Archive for the ‘2010’ Category

Pacers to stay in Indianapolis for another three years

Saturday, January 21st, 2012

Pacers to stay in Indianapolis for another three years

13 July 2010 | Posted in Hosting, Basketball | By Nick Forrester

The National Basketball Association’s (NBA) Indiana Pacers have signed a three-year agreement with the Indianapolis Capital Improvement Board (CIB) to keep them in the city of Indianapolis for at least another three years through the 2012-13 season.

The deal will cost US$33.5 million in taxpayer money over the three years. US$10 million a year will be used to help operate Conseco Fieldhouse, which is reported to cost US$18 million to run. The city will also pay US$3.5 million for improvements to Conseco, but has the potential of increasing to US$4.7 million.

“After tough and deliberative negotiations, we have reached an agreement to preserve the viability of our downtown economic engine, keep the Pacers as the Conseco Fieldhouse prime tenant, preserve the thousands of jobs impacted by Fieldhouse activity, and maintain the millions of dollars in tax revenue generated by this same activity,” said Indianapolis Mayor Gregory Ballard. “Our charge was to preserve the city’s downtown economic vitality while protecting taxpayers across Indianapolis. The agreement we’ve reached achieves this and, very importantly, involves no additional tax increase.”

In May, the CIB released a report produced by Hunden Strategic Partners (HSP), a well-known real estate development advisory practice specializing in destination assets, which showed a Pacers net contribution to the city of US$55 million in economic activity each year. If the Pacers were to leave Indianapolis, it is anticipated that Indianapolis’ governmental bodies would be directly impacted by roughly US$18 million.

[UPDATED] CIB to Vote on Pacers Deal

Saturday, January 21st, 2012

[UPDATED] CIB to Vote on Pacers Deal

InsideINdianaBusiness.com Report

Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard says the agreement was
reached using no public tax funding and will ensure the downtown
area will retain its ability to attract the public, businesses and
conventions.

The deal to keep the Indiana Pacers in Indianapolis for at least
the next three years will go to a vote by members of the Capital
Improvement Board Friday. It calls for the CIB to provide $10
million in each of the next three seasons to the Pacers to
operate Conseco Fieldhouse.

Source: Inside INdiana Business

Press Release

INDIANAPOLIS – The Capital Improvement Board (CIB) of Managers of Marion County and Pacers Sports & Entertainment (PS&E) reached a 3-year agreement on Monday to keep the Pacers in Indianapolis for the near future.

The agreement will go before the CIB for a vote on July 16. If approved, the agreement will exist in conjunction with the current lease agreement, and the CIB will provide $10 million to PS&E for operating expenses for each of the next three seasons. PS&E will maintain operations of the Fieldhouse.

“After tough and deliberative negotiations, we have reached an agreement to preserve the viability of our downtown economic engine, keep the Pacers as the Conseco Fieldhouse prime tenant, preserve the thousands of jobs impacted by Fieldhouse activity, and maintain the millions of dollars in tax revenue generatedby this same activity,” said Indianapolis Mayor Gregory Ballard.

“Our charge was to preserve the city’s downtown economic vitality while protecting taxpayers across Indianapolis. The agreement we?ve reached achieves this and, very importantly, involves no additional tax increase.”

Complete terms of the agreement show a scaled repayment plan in which the obligation of PS&E to repay the $30 million will be reduced for each season the Pacers continue to play at Conseco Fieldhouse, concluding with a zero balance in 2019.

The funds will come from the CIB budget, which continues to improve in both holding the line on expenses and revenue growth -the additional 1 percent hotel tax was increased in 2009, the additional Professional Sports Development Authority (PSDA) tax passed by the General Assembly in 2009, and the availability of State Loans of $9 million per year in 2009, 2010 and 2011.

“We achieved our major goals in keeping the Pacers’ huge economic impact here in downtown Indianapolis, avoiding the entire expense of operating Conseco Fieldhouse without a marquee tenant, avoiding the devastating blow to the economic development and convention business that losing the team would have created, and crafting an agreement that is within the CIB’s budget,” said Ann Lathrop, president of the CIB.

The short-term agreement will allow time for the impacts of a planned new National Basketball Association collective bargaining agreement and expanded CIB financial picture, including an expanded Convention Center and other factors, to take shape in advance of a long-term agreement.

In May, the CIB released a report produced by Hunden Strategic Partners (HSP), a well-known real estate development advisory practice specializing in destination assets, which showed a Pacers net contribution to the city of $55 million in economic activity each year and 909 permanent, full-time equivalent jobs. If the Pacers were to leave Indianapolis, it is anticipated that Indianapolis?

governmental bodies would be directly impacted by roughly $18 million.

The CIB is the public agency that manages several downtown facilities including Lucas Oil Stadium, the Indiana Convention Center, Conseco Fieldhouse and Victory Field, among others. For more information on the CIB, please visit their website at www.capitalimprovementboard.org

Source: Capital Improvement Board

La Vista voters support LB 1018

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Published Nov 4, 2010
Published Thursday November 4, 2010

La Vista voters support LB 1018

By Trenton Albers
Times/Sun Editor

La Vista voters on Tuesday gave its City Council authority to use the Nebraska Advantage Transformational Tourism and Redevelopment Act for future development projects in the city.

It wasn’t just the passage of the initiative that satisfied the bill’s biggest proponent, La Vista Mayor Doug Kindig — it was the margin of victory.

According to unofficial results, the La Vista Sales Tax Direction proposal passed with 77 percent approval.

“I think it shows that we’ve done some good economic development in the past and that the voters have trusted the City Council decisions on what we’ve done,” Kindig said.

Authorized by the Nebraska Legislature as LB 1018, its passage will allow La Vista to rebate a new development or redevelopment project with the local sales tax it produces to offset start-up costs.

La Vista is the first city in the state to pass the initiative.

While the city led the charge on the bill from the get-go, Kindig said La Vista couldn’t have done it alone.

“First of all, without the cooperation of the United Cities, I don’t think this passes in Lincoln,” he said. “La Vista may have brought this to the United Cities, but it was a combined effort.”

Kindig said he’s excited about the possibilities the bill has for new development, most importantly for the city’s Vision 84 project, a plan to redevelop the city’s 84th Street corridor.

“We’ve had developers that have talked to us, and we don’t have anything, but I think this will move those discussions forward much quicker now,” Kindig said.

“So yes, I would expect the phone to be ringing.“

Updating the conference center, new events center part of project proposal

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Updating the conference center, new events center part of project proposal

(http://enidnews.com/localnews/x1836250844/Updating-the-conferencecenter-new-events-center-part-of-project-proposal)
By Robert Barron, Staff Writer
Enid News & Eagle (http://enidnews.com)

ENID — Part of a proposed $40 million downtown renovation project will be updating and expanding Cherokee Strip Conference Center, which was built in 1987, and constructing a new 4,500-seat events center.

Enid residents will decide Tuesday on a $20 million bond issue, which, if approved, will be matched with another $20 million from the city to create a $40 million downtown redevelopment project called the Gateway Enid initiative, officials said.

The Gateway Enid project would renovate Enidʼs downtown, but also make it visible and appealing to people driving by on Garriott.

In addition to renovating the conference center and building the events center, the project also includes:
• Renovating Convention Hall/Mark Price Arena.
• A large public green area and plazas.

Once the projects are complete, the finished result is expected to bring tournaments, performances, conferences and businesses of all types to Enidʼs downtown area.

“I expect it to bring better facilities for people who live here for everything from wedding receptions to family reunions to any sort of meeting space business needs,” said Molly Helm, a spokeswoman for the study committee on the Gateway Enid project. “Better facilities for our citizens, as well as concert and sports venues. Those bring people in from out of town because we can offer more.”

The current conference center combines a new structure with two existing Maine Street buildings, along with parking and loading. The building occupies a full block of downtown Enidʼs civic area. A study by Hunden Strategic Partners states the overall impression of the conference center is pleasant, but dated. The center could play an important part in the downtown development, along with the events center and remodeled Convention Center/Mark Price Arena.

Hunden Partnersʼ survey recommended the conference center be remodeled so the 11,800- square-foot space is more ideally suited to a ballroom. That renovation would require addition of carpet, improved wall decor and acoustical upgrades, along with other physical changes expanding the main space to accommodate a number of simultaneous functions. Along with the new events center, the area could attract events such as conventions and trade shows, consumer shows, sports events, conferences, concerts, corporate training and other meetings and banquets.

Some of the events also will rely on the attraction of a downtown hotel, which Hunden research indicates could be attracted if the bond issue is approved and the downtown redevelopment is done.

The cost of the Cherokee Strip Conference Center project is estimated at $2.5 million by the Hunden research group. The cost of constructing an events center is projected to be $16 million to $18 million, depending on which of three downtown scenarios is chosen.

The events center would become the home to Enid High Schoolʼs basketball teams. It also could be used for trade shows, concerts and other events.

City officials have estimated the downtown renovation project could attract 300,000 people a year to Enid by the next decade. Those people would be coming for the added sporting events, cultural amenities, receptions and banquets, performances and even conventions, should a downtown hotel be built by private investors. Helm, who was formerly associated with Leonardoʼs Discovery Warehouse and Adventure Quest, said that museum currently sees as many as 90,000 people a year.

“When you think that small museum has that many visitors, and tens of thousands are school kids on field trips, I donʼt think itʼs unreasonable to say several hundred thousand will go through during a year,” Helm said.

A 75,000-square-foot events center and updated conference center could host regional basketball tournaments that easily would increase the number of visitors, she said.

“People need space, and we donʼt have it, on a regional basis it sounds very promising,” Helm said.

Helm emphasized the community will not grow to be 300,000 population, but other people will come to Enid to enjoy what is here.

“It wonʼt turn us into a big city, just provide amenities that a community this size can support,” Helm said.

Enid officials: Ensure Hall’s survival

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Enid officials: Ensure Hall’s survival

(http://enidnews.com/localnews/x369041648/Enid-officials-Ensure-Hall-s-survival)
By Robert Barron, Staff Writer
Enid News and Eagle (http://enidnews.com)

ENID — Enidʼs Convention Hall, which houses Mark Price Arena, has been a thorn in the side of the city of Enid for several years.

To make matters worse, upgrades to the building — resulting from a lawsuit against the city — to make it complaint with the Ame-ricans with Disabilities Act upgrades have proven to be expensive.

Enid residents will have the opportunity Aug. 24 to pay for changes to the historic building. Thatʼs the day voters will decide a $20 million bond issue, which, if approved, will be matched with another $20 million form the city to create a $40 million downtown redevelopment project, the Gateway Enid initiative, officials said. More than $5.5 million will be used to renovate Convention Hall.

The Gateway Enid project would renovate Enidʼs downtown, but also make it visible and appealing to people driving by on Garriott.

The project also includes:
• A new civic center.
• A large public green area and plazas.
• Expansion of Cherokee Strip Conference Center.

Once the projects are complete, the finished result is expected to bring tournaments, performances, conferences and businesses of all types to Enidʼs downtown area.

Nearly two years ago, the city closed Convention Hall — built in 1920-21 as a memorial to veterans — because of the ADA issues. It was home to Enid High Schoolʼs basketball teams. Construction cost $500,000 at the time, said Don Rose, Ward 2 city commissioner.

Rose, a member of the consultation committee for the downtown project, said the cost of maintaining the building is between $200,000 and $250,000 a year. EHS basketball teams now play in the Mabee Center at Northern Oklahoma College Enid and would play their home games in the new events center if the bond issue passes.

“Even after the schools moved out … (the plan) was to have people there to continue to maintain it. There are things that go wrong even if itʼs closed, and basic utilities during the winter,” Rose said.

If the bond issue is approved, Convention Hall will be renovated to provide space for Enid Public Schools athletic teams as part of a larger Cherokee Strip event center complex. Enid is the only 6A system in the state with no home fieldhouse for sports teams, and Mark Price Arena would be renovated to meet some of those needs. The arena currently has about 1,575 fixed seats on two levels in a U-shaped configuration around a hardwood sports floor about 7,300 square feet. There is a stage at the south end of the arena with a large fly loft.

Total seating in the building, which includes temporary seating on the event floor, is about 2,435. For sports events, a maximum of 250 seats could be located on the event floor for a total capacity of 1,825, according to a study by Hunden Strategic Partners, which put together the redevelopment plan.

In the recent past, high school sports and an occasional concert or event have been held in the building. The exterior brick masonry is in good condition, according to the Hunden study. There is evidence of water damage on the interior ceiling. Doors and windows are in good condition. The survey concluded there is potential for reuse of the building.

The event floor is too small for anything other than basketball, volleyball or wrestling, and there is inadequate margin to provide substantial floor level seating, according to the study. The concourses, support spaces and restrooms are undersized for the spectator capacity of the building.

Hundenʼs survey proposed redesigning the space. If the seating bowl is kept, the existing concourses could be cleared of permanent and temporary uses to allow for better public use. Existing spaces on the north end of the building on the first three levels could be redesigned for lobbies, concessions and modern restrooms.

The most prominent functional problem is the lack of disabled access, according to the study. That could be solved with the addition of an elevator, according to the study.

The study proposes two options for the building. One is an athletic practice and performance space and the second is for a cultural performance space.

For the athletic space, the lower seating bowl would be removed and the remainder of the building would be renovated. That construction would provide an activity floor of about 120 feet by 140 feet, or 16,800 square feet. That space is large enough for two practice basketball or volleyball courts, separated by an operable divider curtain.

The cultural performance space would become an alternative use for Mark Price Arena as a performing arts space. Although the event floor is inadequate for sports in its current design, adequate seating could be added. The stage is large enough to accommodate all but the largest touring productions and seating capacity up to 2,400 could be provided. That could temporarily be reduced through use of a curtain that would cut off the seating bowl.

Dressing rooms and front-of-house space would need to be completely remodeled, and new stage lighting and dimming system would need to be installed, in addition to a new sound system and other stage modifications.

Molly Helm, a member of the Gateway Enid committee, said the artistʼs concept is not a final drawing of the interior of the building. An Enid school board member, Helm said the two-court concept would not work for school games and part of the design would need changing.

“The plan gives us use of the building and something more economical. Weʼre not spending money to refurbish the old building. Itʼs functional for the schools and weʼre getting a new building, which means lower utilities, more efficient lighting — all the things that make it better than fighting the renovation of an older structure,” Rose said. “And, we get the schools as a tenant, the schools will pay for it, we wonʼt pay that money each year.”

City officials have said bond issue is the only opportunity to save Convention Hall for further public use by the community.

 

$20 million bond issue

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

$20 million bond issue

(http://enidnews.com/localnews/x1358984900/-20-million-bond-issue)
Renovation of Convention Hall, construction of event center top tonightʼs city commission meeting
By Robert Barron, Staff Writer
Enid News and Eagle (http://enidnews.com)

ENID — Enid city commissioners will vote tonight on a $20 million bond issue to renovate Convention Hall and construct a downtown event center.

The vote will come during the 6:30 p.m. Enid City Commission meeting at the city administration building, 401 W. Garriott.

If the plan passes, a special election on the bond issue will be Aug. 24. “The critical part is that we canʼt continue to have economic growth if we simply wait on more people to come here and buy water,” said City Manager Eric Benson. “Half of our economic vitality is built by sales tax, and that can only be generated by drawing more people to Enid.”

Under the plan, Convention Hall, which includes Mark Price Arena, would undergo a multi-level $5.5 million revitalization. It would remain a city asset, while Enid Public Schools also would use the facility and share in the expense of running it.

Mark Price Arena would become home to Enid High Schoolʼs basketball teams again. The teams had played at Mark Price Arena until it was closed due to concerns about Americans With Disabilities Act compliance. The past two seasons, EHS basketball teams played their home games at the Mabee Center at Northern Oklahoma College Enid.

The city still would use Convention Hall for other revenue-generating options, in addition to building the new event center downtown, next to Convention Hall.

“The school will have a permanent field house and associated facilities there, and the city will use it as a revenue generator,” Benson said.

If the bond issue is passed by voters, the new event center would be a 75,000-square-foot building with 35,000 square feet of exhibit space and roll-out bleacher seats. It would have a seating capacity of 4,500.

A third element of the plan would be expansion of Cherokee Strip Conference Center.

“Enid needs to be a destination spot where people come to attend a variety of venues, attractive venues, and it can be anything like a trade show, training conventions, tourism opportunities or athletic events,” Benson said.

He said Enid has a great opportunity for attracting high school and college athletic events, with a national tie-in through David Allen Memorial Ballpark.

A study shows the city could see 300,000 additional visits per year, he said, with national chamber of commerce statistics showing each visitor spends an average of $150 to $200 per day.

Drawing more people to Enid would bring investment to the downtown area, Benson said. He said putting millions into downtown will compel people to invest even more in the downtown economy, including more businesses, restaurants and other facilities.

The commission has been working on the downtown project for two years, with Ward 2 Commissioner Don Rose as chairman of the committee looking at proposals, along with Ward 6 Commissioner Todd Ging and recently Ward 4 Commissioner Drew Ritchie.

The committee also involved a number of Enid business and community leaders.

“A natural tie-in is a hotel, but weʼre not asking voters to pay for that. It will come as a natural development,” Benson said.

The city is two years away from paying off a general obligation bond approved by voters for bridge repairs and replacements.

The emergency resolution scheduled for a vote today will establish a sinking fund for payment of principal but also states at no time will taxable property be subject to a special tax in excess of 5 mills on the dollar for all bonds issued.

Also on the commission agenda is final consideration and approval of the fiscal year 2011 city budget.

The Enid

Center’s contract put out to bid Companies have till Oct. 26 to make Convention Center proposals

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Center’s contract put out to bid

09.26.10 – 11:38 pm
By Ray Gronberg
gronberg@heraldsun.com; 419-6648

DURHAM — City and county officials have put the management contract for the Durham Convention Center out to bid in hopes of finding an operator who will
help stem the tide of red ink it now generates.

A request for proposals gives companies until Oct. 26 to explain how they would market and run the downtown meeting center, which of late has been requiring a combined subsidy from the two governments of about $1.2 million a year.

The governments are ending an existing management deal with Shaner Hotels, the owner of the adjoining Durham Marriott, as of Dec. 31.

Administrators believe Shaner will put in a new bid, as the convention center and the Marriott share a lot of space.

But before putting the contract out for bids, officials “kicked the tires a bit and found out that there are [other] people interested in giving us a proposal,” City Manager Tom Bonfield said.

Forcing companies to compete for the next management contract was among the key recommendations of a consultants’ report earlier this year that criticized the existing deal with Shaner.

The report, drafted by Hunden Strategic Partners, said city and county officials made a bad deal with Shaner in 2005 that allowed the hotelier to improve its bottom line at the convention center’s expense.

The consultants estimated that the two governments were shouldering about $500,000 a year in excess costs for convention center employees whose work was also benefitting the hotel.

Officials also believe Shaner has been using some convention center space for its own purposes without formally leasing it. That’s going to stop, no matter which company wins the next management contract, County Manager Mike Ruffin said.

Going forward, Shaner officials are “going to have to pay for what they lease, and lease for what they want,” Ruffin said.

The convention center will be closed for renovations during the first half of 2012,allowing a new operator a chance to settle in.

City and county officials are willing to negotiate the terms of a new contract, but they’ve attached to the request for proposals their own ideas about what a deal should look like.

They suggest a 5-year contract that would pay the winning company a fixed annual management fee, plus several bonuses rewarding financial results and good customer service that, if hit, would match the fixed fee.

The figures they put on the fee and incentives suggest that they went into the process willing to pay the winning bidder nearly $1.1 million over the life of the deal.

Officials also want a fairly broad set of termination rights, including a clause allowing them to fire the operator if losses at the facility are significantly greater than expected for two years running.

Bonfield said officials have “no preconceived notions” about wanting to replace Shaner, nor are they convinced Shaner’s control of the Marriott gives it a built-in advantage versus other potential bidders. On that front, “I guess we’ll just have to wait and see,” Bonfield said.

Ruffin said he is “very comfortable with the direction we’re headed” and dead set on reducing the center’s subsidy demands. “I’m convinced that can happen,” he added.

The chairman of the Durham Convention Center Authority, lawyer Patrick Byker, also indicated that he’s happy with the approach city and county officials are taking.

“The convention center, let’s face it, is a significant burden on city and county taxpayers,” Byker said. “We have to be sure we’re getting the best deal we can.”

Downtown Amarillo Inc. dithers as plans languish

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

From The Amarillo Independent

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Downtown Amarillo Inc. dithers as plans languish

Part 1 – Documents show behind-closed-door dealings for DAI, city

Downtown Amarillo Inc. director stonewalls information about public business

By George Schwarz and Greg Rohloff
The Amarillo Independent

Revitalizing Amarillo’s downtown has been an on and off the proposition for decades.

But, in 2008, the city Commission seemed to get serious again and authorized the establishment of a nonprofit development firm, Downtown Amarillo Inc., funding it with taxpayer money at more than $200,000 a year. It contracted with DAI to undertake downtown development, including drafting and pushing through design standardsfor the downtown area.

All the activity of DAI went on behind closed doors, despite a call by DAI board member Richard Ware, president of Amarillo National Bank, that the meetings should be open, with executive sessions reserved for those matters authorized under the Texas Open Meetings Act.

Those meetings remain closed, although DAI and The Amarillo Independent have asked the Texas Attorney General’s Office for a ruling.

And while DAI may have plenty on its plate, the main course is a major convention hotel downtown — a dream for city of Amarillo officials and city leaders.

But a review of documents that Downtown Amarillo fought to keep secret shows the plan may be just that — a dream. And as of July 7, that dream may have been put on hold for another six months, if a letter from DAI to developers ever went out.

While much of the material that DAI turned over to The Amarillo Independent was heavily redacted, e-mails and board meeting minutes of the nonprofit’s governing body show discussions about other matters that were not heretofore publicly known.

·The process for qualifying and working with a developer for a downtown hotel to serve the convention center has run in fits and starts, with questions about the entire process from the developers, who wondered about how much taxpayer money the city of Amarillo would have to invest for the project to be viable.

· A ball field or sports complex downtown may be further along than city commissioners have acknowledged during public meetings.

· Combing through the documents reveals a deeper involvement by DAI in city affairs and in DAI’s working with the City Commission and city employees than previously evident.

··A pattern has appeared that almost every initiative discussed at the closed-door board meetings has taken longer than the optimistic time frames that the executive director has indicated to the board.

··DAI is introduced to the idea of a Public Improvement District for a part of downtown that does not encompass the entire area either under the urban design standards the City Commission recently adopted or under the Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone. Instead, the western boundary of the possible PID is Van Buren Street.

DAI, heavily supported by taxpayer money to the tune of more than $400,000 over two years, was ordered by the Texas attorney general to make some of its records public. The agency did so with heavy redactions while, in an Aug. 31 letter, asking the AG for a further ruling on keeping specific information from public view.

In a series of e-mails, Melissa Dailey, Downtown Amarillo Inc. executive director, refused repeatedly to meet for an on-the-record interview with the Independent. Instead, her e-mail response was similar with each request: “… (p)lease email any questions you have and I will respond as soon as possible;” or “Please email me anyquestions you have and I will comment on them or answer them to thebest of my ability.”

In addition, on Sept. 8, after the Independent acceded to her stonewalling for e-mailed questions so she might respond, Dailey wrote
back to say she could not respond by Sept. 9; but shortly before 9 p.m. she had submitted her non-answers.

In this next part of this multipart series, The Amarillo Independent explores the beginnings of the capstone project for revitalizing downtown Amarillo — a convention center hotel near the Civic Center — possibly on the city-owned land south of the Globe-News Center for the Performing Arts.

Part 2 – Convention hotel downtown: Dream or Pipe Dream?

While a downtown-convention center hotel had long been on the city’s radar, the issue came up in the Dec. 10, 2008, board meeting, when Richard Ware, president of Amarillo National Bank, met with Bobby Lee, owner of the Big Texan Steak Ranch and Motel.

At the May 6, 2009, board meeting of Downtown Amarillo Inc., Les Simpson, publisher of the Amarillo Globe-News and president of the DAI board, reported that the state Senate has passed a motel/hotel bill satisfactory to a variety of hotel interests across Texas; the bill at that time awaited House approval.

The bill would facilitate establishment of an Amarillo convention center hotel downtown.

The legislation, according to June 9, 2009, minutes, would allow the city to use taxpayer money to build a convention hotel, explicitly stating, “The City is looking at a lot south of the Globe-News Center for the hotel site.”

It was at this point that Melissa Dailey, at that time the newly hired executive director, suggested that DAI become involved.

It was at the DAI board’s July 6, 2009, meeting that the minutes show the city had agreed to put together a “stakeholders group” to work with a consultant.

“It is expected that DAI will be part of that process,” the minutes state.

At the Sept. 1, 2009, DAI board meeting, Dailey called for a committee to guide the hotel development, with the board going along with a written request to city officials for the panel to include representatives from DAI, Center City and the Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone as well as the city.

The Oct. 1, 2009, board minutes reflect the city’s acquiescence to turning over spearheading development of the Civic Center area to DAI.

“Regarding the hotel study, there is indication that there will be a joint meeting between DAI and the City (sic) to discuss moving forward on the hotel. DAI needs to be ready for the hand-off (sic) of the hotel to DAI when the City (sic) is ready,” the minutes state. “Richard (Ware) motioned (sic) that DAI form a committee to address the hotelpartnership with the City (sic).”

Dailey had sent out a request for qualifications to developers and planned for a Feb. 18, 2010, conference with developers. By April 1, minutes of the board meetings became heavily redacted, meaning some of the information was blacked out.

Whenever the Independent questioned specific redacted information in the documents, Dailey’s response was the same, “Please refer to the letter to the Attorney General dated 8-31-10, which you have been sent a copy of by our attorney.”

Still, in the minutes, Dailey reported responses from eight developers: Garfield Traub, Noble Investments, Zion Hospitality, HRI, Journeyman, MJS Realty, Realty America and Woodbine Development. She also reported to the board that a request for proposals was being drafted, a short list would be sent to the convention hotel committee and the RFP would go out in about a month.

By the end of April, four finalists from the request for qualifications process would be invited to respond to a request for proposal. Those were Garfield Traub, Noble Investments, HRI and Woodbine Development, according to the April 26, 2010, board minutes.

Dailey’s e-mail response to questions about who chose the finalists and how the finalists were chosen shed little light on the process.

“The process was delineated in the RFP as released by the City of Amarillo (see attached),” she wrote.

But she supplied no attachment.

However, by June, hotel development had become iffy, at best.

In the next part of this multipart series, The Amarillo Independent explores how the capstone project for revitalizing downtown Amarillo — a convention center hotel near the Civic Center — starts to unravel.

Part 3 – The “Deal” Starts to Unravel

Over a period of months, city of Amarillo officials and Melissa Dailey, primarily under the guidance of Downtown Amarillo Inc. board president Les Simpson (according to minutes and e-mails), worked to line up developers for a convention center full-service hotel. With the hotel ostensibly near the Civic Center, the plan was to choose developers who would be asked to propose a project to DAI and the city.

But, earlier this summer, things took a turn for the worse.

At the June 3 board meeting, Dailey reported that two of the developers had dropped out of the process.

“Noble stated their concern being an out dated Civic Center and no plans to update it, and Woodbine stated concerns that the city needed to put more investment in the hotel than they were indicating,” the minutes state.

Dailey and City Planning Director Kelley Shaw received word about Noble Investments on May 24 in an e-mail from Rob Hunden, president of Hunden Strategic Partners, the consulting firm that had been selected to do the hotel study and which was now working with developers responding to the request for proposal. In that memo, Hunden wrote that Noble, deciding to pull out of the process, had raised substantial questions about the entire viability of the entire project.

“They do not believe that the product called for in the market can be a long-term success, Even If the City owns it outright,” Hunden wrote. “They’re concerned about the quality of the Civic Center (need to renovation/facelift). They believe that at the most they would get behind 150-room limited service hotel with access function space.”

Hunden called the information disappointing, noting that there was nothing to do to change the developer’s mind.

That prompted a response from Shaw three minutes later: “Wow… This is going to be a real PR problem. Do you think that is actually the reasoning or could it be something else? That’s a weird question but seems like they would have already done such an analysis before wasting time.”

And five minutes later, Dailey responded to Shaw and Hunden by speculating that DAI will likely get similar comments about the need for renovation, not just expansion, of the Civic Center from other developers.

“It’s evident it’s needed,” she wrote. “Maybe this will spark some serious discussion about the idea.”

One minute after responding to Shaw and Hunden, Dailey forwarded the entire exchange to Les Simpson, the president of the DAI board, with the reminder that she brought up a concern about the condition of the Civic Center six months earlier.

Fifteen minutes later, Dailey forwarded Hunden’s e-mail to the remainder of the DAI board as well as Civic Center Director Sherman Bass, Amarillo Convention  and Visitors Bureau head Jerry Holt and city Purchasing Agent Taylor Norman, telling them that Journeyman, the developer that had finished fifth out of eight on the DAI preference list, was still an alternative.

But a June 8 e-mail from Dailey to the board raised further questions.

Dailey wrote she followed up on a board discussion of that day about the convention hotel process and the developers’ pulling out.

“I just spent several hours with (redacted),” she wrote. “We discussed the hotel and Noble and Woodbine electing not to continue to the RFP process. Their take on the situation was that if the development community knew the big picture, the comprehensive land use plan we’re working to implement, that we would have likely seen a different (better) response to the RFQ and ultimately to the RFP.”

Dailey released no minutes from the DAI board meeting that, she wrote, took place June 8.

And, at that point, it would have been hard for developers to see Dailey’s big picture.

The June 3 meeting minutes contain the following sentence attributed to Dailey: “None of the developers were aware of the land-use planand efforts going on to redevelop the civic center (sic) area.”

And, there is a contradiction about whether the developers really understood the land-use plan that Dailey claims is available. When asked if DAI had contacted hotel developers without any indication of the land-use plan for downtown, she wrote, “A broad land use plan is delineated in the Strategic Action Plan which was provided to developers.”

But, the confusion gets worse.

In July 7 minutes, Dailey referred to the hotel developers’ being privy to the land-use plan before the public was, but in response to the Independent stated this wasn’t true. And when directly asked in writing if private developers were made aware of details of the land-use plan before the public was, she wrote, “No. DAI has not released the current land use plan we are working to the public or hotel developers.”

And where was the land-use plan?

During the July TIRZ board meeting, Dailey remarked in passing that information on the land-use and housing studies would be available by the next board meeting. But she was absent from the August meeting, and the September meeting was canceled because the board had no pressing business, said board Chairman Richard Brown. Dailey had not indicated to the board the status on the information from the studies.

In the next part of this multipart series, The Amarillo Independent explores how the capstone project for revitalizing downtown Amarillo — a convention center hotel near the Civic Center — is stalled for a variety of reasons, including money and confusion.

Part 4 – Down the drain?

Developers pull out amid confusion and planning secrecy

The city received word from Woodbine Development in a June 4 letter from B. Gregory Mowatt, senior vice president, that raised questions about a variety of issues surrounding the convention center.

Mowatt took note that other developers indicated they would invest in and own the property taking the city off the hook for ownership.

“Even though it would have been possible to bring potential owners to the table with our group, we were not in a position to do so without understanding more clearly the City’s preferences and the value of the subsidy package in public/private relationship,” he wrote. “Since we presume the city is looking for the path of least resistance and getting this hotel property completed, we believe it is proper to step aside and allow the city to move forward with those groups that indicated a willingness to come into the project as direct owners.”

But it’s the next two lines in Mowatt’s letter that raise questions: “Woodbine’s credibility has been built, in part on its integrity in its dealings within the municipalities in which it is active. Accordingly, we believe this to be the proper action on the part of the Woodbine team.”

On Thursday, Mowatt said there was nothing nefarious to read into that sentence. The city had another developer who was more likely to put equity into the deal and Woodbine did not want to interfere with or slow down the process.

“It wasn’t intended to infer that something happened that led us to pull out. It wasn’t that at all,” he said.

One thing driving Woodbine’s interest in the project was the city’s inducement package, but the city’s participation at that point was ill-defined. And, Woodbine knew the city was looking for minimal participation from the city and a larger proportion of equity from the developer.

“The rumor mill and real estate is pretty effective,” he said. “What we had been hearing was that there were already a couple of prospects that had lined up in the queue with us that were willing to directly own the project.”

With that information and no other information from the city, Woodbine’s greatest fear was it they would get into the project and “mess it up” for another developer or the city.

Some of those concerns may be reflected in a June 10 e-mail from Rob Hunden to Taylor Norman, the city purchasing agent, with copies to Melissa Dailey, Kelley Shaw and assistant city manager Vicki Covey. In that document, Hunden explained that bringing Journeyman in and giving them a month would work, but dragging the process out longer would frustrate the original developers chosen for the next step.

“There is already some fatigue with the process given the RFQ+RFP process,” Hunden wrote. “The more time provided the more costs mount for all involved.”

Hunden indicated that HRI and Garfield have already indicated some concerns to him about the rules of the game changing after the game starts.

With that, planning for the convention center hotel came to a halt.

And it did so very quietly.

The July 7 minutes refer to a meeting between the City Commission and DAI about ceasing the public (city) RFP process, a discussion not held during an open meeting with the City Commission, according to Dailey.

According to a July 7 e-mail exchange between Dailey and Les Simpson, Dailey was drafting a letter to the remaining potential developers telling them that progress on the hotel project would have to wait until the creation of a master land plan for the Civic Center area.

According to Dailey’s e-mailed response, the letter went out.

“I received phone calls from the developers, but no written replies,” her e-mail stated.

The optimistic draft letter, which apologized to developers for the inconvenience, touts the idea that such a plan would have a positive impact on the proposal process for hotel developers, and also states: “We anticipate initiating the hotel selection process in the near term. You may expect to be contacted within the next 180 days with complete information on the redevelopment effort including additionalproject elements.”

Woodbine’s Mowatt said Amarillo was a tough market and he was not surprised to learn that DAI and the city had put the process on hold.

The only way convention center hotels are going to be done in the current market, and maybe in most markets, is with substantial city participation, if not city ownership, he said, adding they become very political in nature.

Hunden did not respond to calls but on Sept. 9 e-mailed a refusal to comment: “Without knowing more information about what was released, I would not feel appropriate commenting at this time. Perhaps at a later date when we have a better understanding of what has been released and what has been redacted. I’m sorry I cannot be of more assistance today.”

Despite the perception of a hold on the hotel development, Dailey indicated in the minutes that someone was working in partnership with DAI to make a recommendation for the hotel developer. The person’s name was redacted and the standard answer to the reason was given: “Please refer to the letter to the Attorney General dated 8-31-10, which you have been sent a copy of by our attorney.”

In a review of documents that the Texas Attorney General’s Office ordered Downtown Amarillo Inc. to make public, The Amarillo Independent found that: a stadium or sports complex downtown may be further along than city commissioners have acknowledged during public meetings; DAI’s involvement in city affairs and with city employees is deeper than previously evident. Further, almost every initiative discussed in closed-door board meetings has taken longer than the optimistic time frames that the executive director has indicated to the board. And, DAI has introduced to the idea of a Public Improvement District for a part of downtown that raises questions — questions not answered byDAI’s responses.

Part 5-Will downtown revitalization be a home run?

Downtown ballpark remains possibility

On the second weekend in May, Downtown Amarillo Inc. Executive Director Melissa Dailey led a group to Grand Prairie for a night at the new ballpark there, the season opener for the Grand Prairie AirHogs.

QuikTrip Park is home to the AirHogs, who compete in the independent American Association, a league that last year had bid for the lease agreement for Potter County Memorial Stadium.

The AirHogs’ ballpark was built after a Grand Prairie election in 2007 on a 1/8th-cent sales tax to pay for the bulk of construction costs. When the measure was approved, Ventura Sports Group, which owns two minor league teams and is developing plans for four others, and which develops and operates stadiums, began work on QuikTrip Park in the city’s entertainment district.

The city of Grand Prairie put up $17 million, backed by the sales tax, and Ventura Sports, $1 million. The target for paying off the stadiumdebt is eight years, said Grand Prairie city spokeswoman Amy Sprinkles.

The city owns the property and collects $200,000 a year for its general fund. Ventura Sports operates the stadium and is responsible for its maintenance and upkeep, Sprinkles said.

QuikTrip Park— a convenience store chain bought the naming rights — seats 4,500 and includes 13 luxury seats. The outfield seating sections next to the foul poles and grass berms alongside the outfield foul lines make up the general admission areas and the $6 tickets. Club seats, at $13 a ticket, are along the infield foul lines and closest to the dugouts, while behind them the box seats go for $9.

Roger W. Christoph, a managing partner of Ventura Sports, recalls that weekend trip, saying he had visited with Dailey, but did not recall any conversation with any of the others in the group.

A May 3, 2010, e-mail indicated that Downtown Amarillo Inc. board members Les Simpson, Gary Pitner and Glen Parkey, and City Commissioner Jim Simms were planning to make the trip, with Commissioners Madison Scott and Ron Boyd and Mayor Debra McCartt checking on the possibility of attending.

Since that weekend, though, Christoph said he has not had contact with DAI or Dailey.

And the only response Dailey would give about the visit was in an e-mail exchange when she was asked why a trip to Grand Prairie was necessary.

“To follow up on a recommendation in the Downtown Strategic Action Plan by exploring an existing outdoor multi-purpose entertainment venue,” she wrote.

“There’s no contracts, proposals or letters of intent,” Christoph said.

Christoph was reluctant to discuss any interest that Ventura Sports might have in an Amarillo stadium, noting that at the end of August, while he was out of the country, DAI had sent information about The Amarillo Independent’s open-records request for DAI’s meetings, expenses and communications, and that he wanted to turn over that information to his attorney before commenting.

What Christoph was willing to discuss, though, were how Ventura Sports has invested in independent minor league franchises and operations and how it is expanding now.

Along with the seating at QuikTrip Park, the stadium includes a pool, a couple of party decks, a 17,000-square-foot playground, a sports bar and grill, and a cigar bar. After each game, as fans are leaving, they are polled about their experience at the park, he said. Some attendees are so busy with the other amenities that they cannot recall which team had won.

Instead of the stadium’s being shuttered at the end of the baseball season, it remains in use for such events as car shows, concerts, festivals and corporate events, which help offset the cost of operating the team.

Ventura Sports also owns the El Paso Diablos and their new stadium.

In August, the city of Laredo awarded Ventura Sports a contract to develop and manage a new $18 million stadium with 7,000 seats, to bedesigned by the architectural firm HKS of Dallas. The decision was made despite protests from the Laredo Broncos organization, which has played in the United League at Veterans Stadium.

Ventura Sports indicates that it will bring several American Association exhibitions and series to the older stadium in 2011 and will open the new stadium in 2012 as part of the American Association. Ventura Sports’ website indicates it is planning three other new stadiums in Topeka, Kan., Montgomery County, Texas, and Brighton, Colo.

Amarillo and a ballpark

In 2008, when DAI’s predecessor committee conducted meetings with the consultant Gideon Toal of Fort Worth, reactions from Amarilloans to a downtown ballpark were mixed, with some fearing a new stadium would mean much higher ticket prices and concessions, given the experience with two defunct franchises, the Amarillo Dusters in Arena2 football and the Amarillo Gorillas in the Central Hockey League. They feared the Dillas would be priced out.

When that committee had completed its work, a ballpark was addressed in the action plan that was handed over to DAI.

Its priorities include: “Attract family oriented venues, events and programs that bring groups to Downtown. Subject to financial feasibility, consider a Downtown minor league ball park associated with mixed use developments.”

Potter County commissioners were thrown into a quandary. The renovation of the vacant Santa Fe Building into county offices had jumpstarted downtown renewal, which now was a possible threat to another county asset, the 50-year-old Memorial Stadium, better known as the Dilla Villa.

When considering the stadium lease last November, commissioners quickly cut off a presentation from Scott Berry of Southern Independent Baseball, seeking an affiliation with the American Association, when he said he was eager to bring a team to town with a new downtown stadium. Thus, the Dillas got their crack at a third straight United League title.

Whether DAI pursues a downtown stadium has yet to be decided; there are few clues in the documents released by the Texas attorney general’s opinion indicating that the committee is fast-tracking a stadium.

But Dailey clearly has some opinions. In an e-mail to Simpson she wrote, “they are the right developers at the right time for us.”

She wrote to the Independent that the statement “was my professional opinion.”

And when asked whether DAI is actively engaged in bringing a ballpark/activities complex or some such facility (no matter what its name) downtown, she wrote, “We are actively engaged in bringing developers to downtown Amarillo and implementing the Strategic Action Plan, of which an outdoor multi-purpose entertainment venue was recommended as a potential development to explore.”

Still, questions emerge.

With the Amarillo National Center, the Civic Center, the United Center in Canyon and Memorial Stadium available for a variety of events, could another venue roughly the same seating size as the othersattract enough new events to be profitable for the operators without stealing events from the others?

Would a new stadium mean a working agreement with a new league and team other than the existing agreement with the United League and theDillas if a stadium developer sought a combination stadium-team arrangement?

Urban Design Standards and the convention hotel

The adoption of the urban design standards for downtown was not without some concern.

March 22, 2010, minutes of Center City of Amarillo’s subcommittee on design standards noted that several past attempts to develop and implement voluntary design standards to be led by Center City had failed.

One member of that subcommittee was Gabe Irving, a member of the Center City board, but also an employee of McCartt and Associates, the real estate firm owned by the mayor’s husband, Joe Bob McCartt.

Now, committee members expressed concern that too many small businesses in the downtown core would be affected with the triggering mechanism of $50,000. In some cases, the committee noted, costs could double for projects if the business owner was required to install pedestrian lighting or trees. Furthermore, some inconsistencies between current zoning regulations and the proposed standards could lead to a two-tier set of standards.

And, applying the development of those standards to a neighborhood adjacent to, but outside, the recognized downtown zone, is seen by some as heavy-handed.

After the residents of the Plemons-Eakle neighborhood voiced strong objections to the City Commission in July, the City Commission asked Dailey to meet with those residents. At the next commission meeting, Irma Heras and Amy Taylor-Restine objected to Dailey’s behavior at the meeting, saying she kept “rolling her eyes” at their statements.

Dailey documented her meeting with the residents in an e-mail to Simpson on July 9.

“A few of the residents, 6 or 7, showed up,” she wrote. “The discussion was all over the map, from we’re Americans and are free, to Jesus Christ, to Obama, the citywide comprehensive plan, and a variety of issues in the current city ordinances.”

Noting that DAI board member Gary Pitner and Center City Executive Director Beth Duke were also present, Dailey wrote that the specific issues of fencing, trees, lighting and sidewalks were fully addressed.

“We’re down to the principle of more government control versus less. They’re likely going to show up Tuesday,” anticipating a subsequent City Commission meeting.

Since then, the residents have mounted a petition drive to overturn the urban design standards.

Meanwhile, during March and April, the city’s planning effort confused the hotel developers as well.

City officials backtracked with the hotel developers who were filing responses to request for proposals asking them to respond to additional questions. Whether this contributed to the confusion and the perception of changing rules isn’t clear, but at this point what is clear is that two of the developers dropped out.

One of the issues was asking developers to respond to a question about whether Fifth and Sixth avenues should be closed as part of a redevelopment of the area around the Civic Center and Globe-News Center for the Performing Arts. The responses were mixed.

Journeyman Austin Holdings noted, in an April 9 letter to the city, that closing Fifth and Sixth avenues could create a pedestrian mall or a parking garage between the convention center hotel and the Globe-News Center.

Coming Sunday: The Wrap-up. Delayed projects and out-of-town vendors

Part 6 – On time? Not so much

The July 6, 2009, DAI board minutes report on a discussion of the planned downtown urban design standards, with a committee to begin moving forward on the development of the design standards.

“To date all of the property owners Melissa has met with have had a positive reaction to design standards,” the minutes state. “Topics covered will include building façade, walkways, landscaping, signage. It is expected that the final draft to take to property owners will be complete within 90 days.”

Those design standards were not adopted until a year later, but nowhere in reviewing the documents is there any board discussion about why it took so long.

Perhaps it was confusion over the process because one month later, at an Aug. 6, 2009, meeting, Dailey presented her 2009-2010 priority action items ¾items which were not clearly delineated in earlier minutes released to the Independent. But, according to the Aug. 6 minutes, it was the same list as presented previously.

“It was recommended to reverse the order of the planning and economic development goals when presented to others,” the minutes state, implying a different internal agenda than the one shown the public.

The board unanimously approved that action.

In her director’s report, Dailey discussed the mission statement. She again reported a committee’s having been formed and moving forward on the design standards for downtown. And, she repeated, all of the property owners she had met with to date had had a positive reaction to those standards. Once again, she proposed a 90-day time frame.

Is Amarillo good enough?

While the minutes as early as 2008 show the use of local vendors for such mundane items as office supplies and furniture, Dailey chose contacts in Fort Worth for two major projects.

As early as December 2008, the board began discussing the possibility of the website for Downtown Amarillo Inc.

But one website domain name was already owned by a local businessman, reported the minutes: “Wes (Reeves) found a link to downtown Amarillo that is owned by Don Paxton. He plans to do some research to determine if the link could be purchased by Center City.”

Reeves is a DAI board member and spokesman for Xcel Energy.

Discussion about the website came up again during the May 6, 2009, meeting, when board President Les Simpson reported that a company purchased the Downtown Amarillo Inc. domain name in 2005 with the intent to resell it in the current asking price of $2,000 was higher than anticipated.

Ultimately, DAI got its domain name, but who would build the site?

In a proposed budget in April 2010, DAI included a $6,000 cost for website design with The Enilon Group, based in Fort Worth.

Dailey acknowledged she didn’t contact any local Web-builders in Amarillo.

“Economic development organizations like DAI require a specific set of tools and capabilities that are very specialized and we approached three companies that had demonstrated experience across the country in this type of website,” she wrote. “While we have many fine local website developers in Amarillo, we are not aware of any that specialize in creating this type of website.”

Maybe not, but Amarillo has at least one company with acknowledged expertise in complex Web design, including projects for national firms.

Eric Spellmann, of Spellmann and Associates, wrote that his company has experience developing websites for a broad range of industry needs, ranging from a “simple two-page brochure” site to “complex, database-driven” sites for national customers.

“Our projects showcase local expertise normally assumed to only be available in larger markets,” he wrote. “While we are disappointed that Downtown Amarillo did not give us the opportunity to bid on their website project, we are open to any assistance we can lend in highlighting the incredible business opportunities that lie downtown.”

The June 9, 2009, minutes state, “Melissa said that we need to get a website up and running as soon as possible to be used as a tool to get the message out.”

As of Thursday, Sept. 16, the DAI website still is only partially operational.

“We’ll be launching our full site soon!” the website states, with no information how to directly contact DAI except for the Web-based form. The only other information on the page are links to the Downtown Strategic Action Plan and Downtown Urban Design Standards.

Reliance on outside support from Fort Worth, which is where Dailey hadworked before coming to Amarillo, was for an even broader task and,
ostensibly, Downtown Amarillo Inc.’s mandate.

Daily recommended, as recorded in the Sept. 1, 2009, board minutes, that DAI retain Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. of Fort Worth.

“They’re very good at downtown planning and Melissa suggested that we may want to use them for projects in the future,” the minutes state. “The master contract essentially serves as a retainer to be able to utilize Jacobs for projects without the delay of going through individual contracts going through their legal dept. A one-page agreement could be entered into for individual project. Board approved unanimously.”

According to the Jacobs website: “Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. is one of the world’s largest and most diverse providers of professional technical services. With 2009 revenues exceeding $11 billion, we offer full-spectrum support to industrial, commercial, and government clients across multiple markets. Services include scientific and specialty consulting as well as all aspects of engineering and construction, and operations and maintenance.”

Dailey wrote that she had contacted local firms for services, but she did not indicate what the specific requests for proposals were nor what the firms were. She acknowledged heavy reliance on Fort Worth-based firms, but didn’t directly answer why she recommended those.

“We currently have partnerships with two Fort Worth firms for planning and market feasibility consulting services, and website development,” she wrote in the e-mail to the Independent.

The Bottom Line

During August, city departments and city-supported agencies such as the Amarillo Economic Development Corp. and Downtown Amarillo Inc. presented their budgets to commissioners during a work session. There were few questions posed to Dailey or Simpson about DAI’s performance.

Perhaps that’s because there are no criteria for performance, a question that came up as early as Aug. 13, 2008. At that board meeting, during a discussion of the bylaws, Rev. Howard Batson, a board member, questioned clauses in that document that mention terms such as “if the company underperforms.”

Batson asked for a definition of what “’underperforms’ means.”

Nowhere in the record of that meeting or subsequent ones was there an answer.

Room for debate on hotel

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Originally posted on Amarillo.com http://www.amarillo.com/stories/030110/new_news5.shtml

Room for debate on hotelConvention center site contentious

By Karen Smith Welch
karen.welch@amarillo.com
Publication Date: 03/01/10
Supporters contend a downtown convention center hotel would be the killer app needed to help Amarillo reach conference planners who ignore markets without one.

Wish listThe city of Amarillo’s hotel wish list:
  • 250 or 300 rooms
  • Ballrooms and meeting spaces of specific sizes
  • Amenities such as restaurants, a lounge, bar, coffee bar, pool and business center
  • A parking garagePossible public financing tools that could be used:
  • Property tax rebates available through the Center City Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone
  • A city of Amarillo rebate of hotel-motel revenue taxes generated solely by the convention hotel once it is open
  • U.S. Treasury Department New Market Tax Credit money issued by banks for commercial projects intended to revitalize low- to moderate-income neighborhoodsSource: City of Amarillo convention hotel documentsGlossaryRevPAR: Revenue per Available Room is a hotel industry measure. It is derived by dividing the total guest room revenue by the total number of available rooms. RevPAR differs from an average daily rate measure because RevPAR is affected by the amount of unoccupied available rooms, while the average daily rate shows only the average rate of rooms actually sold.

    Market 008 2009 $ change

    Amarillo $36.44 $34.04 -2.40

    Abilene $39.97 $32.91 – 7.06

    Austin $76.22 $63.72 -12.50

    Dallas $59.64 $49.11 -10.53

    Houston $69.52 $53.42 -16.10

    Lubbock $43.73 $39.82 -3.91

    Midland $55.09 $39.30 -15.79

    San Antonio $70.13 $54.99 -15.14

    Wichita Falls $30.97 $31.75 + .78

    Source: Source Strategies Inc.

“You’ve got the (convention facility) space. That’s not changing,” said Rob Hunden, the city of Amarillo’s hotel consultant. “Do you fill it, or do you let it sit there?”But critics say the project would be a killer, period.

“If you build a convention hotel downtown, all you’re going to do is destroy the small mom and pop hotels in this community,” said Tom Muse, general manager of the Holiday Inn at Interstate 40 and Ross Street.

“Unless somebody could show me on paper that they (Amarillo) have lost out on $20 or $30 million in revenue in a 12-month period for this community, I can’t see where it (the project) would ever be justified.”

Hunden justified it in October 2008 by estimating that a convention hotel built across Buchanan Street from the Amarillo Civic Center could generate $33 million in annual spending on its operations, $10.4 million more in personal income annually through the creation of about 800 jobs and $3.9 million in revenues from property, sales, hotel-motel and auto-rental taxes.

He estimated the project could cost $50 million to $80 million.

Amarillo doesn’t want to own a hotel, as other cities have opted to do. But it would consider offering public incentives to entice a private developer to build and operate one, Hunden said.

How much those incentives might be worth remains an undetermined bargaining chip.

Notice that the city is hunting for a development team to build and operate a hotel was distributed widely by Hunden, the city and Downtown Amarillo Inc., a nonprofit promoting downtown revitalization.

Developers that survive a qualifications round will be whittled to finalists that will be asked to submit specific project proposals.

The hotel market has softened since the economic downturn, Hunden told 15 to 20 developers gathered for an optional pre-bid meeting Feb. 18, but “we believe there’s enough horsepower there” to support a convention hotel.

Others argue the combination of the recession, which has weakened travel demand, and rooms just built or under construction make this the wrong time to consider public incentives to assist one hotelier.

“Can we wait until we fill the rooms that we have built before we add another blow?” Ambassador Hotel General Manager Phyllis Payne asked. “The economy is the poorest it’s ever been, and we continue to build hotel after hotel.”

The average occupancy rate in Amarillo hasn’t suffered as much as it has in other cities in Texas and elsewhere, industry analysts Jan Freitag, of Smith Travel Research, and Doug Sutton, of Source Strategies said last month.

Seven properties costing more than $50 million total are under construction or about to launch, including a Holiday Inn that will be full service, meaning it will contain a restaurant and other amenities. Combined, the projects will add almost 770 rooms to the market inventory.

But the Amarillo market isn’t pulling in enough revenue per available room, Payne said.

“We’re the worst performer in the state,” she said.

The Amarillo market logged a RevPAR, as the statistic is known in the hotel industry, of $34.04 for 2009, down from $36.44 in 2008, according to Source Strategies Inc.

The figure ranks below most of the RevPARs of larger Texas cities, such as Dallas and Austin, as well as cities more comparable to Amarillo.

“It would be wonderful to have a hotel in downtown Amarillo, but it would be more wonderful to have more business and to have those people stay in the rooms that we have,” Payne said.

But market RevPAR data must be looked at on a case-by-case basis, Sutton said.

“You can’t just say, ‘We’re really a horrible hotel market because our RevPAR doesn’t compare,’ ” Sutton said.

A market that contains a military base, for example, might see more travelers who stay in budget hotels, he said. Therefore, a lower RevPAR could work for properties that charge lesser rates.

Muse blamed loss of convention business on a lack of aggressive marketing by the Amarillo Convention and Visitor Council, which receives hotel tax money for the job.

CVC Vice President Jerry Holt disagreed.

Amarillo did lose two weekends, representing about 5,000 room nights, of what traditionally has been a three-weekend Jehovah’s Witness conference because the city isn’t as central a location for the group anymore, he said.

“But we’re holding our own,” Holt said, “particularly considering everything else that’s going on in the marketplace and in the economy.”

The key to booking more convention business is a hotel situated a short walk from convention facilities, “and if it doesn’t exist, the city might not even have a shot at bidding on the business,” said Deborah Sexton, CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association.

Outlying hotels will benefit from overflow room bookings, she said.

Sure, Amarillo will be better able to compete, Sutton countered, but it will do so against cities that have more pull as destinations.

Developers interested in pursuing a hotel project must submit first-round information to the city by 4 p.m. March 9.

The hotel must open in late January 2013 or earlier, according to city specifications.
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