Archive for December, 2010
A new year and a new attitude at our hotel
Ten years ago the Palmer administration decided Trenton needed a full service hotel. With the help of a group of boosters, including local businessman Shelly Zeiger , the administration shopped the idea around to investors. No one bought. That didn’t stop this group. They convinced the city and the state to fund a $46,000,000 hotel with a Marriott brand.
The city effectively owns the hotel and manages it through a non-profit entity called the Lafayette Yard Community Development Corporation (LYDC). The Mayor appoints the board and during the Palmer administration it was largely controlled by the city business administrator. Read the rest of this entry »
“The State’s Role in Fixing Trenton (Part 2): Using the State’s Power to Re-invent Trenton”
In Part 1 of “The State’s Role in Fixing Trenton” I argued that New Jersey should fund a portion of Trenton’s revenue and I presented a simple calculation for a fair funding level, $70M. However, there are several big changes that only the state can make that will truly re-invent Trenton’s economy and potentially all of New Jersey’s urban centers.
Over the years, state and federal governments have adopted policies favoring the creation of suburbs: most notably road building, tax advantaged mortgages for single family homes and electrification. Technology also played an important role in making urban centers less important as telecommunications, trains, power generation and eventually container shipping spread manufacturing out of town. [1]
These policies and technologies, among others, led to urban decline over the last 50 years. Urban renewal and the riots in the late 60s were just nails in the coffin.
These are powerful mega-trends but their influence is waning and new mega-trends are taking over: Read the rest of this entry »
Big suggestions for Fixing Trenton
Not every big revitalization idea takes big money. There are low cost policies that Trenton can either implement on its own or begin lobbying for that will fundamentally change how our city works.
I’m hopeful that our current city council will be inspired to act on these ideas as it has shown signs of willingness to move in a new direction. I’m encouraged by many of their private and public comments especially around the subject of refocusing our economic development efforts on attracting disposable income. Read the rest of this entry »