The City of Knoxville is holding two public meetings on Monday, June 11th regarding blighted properties.

Consultants, city officials, developers, the Chamber, KTSC and other interested parties will meet to discuss "repurposing and revitalizing blighted buildings and blighted vacant lots in Knoxville’s residential neighborhoods, commercial corridors and industrial sectors."

The first meeting is at 1:30PM at the East Tennessee History Center to discuss commercial and multi-family redevelopment. The second meeting is at 5:30PM at the Cansler YMCA to discuss blighted properties in residential neighborhoods

Despite the short notice, neighborhood organizations are being urged to attend the 5:30 meeting. The meetings are open to the public and there will be Q&A.

More details in the press release after the jump...

From the City of Knoxville

MEETINGS PLANNED WITH CONSULTANTS ON BLIGHTED PROPERTIES

Property developers, bankers, neighborhood leaders, and government and nonprofit officials next week will be wrestling with the challenges posed by blighted and vacant properties in Knoxville and Knox County.

With the help of two outside consultants, separate meetings on Monday, June 11, will focus on repurposing and revitalizing blighted buildings and blighted vacant lots in Knoxville’s residential neighborhoods, commercial corridors and industrial sectors. The meetings, which are open to the public, are sponsored by the City of Knoxville with significant support from Knox County, the Knoxville Chamber, and Knoxville Tourism and Sports Corp.

Present at both meetings will be Alan Mallach and Kim Graziani of the Center for Community Progress. CCP is a nationally recognized firm that provides conferences, trainings and consultations on all aspects of abandoned, blighted and vacant properties throughout the U.S. The City and County have worked with CCP on a variety of issues, including efforts to reform Tennessee’s tax foreclosure laws.

The two planned meetings on Monday are:

&bulll; 1:30-3:30 p.m. at the East Tennessee History Center on Gay Street. A panel including developers and local officials will focus on the development of blighted buildings and vacant lots for commercial, industrial and multi-family residential uses.

• 5:30-7:00 p.m., in the community room of the Cansler YMCA, 616 Jessamine St. A citywide community meeting will address the challenge of blighted and/or vacant buildings and lots in residential neighborhoods. Neighborhood organizations are especially urged to send members to this meeting. (The Cansler Y is just three or four blocks from the I-40 Broadway/Hall of Fame interchange with I-40.)

The panel for the 1:30 p.m. meeting will include property developers Jeffery Nash, Courtland Group; Joe Petre, Conversion Properties; John Craig, Segundo Properties; Mark Heinz, Dewhirst Properties; Bud Cullom, Cullom Properties; and Jim Harrison, Hunter Development Co. Other panel members are Lynne Fugate of CapitalMark Bank & Trust; Tom Vester of Pinnacle Financial Partners; Alvin Nance of KCDC; Doug Lawyer, Knoxville Chamber of Commerce; Dr. Bill Lyons, Deputy to the Mayor/Chief Policy Officer of the City of Knoxville; Todd Napier, The Development Corporation of Knox County; and Kim Trent, Knox Heritage.

Bob Whetsel, Director of Redevelopment for the City, will moderate the afternoon panel. There will be time for questions and comments from the audience.

"With Kim Graziani and Alan Mallach assisting us, this is an opportunity for local government, the private sector and neighborhoods to revisit and perhaps add to the tools and strategies we employ to reuse and revitalize blighted buildings and vacant lots," Whetsel said. "We also want to broaden that conversation to include others who wish to be involved in reversing blight conditions in our community."

Graziani, vice president of capacity building for CCP, previously served as the director of neighborhood initiatives in Pittsburgh, Pa., where she developed and implemented policies, programs and projects that bring about neighborhood revitalization. She targeted innovative strategies for the productive reuse of tax-delinquent and abandoned properties. In addition to leading a citywide land recycling initiative, Graziani was instrumental in the creation of Green Up Pittsburgh, a blight reduction program that transformed hundreds of publicly-owned vacant lots into productive green spaces through community partnerships.

Mallach is a senior fellow at CCP, a non-resident senior fellow at the Metropolitan Policy Program of The Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., and a visiting scholar at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. He has been engaged in housing, planning, and community and economic development as a public and private sector practitioner, advocate and scholar for more than 40 years.

Mallach is the author of an influential book on blighted properties, "Bringing Buildings Back: From Vacant Properties to Community Assets." His most recent book is "A Decent Home: Planning, Building and Preserving Affordable Housing." He is also a member of the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Certified Planners.

See http://www.communityprogress.net for more on CCP and its work.

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Clements's picture

Confused.

I'm a bit confused about the administration's situation; if I recall correctly, Mayor Rogero said that she wanted tougher laws to deal with blighted properties. It has been my experience that:
A. The Better Building Board (BBB) makes a determination of blight based upon expert opinion (Codes officers, Fire officers, etc.) and gives a property owner 90 days to correct or make substantial progress.
B. If the owner does not, the BBB gives another 90 days at which time the property is "certified" as blighted.
C. At the point Community Development can go before City Council to acquire the property via eminent domain then resell to a more responsible owner giving the original owner fair market value.

I'm very supportive of Mayor Rogero but what's wrong with the current process?

bizgrrl's picture

KNS report: lighter

KNS report:

lighter regulations on development might be a good start, panel member and Fulton Bellows site developer Budd Cullom suggested

the city may need to spend money first to draw redevelopment's path from the Old City out to nearby warehouses and Magnolia Avenue.

WATE report:

"Now we've reached the stage where we need intervention and help from larger corporates and we need to be promoting and advertising just what Knoxville has to offer" said Jeffery Nash with the Corteland Group, the developer for Keystone Place and Crown and Goose Gastropub.

Developers also said they need the city's help with creating more parking and additional core areas like Market Square to build around.

As the city works to expand outside of the immediate downtown area, Central Avenue was an obvious next stop.

a concern for developers is redeveloping "pockets" instead of entire streets and neighborhoods.

bizgrrl's picture

I failed to mention the

I failed to mention the reference in the KNS article to the neighborhood groups (about 100 residents) meeting with the consultants and David Massey, neighborhood coordinator for Knoxville. Topics discussed in the neighborhood groups meeting included overgrown lots, crack houses, navigating building codes for historic homes, and the need for money to fix blighted properties.

In other cases, though, residents of the city simply complained about crime, schools and social ills that can contribute to blight. Fighting that is as simple as reaching out to a neighbor and forging a bond, Massey said.

Big Al's picture

More use of the HomeMaker Program

Regarding residential blight, I agree with Clements---the City has what's needed but just needs to act upon it sooner.

CBT's picture

Please note that Knox County,

Please note that Knox County, specifically the Trustee's office and Community Development, took an active part in these meetings. David Massey and Bob Whetsel did a terrific job of planning the visit. The meetings were very informative. On a personal note, I very much enjoyed dinner with Alan and Kim. They left very much impressed with our fair city and opportunities for positive change. Kim told me she's coming back for BiscuitFest next year!

Clements's picture

Mayor Rogero, are you listening?

"no one brings the regulatory hammer down " - Kim Trent

Ms. Trent, leader of KnoxHeritage summed it up here---from Josh Flory's column in today's KNS.

Here's a suggestion for the Rogero administration: task David Massey, neighborhood liaison, with gathering lists of blighted properties from the various neighborhood groups. Take each before the BBB for declaration of blight and after 90 days of non-action by owner, give the owner 90 more days then certify blight if substantial improvement has not been made. After another requisite 90 days, seek approval from City Council to acquire the properties. Once approval is granted, advertise them for sale prior to acquisition. Once an interested party commits arrange a simultaneous closing which transfers title from the unresponsive owner to the City and immediately on to the new owner. Deduct the administration costs and any accumulated fines from the fair market value established by the sale and the remainder goes to the original owner.

The tools are there but are used too infrequently.

Mayor Rogero, you're doing a great job so let's add this to your list of accomplishments.

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