Lewiston council tables downtown parking lot plan
By Scott Taylor
,
Staff Writer
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
LEWISTON - Councilors want some assurances that they'll get to hold onto a downtown parking lot if they pay to pave it.
The City Council tabled a plan to lease the lot between Lincoln Street and Simard/Payne Park - formerly Railroad Park - from the Lewiston Auburn Railroad to build a 46-space parking lot.
At issue was a clause in the lease that would let either the city or the railroad's board of directors cancel the lease with a year's notice.
"If we pay $150,000 to pave this, what's to stop the railroad from coming back and taking it over?" Council President Tom Peters asked.
Peters suggested adding a clause saying the lease could be canceled if land was going to used to bring rail service downtown.
City Administrator Jim Bennett said he would bring that suggested change to the railroad's board, but said he doubted there would be a problem. The majority of members of the board are appointed by the Lewiston council.
"I wouldn't dream of signing a contract like this, unless it was with a group like the railroad board, that we essentially control," Peters said.
According to the lease, the city would pay the Lewiston Auburn Railroad Company 10 percent of parking fees generated there - about $246 per month according to the going rate for downtown parking.
For that, the city will get the land and the right to use it for a minimum of five years. The lot is unpaved now, but the city will spend about $150,000 to pave it for parking.
It's part of a drive to bring more parking spaces downtown as called for in a 2004 Bates Mill exit strategy. According to that agreement, the city would need to provide 1,850 parking spaces through 2011 - and no more than 450 spaces per year.
The Canal Street parking garage added 369 new parking spaces downtown and a parking deck across the street from the Chestnut Street garage brought in another 160 parking spaces. Bennett said that adding a small surface parking lot like one planned for the railroad land makes sense. They are less expensive to build and maintain and can be grouped with other small lots as an alternative to building another parking garage.
But Councilors Larry Poulin and Bob Reed disagreed.
"I don't think this saves us a penny," Reed said. "It just defers the cost a few years. We're still going to have to spend money to build another parking garage. We just get to put it off for a few years. And in the meantime, we've spent $150,000. So, we don't save anything." |
CLICK HERE To Show/Hide Discussion Thread - (8 Comments)
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Posted By:DJ at August 13, 2008 6:25 AM (Suggest Removal) I wish the taxpayers of Lewiston got to vote on how our tax money is spent. Why do we need to have another parking lot and/or another parking garage in that area anyway. Who goes there? Are the parking garages we already have down there full all the time? What's wrong with grading the lot and leaving it unpaved for now?
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Posted By:Jay Bee at August 13, 2008 7:12 AM (Suggest Removal) Don't the taxpayers of Lewiston vote for their City Councilors? Are you suggesting that every spending issue be mailed to you personally?
Still, how much should the City be spending on parking? As we have now found out, it is too expensive to even repave roads according to MaineDOT, so perhaps we need to push up the time table for more rail-based transportation. There's still plenty of steel in the good ol' US of A. Maybe the LA RR needs to get some choo-choo trains moving tout de suite, n'est pas?
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Posted By:Michael Dumas at August 13, 2008 8:11 AM (Suggest Removal) DJ, as part of the Bates Mill Exit Strategy Agreement we are contractually obligated to provide a certain number of parking spaces in the mill area, and these spaces, according to the presentation last night, are part of that strategy.
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Posted By:Robert61 at August 13, 2008 8:21 AM (Suggest Removal) Michael you are exactly right. Simply put, the more the mill is developed the more parking we must provide. The catch is that we have to have the parking ready before the development is ready for occupancy.
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Posted By:Heather C at August 13, 2008 10:31 AM (Suggest Removal) Are these lots/garages revenue generating? If so then that would offset the 150,000 for the lot and allow them time to get some reserves for a garage to satisfy the obligation.
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Posted By:Dr. Hassan Bin Sobah at August 13, 2008 4:56 PM (Suggest Removal) It won't take that long. This state will be pretty beat up come next May after a heating season with $5.00 per gallon oil.
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Posted By:dr. dosh at August 13, 2008 8:18 PM *'>(Suggest Removal) This is a classic stalling measure . . much like the one to delay something else several days for an unspecified " while ." Pave the lot while summer is here . Worry about revenue and tax sharing later . Don't stall these things Councilors Larry Poulin and Bob Reed . It's a parking lot & not a new Marriot Hotel® , ok ? Don't cut off yer noses despite your faces . Please do not be so short sighted you can not see the benefit of more parking . Make Lisbon St. a pedestrian only zone . Whoops. .l o l , i am in Hawai'i (=>*
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Posted By:Robert61 at August 13, 2008 9:36 PM (Suggest Removal) Dr. Dosh, allow me to defend my thought process as a city councilor. To avoid building one parking garage you would need to have 12 of these lots as parking spaces with surface parking only. Thats 12 places you have leased or owned and then cannot develop into any kind of arts, entertainment or business establishment. Eventually you have to develop the garage anyway so it delays for a few years and then you build the garage at a higher price PLUS what you spent on the lot. For further understanding read the lease agreement, you'll understand. Building a parking lot would be the short sighted action, whereas I'm looking for long term solutions. Mahalo!
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