Indiana. Thirty-six percent 4 Limitations to Development Describe the limitations to development in the zone area. Indicate what features of the zone have mitigated your efforts to redevelop this area. These features should include: the extent they are a problem, a discussion of crime, description of skill level of the labor force, ownership of property, permitting procedures, zoning, statutory restrictions, infrastructure, water quaiity, water supply, geographic barriers, financing and bond rating. Most of Jeffersonville's protracted and troubling problems with economic, physical and social issues are within zone boundaries. The area contains most of the community's dilapidated houses, rusting brownfields and empty stores. For example, it holds 100 percent of the public housing. Outside of the proposed zone area, the city could point to almost nothing but economic progress in recent years - the rows of new executive-level homes, the almost $150 million in new manufacturing investments and other exciting signs of progress on the city's East Side. But it is the zone that holds many of the remaining locally owned businesses, historic structures and, of course, the thousands of residents who helped this traditionally blue-collar community lay the foundation for growth. Instead of "writing off' this core area of the city, the community is determined to revitalize it. The challenges are both clear and formidable as the proposed zone faces economic, physical and social limitations to development. Economic issues are probably the most troublesome, and start right at the homes of zone residents: · 75 percent of the residential property is in need of rehabilitation · More than four out of 10 dwellings are not owner occupied · Almost 8 percent of the dwellings are vacant Housing needs are well illustrated by statistics from the Jeffersonville Housing Authority. The organization manages 762 units, which includes 381 Iow-rent housing units - comprised of 185 family units and 196 elderly units - 200 Existing Section 8 Housing Certificates and 181 Housing Vouchers. There is a backlog of applications for housing assistance. The housing authority's Annual Report for 1998 had 178 on the waiting list. Haven House Services Inc. is a not-for-profit organization that formed in 1996 to respond to the epidemic of homelessness in Southern Indiana. Thirty-six percent 4 of the people they serve are from Jeffersonville, and the majority of those people are from the zone area. Based in downtown Jeffersonville, the group provides transitional housing. In 1998, they served 1,340 new clients and 2,263 continuing clients. A profile of their clients is a reflection of many zone residents. About 40 percent are single mothers. Almost 80 percent of the new clients are white while 17 percent are African-American. About 45 percent of the people in the programs have an hourly wage of $5-$6. Twenty-two percent receive food stamps. Another service organization is the Center for Lay Ministries, also located in the zone. This group provided food or financial assistance for more than 9,500 people last year. The numbers for 1999 so far exceed the numbers for this same time last year. Socially, residents who improve their skills and find better jobs have moved out of their old neighborhoods; those who remain are often unskilled, unemployed or earning well below the median income. To illustrate, there are 15 new subdivisions currently seeking, or having just received approval in Clark County, according to the Homebuilders Association of Southern Indiana. The average cost of these new homes is $110,483, up from $93,389 in 1994. None of that growth is in the zone in 3art because few downtown residents could afford the mortgages. High wage earners need a motivation to stay just as businesses need an incentive to expand or relocate. The usual impediments to home ownership in high poverty areas are a problem. Homebuyers lack the money for down payments. Neighborhoods are poorly kept, and the blame is placed on absentee landlords. Rental units are often overcrowded and in a state of disrepair. These conditions breed crime, and indeed some zone residents were so worried about their safety that they formed a Block Watch program. Joanne Blake, a founder of the Rosehill Neighborhood Association, said drug dealers, public inebriation and prostitutes plague her street. In September, a fire at an apartment house on Colonial Park Drive, which police say was set by an arsonist, killed three people, including a 4-month-old boy. Other streets, such as West Maple, are so festooned with abandoned cars, decaying porches and scattered litter that they resemble photos from the Urban Renewal campaigns of the 1960s. A concentration of liquors stores, bars, the community kitchen and a series of "flop houses," derelict structures or rooms rented out by the week, contribute to the problem, Blake said. She counted 18 rental properties just along one section of Pearl Street. 5 Another emerging issue involves the area's growing Hispanic population. They arrive in Jeffersonville for the jobs, and many move to the zone because of the inexpensive housing. There is often a period of transition when a new ethnic group locates to an area, and Jeffersonville is no exception. A group of clergy members recently convened to discuss the needs of the new ethnic community. Legal Services in New Albany, for example, noted an explosive increase in the presence of Hispanics. The Clark Coun.ty prosecutor intends to hire interpreters because of this influx. The prosecutor, Steve Stewart, also noted an increase in Hispanic-related crimes, including domestic violence and hate crimes. An additional obstacle to development involves city regulations. There are a number of restrictions to building on vacant lots within the zone. In most cases development requires a variance, due to the smaller size of zone area lots. Most of the lots are about 35-feet wide while new city code requires 70 feet. Previous sections of this report referred to infrastructure problems, inadequate public transportation and the fact that much of the zone is in a flood plain. B. Provide a brief description of any past or present community development, urban renewal or other activities that have already been undertaken to revitalize the proposed area. Comment on the level of success achieved with the revitalization effort and why that specific effort achieved such a result. How did the limitations to development affect the result? Most of Jeffersonville's recent residential, industrial and general economic growth has been on the East End of town, pulling economic development away from the zone. In the past two years, the East End has seen eight new business locations that brought $143 million in investments and 931 new jobs. There has also been growth in the zone, but on a much smaller scale. In the past two years there have been five new developments, mostly in what is known as the "piggyback yard" by the river. These projects constitute $25.4 million in investments. While the East End projects are mostly higher-paying manufacturing jobs, like steel production for Galvstar Inc., many of the downtown jobs are lower-paying service positions. One of the new downtown projects is a restaurant and two are hotels, which will need maids, dishwashers and clerks. Some efforts are underway to improve the infrastructure and physical appearance in the zone. In 1998, Jeffersonville Main St. Inc. and the city received a $550,000 Streetscape Improvement grant to reconstruct sidewalks, 6 replace streetlights and add benches and trash receptacles in a five-block section of downtown. The grant included an $82,500 local match. This year, Main Street Inc. began a $1.8 million Iow-interest loan program downtown. The program, funded by six area banks, aims to promote expansion of existing businesses and to recruit new companies. The minimum loan is $10,000 and the maximum is $300,000. The loan program attracted five interested parties, four of whom applied. Even with better-than:market terms the program does not suit the needs of all the local businesses. Dale Griffith, co-owner of an antique shop, decided against applying when he was thinking of buying an adjacent building. The length of the term and the maximum amount did not fit his plans. Clearly the need remains for flexible, long-term lending aid. Main Street Inc. also paid $153,000 for three nearly vacant downtown buildings. The money came from the Redevelopment Department's revolving loan fund. Two of the buildings had not housed businesses for at least five years. The organization is recruiting a coffee shop/cafe, bicycle shop, record store, bookstore, small fitness center and shoe shop. The city's Department of Redevelopment last year also initiated an Owner Occupied Rehab Grant program. The $225,000 (including a $25,000 match) program helped 17 homeowners with remodeling work. Unfortunately, the department could not secure funding to continue this successful program. An additional 14 homeowners who wanted help could not be served. Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana (HLFI), which has a branch office in Jeffersonville, has had some successful projects, including: · Grisamore House (1983). HLFI owns, occupies and leases office space in this 1837 row house. In 1987, HLFI developed a public garden to the east of the house, on the site of a former Laundromat. · Lewman Building (1992). HLFI worked with others to re-roof, stabilize and market this key downtown building after it was damaged by fire and slated for demolition. · Spring and Maple (1995). HLFI provided a $2,000 grant to Jeff Main Street for a planning grant after two buildings at the corner of Spring and Maple were destroyed by fire. · Elks Building (1999). HLFI provided an $85,000 loan to Jeff-Clark Preservation to purchase and stabilize historic Elks Lodge on Spring Street. But the foundation does not have the resources to address all of the zone's preservation issues. For example, the organization has included the Quartermaster Depot as one of its "10 Most Endangered" properties statewide in 1996 and 1999. 7 Organizations such as HLFI, the Redevelopment Department and Main Street are attempting to improve the proposed zone area. But none of the groups are undertaking a comprehensive view of redevelopment, and all of them are limited in what they can accomplish. The Jeffersonviile UFA will both augment and coordinate all these efforts as well as design new programs to fill service gaps. 8 How will the zone be managed? A. What is the managerial structure of the Urban Enterprise Zone? The enterprise zone will be managed by the City of Jeffersonville Urban Enterprise Association, Inc., a not-for-profit agency to be formed under the rules of the Internal Revenue Service and the Indiana Department of Revenue. A 10- member board of directors will administer the policies of the enterprise zone. B. How will the day-to-day activities of the zone be handled? The Department of Redevelopment of the City of Jeffersonville will hire a full-time person to act as executive director of the JUEA and to report to the board of directors. The Redevelopment Department will provide funding for the first year's salary of the executive director. After the first year, the position will be funded through revenues raised by the zone. The Redevelopment Department, Planning Department, Legal Department and other city offices will provide support staff as needed. C. What professional resources will be available or are planned for use by the Urban Enterprise Association? The JUEA will utilize professional services supplied by the City of Jeffersonville for routine accounting and legal matters. Community and economic development consultants will be used as needed. 9 Functions and responsibilities of the UEA First, the JUEA will execute its statutory obligations under the UEZ-enabling legislation. It will enforce all zone rules and legislative requirements, including the reinvestment of tax savings by businesses, the collection of contributions and all requisite financial and statistical reports. Second, it will manage programs in the zone. (See Attachment X). It will review on an ongoing basis the effectiveness of these programs and revise policy when needed. The Ci'ty will again assume a major role regarding capital investment within the zone for infrastructure improvements. The JUEA will take primary responsibility for developing human resources in the zone with a range of programs addressing home ownership, human services (health care, education and training, recreation, etc.) and technical assistance to zone companies. It will take a principal role in partnership with partners such as the Southern Indiana Economic Development Council in promoting economic development and the redevelopment of brownfields through aggressive marketing of zone incentives. The JUEA will also work closely with the Southern Indiana Chamber of Commerce and the Small Business Development Center branch in New Albany. Third, it will manage the implementation of its action plans in order to achieve its adopted goals and strategic objectives. These plans enumerate the steps to completion for each action and comprise the fundamental management tool for the organization's day-to-day operations. It will review on a monthly basis the progress toward completion of specific actions as detailed in the strategic plan. The association will update its Three-Year Plan on an annual basis, modifying or renewing its broader goals and objectives in the light of changing conditions (demographic, economic and social). Fourth, zone revenues will be supported by continuing pursuit of additional grants or funding from appropriate local, state and national resources. 10 Obstacles to Development According to lC 4-4-6.1-3(E), at the time of enterprise zone renewal, the Indiana State Enterprise Zone Board will review the success of the enterprise zone based upon the following criteria: (1) Increases in capital investment in the zone (2) Retention of jobs and creation of jobs in the zone (3) Increases in employment opportunities for residents of the zone. A. What are the existing obstacles to: (1) Capital investment (2) Job retention and creation (3) Employment opportunities for zone residents in the zone area? One of the biggest impediments to capital investment in the zone is the lack of attractive sites for businesses. There are at least 11 brownfield sites in the zone, some with enormous potential after environmental concerns are addressed. Other barriers to growth include the large percentage of land in a flood plain. As a result, zone-based manufacturers who expand often do so outside the zone. For example, BADD, Inc. recently moved because they couldn't find a suitable location nearby. While there are real physical barriers to development, such as brownfield sites and streets whose narrow dimensions limit truck traffic, an equally big obstacle involves perceptions about the zone. Business owners weigh fears about crime and rundown buildings in the zone against all that exciting growth going on in other parts of Jeffersonville, and then relocate. As basic employers move out of the zone to the city's new economic center, local residents lose employment opportunities. Not all zone residents have the resources to follow the work. For example, within the proposed zone area Vogt Valve recently cut 34 jobs. Dollar General just closed its downtown store and the SerVend International, an ice machine manufacturing company, moved to Seilersburg. 11 B. Describe how the UEA plans to overcome the aforementioned obstacles to: (1) Capital investment (2) Job retention and creation (3) Employment opportunities for residents in the zone area? The UEA's strategic plan addresses four broad areas of action: 1. Instituting employment development for zone residents 2. Promoting zone neighborhoods 3. Sponsoring housing maintenance and rehabilitation 4. Zone business retention and expansion and new business recruitment First, zone residents must be better informed about education and training opportunities available in the community. The accessibility of these opportunities will need to be assessed and improved as required. Second, the UEA will support programs that improve the business climate of the downtown area and the "livability" of zone neighborhoods. Zone residents who find better employment opportunities (in or out of the zone) will remain in the downtown area only if the zone community can improve the infrastructure, safety and appearance of inner-city neighborhoods. Initiatives will be designed to empower residents to plan and determine the future of their community. The Main Street Association already is working with downtown businesses. A more focused campaign will be initiated to nurture leadership and neighborhood associations. The JUEA will assist residents and businesses to take more ownership of zone initiatives through greater participation in the decision-making process. These measures should make the area more attractive for capital investment in homes and businesses. Third, the JUEA will offer residents opportunities to repair their homes and perform the routine maintenance that - left undone - undermine a home's worth. People taking pride in their homes is a signal of revitalization. Fourth, there will need to be a greater effort at retaining and expanding existing business and in recruiting new business into the zone. This will require a closer partnership with the Southern Indiana Chamber of Commerce, Small Business Development Corporation and the Southern Indiana Economic Development Council. The JUEA will become the lead organization for retention and expansion of existing businesses within the zone. The keys to job retention and creation in the zone are properly inventoried business properties, aggressive marketing of zone incentives and a workforce with the right skills to attract employers. 12 A better-educated workforce, suitable residential and business properties and an aggressive marketing campaign for zone incentives should overcome obstacles to capital investment, job retention and creation and employment opportunities. What are the goals for: (1) Capital investment (2) Job retention and creation (3) Employment opportunities for zone residents in the zone area? Community leachers have developed goals and strategies for each of the four key areas to be addressed by the Jeffersonville Urban Enterprise Zone: 1. Housing Maintenance and Development The goals of this strategy are to improve housing and property maintenance, both downtown and in nearby neighborhoods. The city's vision for housing in the proposed zone area is for it to become a vibrant set of neighborhoods, in which families have a wide range of choices in homes and lifestyles. The role of the JUEA will be to take the lead in eradicating blighted housing and inadequate infrastructure. Actions stemming from this Strategy will increase home improvement activities and help maintain existing housing stock while stimulating organizational and community capacity to attract and coordinate the production of housing in the downtown business district. 2. Promoting Neighborhoods Neighborhoods are more likely to be revitalized when local residents take an active role in development and implementing growth strategies. The goals of this strategy are designed to organize grass-roots community organizations, to advance their internal capacity to undertake selfdirected neighborhood improvement projects and to establish mechanisms to improve the physical conditions within enterprise zone neighborhoods. Neighborhood associations will be essential partners to the zone revitalization, and the JUEA will help to support those associations. 3. Zone Business Retention and Expansion & New Business Recruitment The goals of this strategy are to generate increases in economic vitality for both the downtown business district and the entire enterprise zone. The strategy encourages small business development, new business and industry attraction by expanding the employment base. Efforts will be directed toward stimulating reinvestment in downtown property and to creating the availability of forums through which zone economic issues might be identified and addressed. 13 4. Zone Resident Employment Development The goals of this strategy are directed toward expanding employment and economic opportunity for residents of the zone. The primary focus of this strategy is the creation of an employment clearinghouse to directly link zone residents seeking employment with the hiring practices of zone employers. Other strategies involve building resident capacity to expand career skills and attain advanced job placement. D. How .does the UEA plan to reach the aforementioned goals, and what activities will the UEA perform or sponsor? (i.e. programs, sponsorship of programs, etc.) Having established a strategy and goals, the JURA has designed specific programs. Housing Maintenance and Development projects include: > Establishing a home maintenance and rehabilitation program > Coordinating downtown housing development Promoting Neighborhoods projects include: > Creating a neighborhood newsletter ~> Establishing a neighborhood advisory council ~> Establishing a neighborhood grant program ;> Implementing a tenant housing conditions education and enhancement program > Recognizing neighborhood organizations for community development efforts 3. Zone Business Retention and Expansion and Recruitment Projects include: > Creating a business advisory committee > Developing an enterprise zone site and building database > Establishing business advertisements in the JURA newsletter > Assisting in implementing a micro-enterprise loan program > Building upon the partnership with the Southern Indiana Economic Development Council: · to identify and improve employment locations · to market zone incentives to new and existing employers 4. Zone Resident Employment Development projects include: > Establishing an employment clearinghouse > Job Opportunities Awareness ;> Basic Skills Training Program 14 Three-Year Strategic Plan The planning process that created this strategy focused on community involvement. Early on, JUE^ organizers put a premium on meeting with zone residents and business owners and made it a goal to continue this communication even after the plan was complete. Their work resulted in the identification and prioritization of the following key areas for projec{s: Employment development for zone residents Business retention and expansion New business recruitment Promotion of zone neighborhoods Home maintenance and rehabilitation programs Employment Development for Zone Residents One area in which the JUEA can make a significant contribution is in workforce development. By definition, the residents of the enterprise zone average lower incomes than the rest of the community. The Indiana Enterprise Zone Program was designed in part to help local residents improve their incomes through securing better-paying jobs. There are two major employment trends that the United States faces. The first trend is the continuing pressure upon employers to find adequate employees. The second trend is the growing disparity in income between those workers who have training and education and those who do not. JUEA will build a workforce development program centered upon those two macroeconomic forces. Establishing the following programs will help improve wages and career opportunities for zone residents: > Job Opportunities Awareness > Basic Skills Training Program > Small Business Development Job Opportunities Awareness Zone residents must be made aware that possibilities exist for almost everyone to train and prepare for better-paying, more satisfying jobs. Without this awareness residents are unlikely to find the motivation to improve their employment and life skills. Benchmarks for Job Opportunities Awareness Zone residents are'r~ade aware of new employment and career opportunities Zone residents attend semiannual Careers Day and Job Fair organized by JUF__.~ Zone businesses have a UEA contact for asSistance in finding employees A Tax Credit Promotion is targeted at businesses in the zone and coupled with 15 promotion of improving skills of zone workforce Zone Residents receive access to a personal computer at City Hall (or some otler zone location) that can access Indiana Department of Workforce Development's new CSSS employment program Implementation Schedule for Job Opportunities Awareness Steps Task Deadline 1 Create JUEA Business Advisory Council 01/15/2000 2 Form project task force with Workforce Investment 02/1502000 Board, Labor Unions in zone and others 3 Task force organizes and presents Job Fair proposal 05/15/2000 with career counselors and local employers 4 Staff trained on Workforce Development program and 09/15/2000 computer made available at zone location 6 Create Tax Credit Promotion through local media and 09/15/2000 tie in with promotion of improving skills of local workforce 7 Advertise employment opportunities in zone newsletter10/15/2000 Basic Skills Training Program For some zone residents, access to information about employment opportunities will not be sufficient. JUEA will work with local education and training organizations to make basic skills training more accessible for zone residents. This program should build upon educational curricula already available in the community. Thus, JUEA should partner with current Adult Basic Educational programs from the school system and the local Workfome Investment Board, If possible, basic skills training should take place within the zone. The JUEA's role is to help local training organizations better serve zone residents. The JUEA will not manage this program. Benchmarks for Basic Skills Training Program Zone residents are made aware~of th~ advantage of improving their work skills Zone residents are made aware of training opportunities Zone resident receives education and training scholarship Zone residents attend evening classes in the zone have access to transportatior Implementation Schedule for Basic Skills Training Program Steps Task Deadline 1 Form project task force with Workforce Investment 02/15/2000 Board, school system and others 2 Develop communications plan 04/15/2000 3 Find suitable space in zone to locate Workforce 08/15/2000 16 Development Classes Establish education and training scholarship for zone 11/30/2000 residents and cdteda for selection Investigate corporate sponsors for scholarship match 01/15/2001 with UEA (Determine award consistent with budget and corporate support) Produce and mail brochure on educational 03/01/2001 opportunities, locations and transportation. Include scholarship information 17 Business Retention, Expansion and Recruitment An economic development campaign implemented specifically for the zone will be an important component in creating new jobs and will complement investments in infrastructure and workforce development. Establishing the following programs will help recruit new businesses and develop existing ones: ~ Site Marketing Initiative > Zone-oriented Entrepreneurial Development > Retention and Expansion Site Marketing Initiative This is a large-scale project and JUEA will need to work with partners such as the Southern Indiana Economic Development Council. Benchmarks for Site Marketing Initiative Database of industrial and'commercial sites compiled Materials describing sites and incentives are completed Businesses in the zone are targeted for marketing campaign New businesses are targeted for marketing campaign Materials are mailed and follow-up calls are made Prospects visit the community Businesses expand or relocate in the zone Implementation Schedule for Site Marketing Initiative Steps Task Deadline I Create database of industrial and commercial sites 01/01/200 0 2 Produce materials describing sites and incentives 03/15/2000 3 Target businesses in the zone for marketing campaign03/15/2000 4 Target new businesses for marketing campaign 06/30/2000 5 Mail materials and perform follow-up calls 07/01/2000 Zone-oriented Entrepreneurial Development In addition to working with existing employers and recruiting new employers, the JUEA will establish an aggressive zone-oriented entrepreneurial development program. This program will focus on growing new businesses for the zone from within the community. The JUEA will work closely with the Small Business Development Center to establish an office and program within the zone. Benchmarks for Zone-oriented Entrepreneurial Development Creation of a development campaign Location of new entrepreneurs in the zone 18 Implementation Schedule for Zone-oriented Entrepreneurial Develo ~ment St;ps Task Deadline 1 Create community awareness campaign 10/01/2000 2 Analyze small business market opportunities within the02/15/2001 zone 3 Survey residents for interest in small business 03/15/2001 development 4 Create.entrepreneurial training program within the zone 06/30/2001 5 Identify funding resources 08/15/2001 6 Apply for grants 09/15/2001 7 Implement program 12/01/2001 Business Retention and Expansion The JUEA will work with existing industries to address misconceptions about the zone and to create a better climate for business. Letting these businesses know that they have an ally, and that the UEA has the power to help them, will be one of the first goals of zone staff. Benchmarks for Business Retention and Expansion Local companies realize the benefits of participating in the zone other programs Local companies decide to expand within zone boundaries incentives and Implementation Schedule for Business Retention and Expansion St;~ps Task Deadline 1 Prepare material explaining zone benefits and programs02/01/2000 Mail information to every zone businesses, including an 03/01/2000 offer to meet Contact zone employers with more than 50 workers and 05/01/2000 survey them about their needs Follow up survey results 07/15/2000 19 Promoting Zone Neighborhoods JUEA will promote empowerment opportunities and general quality of life issues in the zone. The association will establish these programs: Fostering Neighborhood Associations Publishing a Community Newsletter Sponsoring a Rental Property Education Program Creating Resident and Business Advisory Councils Neighborhood Associations One neighborhood association recently formed within zone boundaries, but there is a need for others. These associations make a terdflc conduit for not only local activism, but also for educating people about JUEA's services. Benchmarks for Neighborhood Associations JUEA developed~and distributed a How-To Manual for organizing a neighborhoed association JUEA applied its blueprint for starting neighborhood groups to several areas in the zone JUEA is supporting fledgling groups by hosting and staffing the first few meetings JUEA is funding small-scale, block-specific projects identified by the associationls Implementation Schedule for Neighborhood Associations Steps Task Deadline 1 Create a "How To Manual" for organizing a 08~30~2000 Neighborhood Association 2 Distribute manual to potential pilot areas 09/15/2000 3 Meet with Police Department for potential streets to act 09/15/2000 as pilot projects 4 Meet with church leaders and social service agency 10/15/2000 representatives for potential streets to act as pilot projects Select two areas for pilot projects. Possible catalysts 02/01/2001 5 include neighborhoods with: i. A rallying point (crime, etc.) ii. A particularly nice feature to protect 6 Create a "start-up" program to simplify creation of an04/15/2001 association. Initially offer: i. A place to meet ii. Clerk support (meeting notification) iii. Arrangement of speakers (police, etc.) iv. Information on possible topics 7 Create incentives to keep associations going. 05/15/2001 Possibilities include: i. $500 grants for projects 20 ii. City-sponsored cleanup blitz iii. Access to housing repair loans iv. Subsidized block parties 8 Work with residents to form associations 06/15/2001 Community Newsletter Newsletters are an excellent way to build neighborhood cohesiveness and to alert residents that people are working to improve the local quality of life. They also inform residents whom to contact for problems and questions. Benchmarks for a Community Newsletter JUEA has a newsletter mailed throughout the zone. The first year will have ser annual publications, later the UEA will switch to quarterly issues Implementation Schedule for a Community Newsletter St;gps Task Deadline 1 Select newsletter features, such as: 03/01/2000 i. Profile of zone business ii. Profile of zone resident iii. Explanation of zone program 2 Find corporate sponsors to fund production costs 05/15/2000 3 Set schedule for first two publications 06/30/2000 4 Find local printer 06/30/2000 5 Produce first issue 09/30/2000 6 Mail to homes and businesses 10/01/2000 Rental Property Education Program The condition of rental property was a frequent complaint made by residents throughout the planning process. JUEA will help facilitate a better city-landlord relationship. One facet of this program would be a "Landlord Expo," where rental property owners are brought together for a meeting that includes workshops on property repairs. For this project JUEA would partner with city departments. Benchmarks for Rental Property Education Program JUEA helps organize "Landlord Expos" where investment property owners learn about issues such as maintenance and city codes Using the expos, JUEA forms relationships with local landlords 21 Implementation Schedule for Rental Property Education Program St~ps Task ' Deadline 1 Partner with city departments such as code enforcement03/30/2001 2 Design program 07/15/2001 3 Set location and date 08/15/2001 4 Solicit sponsors 08/15/2001 5 Send invitation letters 08/30/2001 6 Confirm invitations 09/15/2001 7 Rehearse presentations 09/30/2001 8 Hold event 10/30/2001 9 Write participants asking for feedback 11/15/2001 Resident and Business Advisory Councils Formation of these groups will be vital to introducing the JUEA to the community and to creating buy-in among stakeholders. In the future, the groups will provide front-line feedback on refining JUEA goals. Benchmarks for Advisory Councils JUEA has organized a neighborhood advisory council and business advisory council that meets twice a year Implementation Schedule for Advisory Councils St~ps Ta~k Deadline 1 Prepare list of business group members (include small 01/15/2000 and large) 2 Prepare list of resident group members 01/15/2000 3 Invite potential members to participate 02/01/2000 4 Prepare agenda items for business group: 02/15/2000 i. Guest speakers (SBDC, IDOC) ii. Issues (R&E, infrastructure) 5 Prepare agenda items for resident group: 03/15/2000 i. Guest speakers (City Hall, etc.) ii. Issues (rental property, streets) 6 Mail participants summary of meeting 04/30/2000 22 Home Maintenance and Rehabilitation Programs Many of the houses in the zone are in need of significant rehabilitation, but residents don't have the money to get the work done. Deteriorating housing is a signal that attracts crime and repels new investment. During research for this zone application issues such as the need for affordable housing and the need for Iow-interest loans for home repair were mentioned repeatedly. Benchmarks for Home Maintenance and Rehabilitation Programs $150,000 secured for Home Maintenance and Rehabilitation Program through JUEA and Banks Implementation Schedule for Home Maintenance and Rehabilitation Programs Steps Task headline 1 Form a task force with possible members: 04/15/2000 Area banks Local government agencies Local business people The neighborhood organizations City housing advocates Other civic organizations Architects Church groups 2 Meet with bank, state representatives 05/15/2000 3 Explore further funding possibilities such as Lilly 06/15/2000 Foundation and Community Redevelopment Act bank programs 4 Set goals such as: 06/15/2000 five homes in 2000 10 homes in 2001 5 Design marketing plan with bank representatives 07/15/2000 6 Promote programs through neighborhood associations, 07/30/2000 etc. 23 O What Responsibilities will the UEA Assume on Behalf of the Applicant Municipality? Not applicable. 24 Partnerships The Jeffersonville UEA will have an impressive set of partners ready to share experiences and resources. Local not-for-profit, economic development and neighborhood groups are already operating in the community. Although these organizations are working toward similar goals, there is no overall plan to address problems unique to the zone. Most of these groups serve the entire city and some also work in nearby counties. Local not-for profit organizations include the Center for Lay Ministries and the Community Kitchen. Some of the area's problems are severe enough that residents decided to organize themselves. The Rosehill Neighborhood Association began as a crime watch program last spring and quickly developed even more ambitious projects. For instance, they organized the Clean Sweep of Rosehill event scheduled for this October, where neighbors will collect trash in a dumpster provided by the city. They have also sent mailings to local landlords with information about nuisance laws. Joanne Blake, a founder of the group and a local business owner, is very eager to work with the JUEA on projects. Another key ally will be the Southern Indiana Housing Initiative. This far-reaching group consists of service providers for housing and homeless services. The group has developed a continuum of care for regional housing and expressed an interest in working with the UEA on affordable housing in the zone. Members of this organization include: · Rauch Rehabilitation Services, for developmentally disabled people · LifeSpring Mental Health Services · Haven House Services, for homeless shelter and transitional housing Salvation Army · Jeffersonville Housing Authority · NewAIbany Housing Authority · Center forWomen and Families · Interfaith Community Council · New Hope Services There are also ready-made partnerships available with local economic development groups. The foundation for these relationships were formed by the Jeffersonville Department of Redevelopment, which has worked with these organizations and which will host the new JUEA. 25 These economic development organizations include Jeffersonville Main Street Inc. (JMSI), which covers 10 square blocks downtown that includes 110 buildings. The combination of these entities will offer Iow-interest loans, design guidelines, small business assistance, tax abatements and seminars to downtown businesses. In 1998, JMSI projects included overseeing $25,500 in fagade renovations, $1,394,000 in building rehabilitation and $4,340,000 in new construction. Other potential programs that JMSI could partner with UEA on include: · Promotion of the Farmers' Market · Growth managementJCBD Reinvestment Education · $500-$1,000 fa<;ade grants for commercial buildings · Workshops on preservation of older properties · Landscaping programs · Business recruitment incentives · Big Four Bridge pedestrian walkway · Establishment of design criteria · Downtown entryway beautification · Quartermaster stabilization and restoration Another potent associate is the Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana (HLFI), whose office in Jeffersonville has loaned or invested more than $270,000 in local preservation efforts. HLFI has also contracted with the city to provide consulting service to the Historic Preservation Commission. HLFI, in conjunction with Historic Southern Indiana, the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the Indiana Division of Tourism, spearheaded the designation of the Ohio River Scenic Route as a National Scenic Byway in 1996. The route, whict travels Market and Spring Streets in downtown Jeffersonville, is expected to draw significant tourist traffic and investment when fully operational. HLFI is currently working with the city, the owners, and the Preservation Commission to find a way tc save and reuse the Quartermaster Depot. Jeff-Clark Preservation is another local, vital group ready to partner with the UEA. This not-for-profit organization formed in 1983 to save local, endangered buildings. Working with Jeffersonville Main Street and Historic Landmarks, they bought the Elks Building at 240 Spring Street last summer. The group put in an initial investment of $85,000 to buy the building and plans to spend another $100,000 to renovate. A potential buyer, who would convert the three-story, 1903 building to retail shops and apartments, has already approached Jeff-Clark Preservation. Previously, the organization helped restore four residential houses and returned them to the ta~< roles and renovated another downtown building, which now houses an antique shop, beauty shop and two apartments. 26 Another partner is the River Hills Economic Development District, which administer local grants such as the owner-occupied rehabilitation grant from the Indiana Housing Finance Authority. Jeffersonville's Downtown Merchants Association is both a case study in the town's economic cycles and a picture-perfect candidate for benefiting from a partnership with the new UEA. The association was once very active, sponsoring special events such as Spring on Spring Street~, putting up decorations for holidays and generally drawing people downtown. Then it began losing members - namely, downtown shops. Key businesses drifted away, the last one being a florist about a year ago. The group stopped all activities. This summer, however, long-time merchants noticed that new shops are opening downtown. They are now regrouping to plan its first renewed activity, Halloween Downtown. The Clark County Redevelopment Commission also is an ally. JUEA will work with the commission, which has a professional, full-time staff, on projects such as downtown revitalization. 27 Participation The framework for UEA's development plan grow out of two actions: A strategic plan for downtown rovitalization initiated in 1996 and a more recent ~lanning process for zoning revisions. Initial arguments on the need for an enterprise zone grew out the projects and observations of the city's Department of Redevelopment. This department works with most of the economic development, social service and not-for-profit organizations operating in Jeffersonville. By funding projects, partnering on projects and attending planning meetings, the Redevelopment Department learned the needs of business owners, residents, preservationists and other key stakeholders. Redevelopment Department officials and other city employees were able to identify which of the zone's needs are being addressed and which need further attention. The Redevelopment Department has also worked directly with rosidents. For instance, when looking for applicants for a home rehabilitation program, department employees started with flyers, a newspaper ad and posted notices at local churches. When those efforts failed to produce enough applicants, they went door to door in the zone recruiting neighbors. The initial effort associated with the Strategic Plan involved analyzing background information relative to existing conditions within the enterprise zone, interviewing potential JUEA Board members and holding a series of community focus group meetings to obtain input from the urban enterprise zone community. Five overriding problems and concerns surfaced through the focus group meetings as issues which need resolution if economic and residential well-being within the enterprise zone are to show marked improvement over the long term; Physical appearance of the enterprise zone Business development and downtown viability Neighborhood organization and development Employment training and development for zone residents Public relations/communications Next, several JUEA board working sessions explored core urban enterprise association values and developed a mission statement and sedes of goals for the organization. Other information was gathered this summer, when a consulting firm led the community through vision and problem-solving sessions as part of Jeffersonville's zoning ordinance revision. 28 The session on commercial development downtown included representatives from the Jeffersonville Preservation Commission and the Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana as well as business advocates. The "Economic Development" session had people from the Southern Indiana Economic Development Council, Jeffersonville Main Street Inc. and city departments. The discussions covered both broad and very specific problems in the zone, everything from the need for more downtown parking to the general blight of a local gas station. Many of the specific issues that the UEA will address were first developed during the Downtown Jeffersonvil/e Strategic Action Plan process. This process w~s funded through an Indiana Department of Commerce Community Planning grant and involved meetings with key stakeholders. These issues were also addressed during the later Jeffersonville zoning planning process. Creation of an enterprise zone is an ambitious plan, and the City of Jeffersonville and the JUEA are determined to make it succeed. The City Departments of Planning and Redevelopment, as well as other city offices, are prepared to supplement JUEA income with direct and in-kind subsidies. Funding to meet the budgetary requirements of the action plans will be targeted from the following sources: Department of Redevelopment Community Development Block Grants (U.S. HUD) Local Lenders Federal Home Loan Bank Jeffersonville Main Street Inc. Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana Indiana Development Finance Authority Indiana Housing Finance Authority River Hills Economic Development District Southern Indiana Economic Development Council The JUEA will maintain a broad-based membership on its board: the participation by representatives of government, human services, educators, businesses and residents is the first step toward building consensus among the stakeholders. The JUEA believes that it is essential that all stakeholders become creatively involved in shaping the goals, objectives and programs which are meant to transform and empower their community. When individuals become creatively involved, they take ownership in an organization and have a larger stake in seeing it succeed. Pride of ownership is not simply a principle in housing but in human services as well. As a consequence, the JUEA is committed to an ongoing strategic planning process in which all the stakeholders are in fact creatively involved. The neighborhood associations, the business and neighborhood advisory 29 committees, public outreach meetings and the media will all be used to invite and create participation and, therefore, to mobilize support. 30 Redevelopment Plan Empowering zone residents and partnering with existing businesses and development organizations is the primary objective of the new JUEA. in Question 6 of this section, we outlined the specific goals, projects and benchmarks for the creation of the enterprise zone. In this section we will outline the administrative and organizational steps needed to reach our pdmary objective. Organizing a Staff Upon learning that formation of the Jeffersonville Urban Enterprise Zone has been approved, the City Department of Redevelopment will begin formalizing the organizational structure. Assemble board of directors Determine steps for hidng process Begin hiring process, sending out notices to professional journals, etc. Formalize contributions of all city departments Hire executive director Creating Partnerships with Residents Me~t with existing neighborhood association Distribute new zone newsletter Meet with local churches, housing projects, etc. Create citizens advisory board Select areas for potential new neighborhood associations Foster creation of new associations Creating Partnerships with Businesses Pre are materials on zone incentives Meet with companies about R&E program Create business advisory board Distribute new zone newsletter Creating Partnerships with other Organization Formalize relationship with Southern Indiana Housing Initiative Formalize relationship with Jeffersonville Main Street Inc. Formalize relationship with Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana Formalize relationship with Community Kitchen Formalize relationship with Center for Lay Ministries 31 Formalize relationship with Jeff-Clark Preservation Formalize relationships with other local economic development groups 32