From Deseret News archives:
Provo alliance is not doomed
The previous night, Richards joined four other council members in a 5-2 vote that terminated the downtown business fees that have funded the Downtown Business Alliance for the past six years.
Richards explained that while the business improvement district will be disbanded next month, the council did not abandon the alliance. Lost in the shock over the apparent setback, she said, was the council's unanimous decision to fund the alliance from city coffers through September while everyone tries to figure out what to do next.
The initial concept was to have the alliance sign a contract with the city to continue its efforts to beautify, maintain and market the downtown through hybrid funding from the city and businesses willing to contribute.
But Council Chairman George Stewart said Thursday he would consider reinstituting the improvement district if its fees could be made more palatable to the business owners who protested paying a flat rate.
In contrast, less than 1 percent of downtown Salt Lake City property owners protested in March when their fee was renewed, said Camille Winnie, program manager of the Salt Lake Downtown Alliance.
"What I saw was unfair and not equitable," Stewart said. "From my standpoint, I would prefer to see them reformulate their district and create the tax based on benefit. If not, I don't mind it being a public/private partnership for a while."
Two experts who spoke to the Deseret Morning News said their advice would be to bring back the district with reformulated fees.
Provo's decision to terminate its improvement district and associated fees is "infinitesimally" rare, said David Feehan, president of the International Downtown Association.
The three or four cities to do so among the 1,500 downtown improvement districts in the United States, Canada, Europe and Africa have subsequently reinstated them, Feehan said. One is Victoria, B.C.
"There may be in Provo a need to readjust, to create a different formula to assess fees, maybe to improve the services for the people on the edges of the improvement district, but this sounds like a throwing-the-baby-out-with-the-bathwater situation to me," Feehan said.
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