From Deseret News archives:
Breaking ground for unity
Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson first presented the idea to billionaire Jon Huntsman on Dec. 13, 2002. Anderson proposed a deal to swap land owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints at the corner of California Avenue and 900 West for the right of the church to restrict certain speech and behavior on the Main Street Plaza downtown.
Exactly four years later, Anderson, Huntsman and a host of other key players, including the center's namesake, James LeVoy Sorenson, broke ground Wednesday on the 26,000-square-foot community center.
The center, which is next door to the Sorenson Multi-Cultural Center, will include a number of classrooms for computer and language training that will be taught by Salt Lake Community College and the city. The center also features a Salt Lake Donated Dental Services clinic; a 2,500-square-foot performance space; and a 6,200-square-foot health and fitness center.
"This is a moment we've been waiting for, for a very long time," Anderson said Wednesday.
It wasn't long before problems cropped up.
A number of funding gaps developed as plans progressed, and those shortfalls brought wrangling over whether corners should be cut, such as doing away with some of the classrooms or a drop-in child-care center.
But the center's promoters pushed for it to be built as it had first been envisioned. In the end, Sorenson and the Alliance for Unity donated a combined $6.5 million.
Still, as recently as last month, the project was $700,000 short. This past summer, the city's public-services director, Rick Graham, told Anderson and the Deseret Morning News that he worried negative press surrounding the center would discourage private donations.
But on Nov. 14, the City Council approved accepting a $1.99 million donation from U.S. Bank using New Market Tax Credits, a federal program that gives tax credits for private donations to projects in low-income urban or rural areas.
Money wasn't the only stumbling block for the center. A home was located between the land donated for the center by the church and the land donated by Sorenson. In the legal work involved in securing that property, the center's planners found themselves in the middle of the homeowner's 18-year divorce case.
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