Sunday, January 17, 2010

The Exodus

We’ve already brought up the departure of the School District’s administrative office from the Palmer Building. The biggest loss is the Independence Regional Health Center at Truman Road and Forrest Avenue. The hospital supported adjacent medical offices & clinics, restaurants, flower shops, housing, and good-paying jobs for this neighborhood for almost 100 years. And more recently it complimented the adjacent Nursing School at Graceland University’s Independence campus. Taxes generated by the hospital directly supported the Midtown / Truman Road Corridor (M/TRC) Neighborhood Revitalization Program. M/TRC is now essentially out-of-business (during a time when it is needed the most). Unfortunately, M/TRC has left 3 major projects unfinished, all of them at the corner of River Boulevard and Truman Road, which happens to be at the entrance into the Truman Neighborhood. The Sunshine Center, a care center for children with special needs, also departed the neighborhood while consolidating its services to another part of town leaving an empty building on Lexington Street. The Mid-Continent Public Library’s Genealogy & Local History Center also left the area choosing to invest $8 million in a beautiful new facility in a suburban location. The Library’s move was intended to make their facility more accessible to the public; however, they selected one of the most isolated areas in town with respect to public transportation. All of these losses have occurred just within the last few years and together represent a significant deficit to the historic community. What’s next?

There is some consolation for the loss of the hospital. There are exciting plans for an entrepreneurship center and business incubator at the old site. The project promises to be supported by the School District, Independence Council for Economic Development (ICED), a private developer, and TIF funding from the initial hospital relocation. This is likely a best-case-scenario for this site considering all the obstacles. I applaud the Independence School District in taking a leadership role in this project. Success will depend on public and private institutions working together, doing what they say they are going to do, guiding the project through completion, and sticking around, even when situations become difficult. Yes, that’s right; it sounds like a different approach than what we are used to.

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