Grebien announces ‘Creative Economy’ plan
PAWTUCKET – “The artists and artisans of Pawtucket are a vital economic engine for the city,” mayoral candidate Don Grebien declared in announcing his “Creative Economy” plan. “Besides the important cultural benefits they bring, these are small businesses and new business means new jobs and revenue for the city.”
The plan, dubbed “Pawtucket CARES” – Creative Economy, Arts, Riverfront and Education Solutions – focuses on downtown development including transforming Slater Mill into a National Park, ongoing redevelopment of the city’s approximately 70 mill buildings, including creation of small business incubators and satellite educational institutions in mill structures as well as in downtown commercial buildings, fostering a wide variety of creative occupations, support for the Riverfront Commission’s mission to help guide redevelopment along the city’s riverfront, and linking local artists and schools.
“The name Pawtucket CARES is meant to communicate that we care deeply about what the creative community has brought to the city and what it can continue to bring with the proper encouragement and assistance,” Grebien said.
“That includes the graphic artists, Web developers, interior and exterior designers, video game developers and other cutting edge people whose creativity will foster a new economy we can only imagine but need to encourage, along with the fine artists from whose studios come works in glass, metals, canvas and a host of other mediums that have already put ‘Made in Pawtucket’ on the artists’ map around the world.”
In other highlights, the Grebien administration will:
- Work with the Pawtucket Foundation and downtown businesses to implement study findings to cut red tape and improve parking, signage and traffic circulation
- Work with the city legislative delegation and groups like Grow Smart RI to make restoration of historic tax credits a top priority in the upcoming legislative session
- Continue support of the regionally successful Pawtucket Arts Festival, the city’s three theater companies, six art galleries, musical and other special events
- Exploit excess capacity of the city’s new state of the art water filtration plant by attracting water-intensive businesses (breweries, manufacturers, etc.) to mills
- Streamline the process for mill owners and developers to meet fire and safety codes without sacrificing public safety
- Fill the vacant Planning and Redevelopment Director position with a candidate whose expertise includes promoting the arts as an economic engine
- Work with school officials to ensure the Jacqueline M. Walsh School for the Performing Arts thrives at its new location at Jenks Junior High School , and help enlist academic and other experts to promote arts and arts careers in the schools
- Work with the legislative delegation and others to create sales tax-limited districts to provide financial incentives for small businesses, creative sector and green companies and retail located in the historic downtown
- Assemble an immediate Arts Summit to gain input and involve artists, artisans, building owners and developers to map future of city Arts & Entertainment Dist.
- Attract additional stores to create an Antiques Trail throughout the downtown
- List downtown businesses in city’s ongoing property database to assist marketers
- Reorganize the city website to include section on arts-related business and other assistance, including events promotions and marketing a “brand” for the city
- Continue efforts to get storage tanks along the Pawtucket River removed; fund development of Taft Street Landing, Front Street and School Street Pier; negotiate with state, federal and utilities officials to clean up riverfront brownfields
- Work with banks and other lenders to create a fund to purchase distressed downtown properties and market them for development
Grebien also noted he strongly opposes his opponent’s economic development plans to site a baseball museum in the downtown Visitor Center and impose what he termed a “Fantasyland” of flimsy cottages on Slater Mill.
“To start with, Slater Mill is privately owned and none of these plans were ever brought to its independent board, which is just one reason why I call it ‘Fantasyland.’ It also has all the substance of a Hollywood set that looks good in front but is only supported by a two-by-four in back, and would bring about as many new jobs as a frontier ghost town.
“It’s nothing but a pale rerun of a $16,000 taxpayer-paid plan a mayoral candidate offered a month before election day in 1985, and we’re still waiting for the money and eager developers to show up for that one. Slater Mill should not be used as someone’s political plaything. It is a national treasure that deserves to be turned into a National Park, and that’s something I strongly support,” Grebien said.
“Turning the downtown Visitor Center into a minor league baseball museum is another project that may sound appealing at first but is another fantasy concept when you look at it even a bit more closely. It would require evicting the Blackstone Valley Tourism Council which has vigorously promoted the city from its headquarters there for a decade, plus the resident art gallery and gift shop that benefits Slater Mill. It would also require displacing a tenant on the second floor [NetworkRI] that has been on a long term lease paying the city thousands of dollars. It’s also curious that no minor league officials have stepped up to financially promote such a plan, and a Southern city rejected the idea about four years ago after it found a similar project would cost $40 million,” Grebien said.
“Not to mention that this ill conceived plan calls for an alternate site adjacent McCoy Stadium, where the city owns no substantial property aside from Pariseau Field. After this same basic idea was first offered about 20 years ago by a City Council candidate, closing down the nearby fire station was touted as a possible location. That would be no less an ill advised threat to public safety now than it was then. In summary, these so called economic plans by my opponent are all show and no go,” Grebien said.
Grebien noted his own economic development plan was previously released and is available on his website at www.dongrebien.com.