The four members of Evansville's Redevelopment Commission did what they were appointed to do: rubber stamp whatever public giveaway is put in front of them to approve. There are no tough questions here to be asked about why taxpayers are footing half the bill to fund a $74 million hotel adjacent to the city's convention center. By God, it means jobs and economic development. Who can question voting for it? The Evansville Courier-Press
reports on the RDC's approval of the $37.5 million public subsidy for the project:
Thursday’s 4-0 vote by the Evansville Redevelopment Commission in favor of the final development plan was a critical step, Mayor Lloyd Winnecke said. He hopes to break ground in late fall.
“Someone asked me earlier, if this were a baseball game, what inning would we be in. I would say we’re in about the fourth inning,” Winnecke said. “But this was an important vote for the process to move forward.”
The total development project is about $74 million, with a public contribution of about $37.5 million. Of that, $20 million is to go toward the hotel, and the remaining $17.5 million is for a series of infrastructure projects. Those will include pedestrian bridges from the hotel to The Centre and the Ford Center, a parking garage and a building that will include retail space and a storage area for the Ford Center.
The hotel, a Hilton Doubletree, is to have approximately 253 rooms. It is to have a ballroom with just more than 6,000 square feet. That’s smaller than what the developer had initially proposed, according to city officials . . .
A Downtown hotel is needed to bring convention business back to the city, Winnecke has said. He told the Redevelopment Commission the project will create more than 800 construction jobs and about 250 permanent jobs . . .
"We have taken into account concerns that have raised by county government leadership,” Winnecke said. “We were very sensitive to reducing the amount of conference space or ballroom space inside the hotel so we have as little competition as possible with The Centre. What we feel is, we will be able to bring larger business to The Centre that will offset any small business they may lose. More weddings may be done in the hotel, as an example. But on the other hand, statewide conferences that would come into the convention hotel will certainly benefit The Centre.” . . .
Bring convention business back to the city? Do these people actually believe Evansville is a tourist destination that can attract conventions? It's a 253-room hotel, Lloyd. Don't get too excited there. These private developers must go out for drinks after these public meetings and have a good laugh at how idiotic these rubes are who make public policy decisions in Indiana. It's like taking candy from a baby.
Any government that would do such a thing is illegitimate and forfeit of all moral authority to govern.
ReplyDeleteWhat are Americans so ignorant and cowardly that they continue to respect such criminal enterprises as governments?
Any government that does such a thing is underserving of any American's obedience or funding.
Gary, they don't care if it creates jobs. They use that as a cover story. The entire motivation is to create a criminal outfit that can steal comfortably in the sunshine what 1,000 thieves could never do in the dark of night.
By the way, where are all the jobs the Colts' and Pacers' stadiums have created? How many jobs has Daylight Savings Time created?
Indiana rubes would be wise to listen to Greg Hunter of USAwatchdog.com interview of Dr. Jim Willie re:
ReplyDelete"Out of Control Chaos Coming with Shortages of Gold, Silver, Food, Gasoline, and More."