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2001-03-15 Economic development CITY OF BEVERLY Public Meeting Minutes Master Plan Workshop - Economic Development BOARD: Master Plan Steering Committee SUBCOMMITTEE: DATE: March 15, 2001 BOARD MEMBERS PRESENT: Joanne Avallon, Scott Houseman, Larry Ralph, William Rodenbaugh, John Young, Maureen Troubctaris, John Thomson, Wendy Pearl, George Simon, Bruce Oveson, Virginia McGlynn, Donald Preston, John Murray BOARD MEMBERS ABSENT: Wendy Frontiero, Richard Dinkin OTHERS PRESENT: Tina Cassidy, Planning Director and Ken Buckland, The Cecil Group RECORDER: Jeannine Dion Cassidy introduces herself and welcomes all people attending the workshop. She introduces the members of the Master Plan Steering Committee and consultants from the Cecil Group and RKG Associates. Cassidy introduces Ken Buckland from the Cecil Group and he provides an overview of the Master Plan process and the Alternatives being discussed pertaining to Economic Development. There are three Alternatives: 1) Amenities and Quality of Life The ultimate priority under this alternative is maximizing and enhancing the quality of life of the residents of Beverly. Economic development actions must he in concert with this objective. 2) Public Facility Improvements Use infrastructure improvements to serve economic development. Master Plan Workshop - Transportation and Infrastructure. March 15, 2001 Page 2 3) Economic Development Under this alternative, the City would develop as a regional economic center to broaden the tax base. The meeting breaks into small group discussion. When the meeting reconvenes, each table reports its findings on the top five recommendations on actions the City should take with respect to economic development. Table 1 · Advocate the "New England" architectural style for new developments rather than the "west coast" style. · Evaluate traffic lmpacts when considering expansion. · Streamline the site and development processes (i.e. "one stop shopping" when changes are proposed to residential or commercial sites). Development should be appropriate and existing businesses should he preserved · More parking is headed. · Consider alternative transportation. · Explore tourism and cultural potential (riverfront, downtown, historic and education venueS). · Gateways to the city. Target the appropriate sites for specific development (hotels, etc.) Table 2 · Open up the waterfront area for mixed use and public access (harbor, Bass River, etc.). · Exploit art institutions - promoting Beverly as a cultural destination. · Encourage redevelopment of older and underutilized areas under design review standards. · Establish a"streetscape" program- making the city more user-friendly and attractive. · Implement scheduled infrastructure improvements and tax advantages. Table 3 · Encourage tourism, promoting Beverly as a garden city. Bank on Beverly assets using collective resources and adding public transit. · Connect the harbor front to downtown to River Street through zoning changes (hotels, etc.). · More coordination between boards so they are not in conflict. · Develop downtown properties without expanding commercial zones. · Promote mixed uses (both commercial and neighborhood uses). · Protect water supply. · Restrict access to Wenham Lake. Master Plan Workshop- Transportation and Infrastructure March 15, 2001 Page 3 Table 4 Review and study the possible zoning changes (CN zoning districts, "IR" zoned land near Gordon College). · Establish redevelopment zones in the downtown area. Cost benefit analysis of the Route 128 overpass. · Enforce zoning regulations (green space, buffer zones, etc.) · Waterfront is under performing resource (encourage tourism, residential, etc.). · Create design standards (sign regulations, buffer zones, no drive-throughs, etc.) to maintain the historic charm of neighborhoods and protect the residential character. Table · Keep the character of Beverly. Focus development on reuse. · High quality streetscapes and waterfront access. Controlled tourism. · Control development imparts on natural resources. Develop enough to support the schools. · Balance need for affordable housing with economic development. Table 6 No more land area for future economic development. Ensure environmental standards and controls are in place. Redevelop the downtown and Bass River areas. Zone for mixed uses with height limitations and facade improvements. · Parking garage is needed near the main train station. · Public transportation is underutilized and more should be done to encourage its use. · Infrastructure - poor roads, sidewalks, streetscapes, lighting and not pedestrian friendly. Buckland thanks all who participated in the workshop and announces that the Open Space and Residential Development workshop is scheduled to take place on March 29, 2001 here at the Senior Center. The meeting is adjourned at 9:15 p.m.