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Update from Tuesday’s Common Council Meeting …

Several key road projects got a boost at Tuesday’s South Milwaukee Common Council meeting.

Of specific note for the 4th District, the council voted unanmiously to seek bids on repaving of the “stub” streets east and west of 15th Avenue (Pine, Chestnut, Cedar, Michigan and Marquette). I’ll keep you posted on what comes back, and if this work moves ahead.

The project is expected to be costly. Of course, if you’ve had the displeasure of having to drive on these roads, you know it’s probably money well spent. Yes, these streets are not high-traffic thoroughfares, but the time has come to fix these. Now.  

The council also unamiously approved the design and engineering contract for the planned widening of Pennsylvania/Nicholson from College to Rawson. Look for updates on this blog about public information meetings on this project this spring and summer.

The South Milwaukee Downtown Market also got a boost from the council, which approved funding for minor improvements to 11th Avenue between Milwaukee and Madison Avenues. This project will feature significant patching work to make the street smoother — and safer.

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County Board to Consider Lake Parkway Resolution

From the “baby steps are better than no steps at all” file …

The Milwaukee County Board will consider at its meeting Thursday a resolution requesting the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning partner with area communities to study extending the Lake Parkway south to Ryan Road or beyond.

Learn more in the February edition of County Supervisor Pat Jursik’s E-News newsletter. She also has updates on the Hoan Bridge and transit funding in this issue. You can also check out my previous post on this topic, and click here to see a one-page PDF showing a potential route for the extension of 794.

I’ll keep you posted as this progresses … even though it may be a decade or more before we see the road extended south. I hope it gets off the ground much sooner than that. This is a great project for the 4th District, South Milwaukee and the entire region.

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Previewing Tuesday’s South Milwaukee Common Council Meeting

It’s a rather light agenda for Tuesday’s South Milwaukee Common Council meeting, but there are a few topics of note.

They include discussion and action on three public works projects, two of which directly impact the 4th District: 

I’ll keep you updated on all of these, including the “stub” streets issue. These streets have needed work for years, and I’m hoping 2010 is finally the time it gets done. 

You can read the entire agenda here.

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Updating Two Key South Milwaukee Road Projects

We’re making strong progress on two South Milwaukee, and 4th District, road projects. We discussed the two jobs – the rehabilitation of 15th Avenue and the widening of Pennsylvania/Nicholson, both from College Avenue south to Rawson – at Thursday night’s Public Works and Property meeting.

 Here’s where we stand …

15th Avenue

Bids will be open on February 23, and work on the rehab project is expected to begin in April, wrapping up in October.

The plans include the addition of six-foot medians at Cherry, Walnut and Beech Streets to emphasize school zone and pedestrian crossings, slow traffic and improve safety. For traffic control, left turns for those traveling north on 15th to those streets will be prohibited from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. and 2 and 4 p.m. on regular school days.

The pavement will also be widened on the east side of 15th from 150 feet south of Cherry to 200 feet north of Beech to accommodate the median and allow for a designated turn lane for the dropping off of South Milwaukee Middle School students.

 It also includes:

  • Full concrete pavement replacement of travel lanes;
  • Full replacement of the pavement and island at 15th and College Avenue; and
  • Spot replacement of deteriorated curb and gutter and parking lane pavement.

The project will be completed in five stages, with the area south of Cedar to south of Oak Creek Parkway – closest to the schools – planned for mid-June to September 1. Connecting local streets will be closed during the construction stages, and traffic will need to use other routes.

So expect minor delays, and some frustrations, but remember the bigger picture here … and keep thinking about the first-class roadway 15th will be when it’s done.

Also remember who’s paying for it. It’s being primarily funded with federal stimulus money, with an anticipated city portion of $150,000. It’s a worthy investment.

Click here to see the letter we’re sending to area residents about the project.

Pennsylvania/Nicholson

This project is coming into much clearer focus, and I like what I see.

At the Public Works meeting, we authorized City Engineer Kyle Vandercar to enter into a three-party design engineering services contract between South Milwaukee, the Wisconsin Department of Transportation and Foth Infrastructure & Environment for the project at a cost not to exceed $390,000. The full Common Council will vote on this at its Tuesday, February 2, meeting.

So, as we enter the design and engineering phase, here are some updates on the project:

  • Construction is currently set for 2012.
  • Preliminary engineering work will include design options for a public information meeting likely next May or June. I’ll keep you posted.
  • Project construction costs are estimated at $4 million. South Milwaukee and Oak Creek would each pay $400,000, with the state picking up the rest.
  • Total project costs for South Milwaukee are estimated at $640,000, including our share of design and other costs not covered by the state and right-of-way acquisition.
  • The project will likely focus on two options – widening the road to four lanes or four lanes with a median. Other options are unlikely. That includes an approach favored by some: a three-lane option (two through lanes and a middle turn lane). The state is unlikely to approve such design because current and future traffic counts require a wider road, and studies have shown that such a design is unsafe.  

We are moving ahead with the project with or without involvement from the U.S. Postal Service, whose plans for the postal sorting facility at College and Nicholson are still on hold and may never get off the ground.

That means there won’t be a roundabout as part of the project.

The potential extension of 794 south to Ryan Road or beyond also probably won’t factor much into this project. At best, it seems like the Parkway extension won’t happen until 2025, or perhaps 2035, and I’d argue the work on Pennsylvania/Nicholson can’t wait.

Of course, I promise to keep you posted on both of these projects as they get closer.

In the meantime, I want to know what you think. Post your comments below.

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Enjoying a Good South Milwaukee Meal

As someone who seldom misses a meal — check out the photo on the front page of this blog for evidence — I am lucky to live in South Milwaukee.

The reason: Our city is full of great restaurants.

You can add another one to the list: Paisano’s. The restaurant opened earlier this month at 113 North Chicago Avenue.

Our party of six (me, my wife, in-laws and two children) had a first-class dining experience at Paisano’s for lunch on Sunday. Among my impressions:

  • The new owners put a lot of money into the interior. It looks bright, clean and vibrant, inviting from the moment you walk in the door.  
  • The service was fantastic. It almost seemed like the resturant was overstaffed with servers — always a good problem to have. And they were friendly, and responsive.
  • And the food? It was quite good, from my spaghetti and meaballs to the French dip sandwich my wife ordered to the smothered chicken my mother-in-law enjoyed. The breakfast items the others in our group ordered were also tasty.
  • The portions were huge, and the prices were very reasonable.

In other words, great atmosphere, service, food and value. Paisano’s is a winner.

With that in mind, I’d like hear what your favorite South Milwaukee restaurants are … and why. Post your comments below.

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Headlines from South Milwaukee’s Neighbor …

There’s a lot going on in Oak Creek these days, and it’s not all good news. Here’s a sampling of Milwaukee Journal Sentinel headlines from just the past few days.

I’m especially intrigued to see the progress of the Oak Creek “Civic Center.” I’ll keep you posted on this.

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South Milwaukee School Superintendent to Retire

South Milwaukee School District Superintendent David Ewald is retiring.

He will leave at the end of the school year after 11 years on the job. From the posting on the school district’s website:

In his letter to the School Board in which he sought his release into retirement, he describes himself as being blessed beyond all expectations to have spent his entire working life working side by side with some of the most remarkable people in the world in support of children and their families. 

He describes his experience within the community of South Milwaukee as a profoundly gratifying experience, noting that the city of South Milwaukee is truly a great place for families… a safe place of collaborative relationships, superb recreational opportunities, excellent neighborhood schools and parks. And all this just a stone’s throw from the big city benefits of the city of Milwaukee.

As the proud parent of a Rawson Elementary kindergartner, I can personally attest to the quality of the school district Ewald has helped build. Good luck, Dave.

Click here to see an Ewald bio.

I’ll keep you posted on the search for his replacement, which apparently will begin with a closed session meeting of the South Milwaukee School Board on Wednesday.

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Where I Stand on Regional Transit … and Rail

As I said in a previous post, I had the pleasure of attending last week’s press conference at Bucyrus International where Governor Jim Doyle joined business, labor and political leaders to announce the introduction of a bill to create a Southeastern Wisconsin regional transit authority.

I called it “a new day” in the longstanding debate over regional transit funding and the future of the Kenosha-Racine-Milwaukee commuter rail line.

It’s not hyperbole, and here’s why: It’s because of who was in the room.

Yes, Doyle’s support is no surprise. Nor is the support of organized labor, and they were certainly well represented and made their voices heard. Rather, it was the presence of the business executives that sent the strongest message.

Bucyrus. SC Johnson. Northwestern Mutual. Johnson Controls. AT&T.

One after another, the chief executives of all of these companies stepped to the microphone at the press conference and told those in attendance the exact same thing – that they support Doyle’s RTA proposal and the bus transit and KRM trains it will help fund.

Their reason? Economic development and jobs, jobs, jobs … using transit to get workers to their front doors. Indeed, Bucyrus CEO Tim Sullivan pointed out that a KRM station would likely be located within a half block of its main entrance.

As Sullivan and the others spoke, I couldn’t help but think that this gathering marked a tipping point in this often too-contentious debate, one in which ridicule and scorn has too often replaced reasoned and rational discourse.

No longer can conservatives claim that support for KRM and regional transit is purely a liberal issue. No longer can they deride supporters as lefty “choo-choo train” lovers.  

No, this is now a big business issue, a conservative cause, a liberal cause, a bipartisan cause. The presence of those corporate leaders on Tuesday showed that more than anything.

That’s why I think you will indeed see the RTA bill pass and the KRM trains ultimately leave the station. And it’s why I’ll be the first to welcome the trains to South Milwaukee.

 Of course, there are global reasons for my support.

For starters, our area’s transit funding mechanism (one based on property taxes) is broken. Look no further than the “death by a thousand cuts” state our county bus system is in. We need a new way to pay for transit, and we need to join most other major metropolitan areas in making that a sales tax and RTA.

We also lag behind our peers in not having rail as part of our transit arsenal. Cities that we are competing with for jobs have rail as a drawing card. We don’t, and that hurts us.

I also strongly believe a regional approach to transit is a must if the Milwaukee area is to compete with other cities across the country. An RTA provides that.

Yet, while I believe all of these are valid arguments for an RTA and KRM, my support for both is not based on any of them. My strong support is based on the fact that an RTA will help bring the KRM to life, and the KRM is good for South Milwaukee.

Here’s why: 

  • Commuter rail is a boon for Bucyrus. Sullivan said it best when he said the KRM trains will be instrumental in attracting new talent to Bucyrus – a priority given the perhaps 500 new people the company will be bringing to South Milwaukee as a result of its acquisition of the mining division of Terex Corporation. The same argument could be made for Cooper Power, Metalcut, Appleton Electric and any other city employer. Getting workers from Point A (home) to Point B (work) and back again is perhaps the biggest argument for the KRM extension.
  • Commuter rail is a boon for our downtown. Sometimes forgotten in this debate is what the KRM could mean to our city center. Simply, a downtown station could spur a rebirth in this critically important district. Look at the numerous examples in northern Illinois – if done well and planned properly, commuter rail stations spur development. There is no argument here. Draw a six-block radius around your station, and new business and residential growth will follow there. That means a new day for a downtown that needs it.
  • Commuter rail will draw new residents to our city. So, you’ve just been hired at Abbott Labs, Baxter or some other major Lake County, Illinois, employer, but there’s no way your family can afford to live there. Nor do you event want a life in exurbia. Why not consider South Milwaukee? We’re a clean, safe, affordable community located 10 minutes from downtown Milwaukee … and maybe less than an hour from your job on the train. That’s what KRM will bring our city – new prospective homeowners and apartment renters, and demand for new housing near the station. What an opportunity.

Now, even with all those positives for South Milwaukee, I realize this is no slam dunk, and the RTA and KRM are not without their political pitfalls.

The KRM is costly – more than $200 million to get it up and running, according to the latest estimates – and it will require some sort of taxpayer subsidy going forward. Fares will not support it alone. And Doyle’s RTA plan is sure to be unpopular with some, as it calls for a 0.5% sales tax increase to pay for busses, trains and other transit options.

Yet while holding the line on taxes and spending should be a focus for any elected official, there are times when increasing both is justified as an investment in a worthy effort that promises a strong return. This is one of those times … and the KRM is one of those projects.

But don’t listen to me. Listen to Tim Sullivan, Fisk Johnson, Bob Mariano and Stephen Roell — the business leaders who spoke last Tuesday.

Let’s invest in South Milwaukee. Let’s get the trains rolling. It’s time.

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Learn More About Some 4th District Road Projects

Looking for an update on the upcoming improvements to Pennsylvania/Nicholson and 15th Avenue? Stop by the Public Works and Property Committee meeting next Thursday.

The meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall.

On the agenda are more details on the 15th Avenue rehabilitation and Pennsylvania/Nicholson expansion projects, including more details on the project schedules and the city’s cost share amount for both.

Among the questions I’ll have are what, if any, impact any southward of the Lake Parkway may have on the Pennsylvania/Nicholson project. My first inclination? Probably not much. Pennsylvania/Nicholson needs works, sooner rather than later. It certainly can’t wait until the Parkway project proceeds, if it ever does.

Check out earlier posts on 15th Avenue and Pennsylvania/Nicholson for more.

Also to be discussed are other potential 2010 projects. One I’m pushing for are improvements to 11th Avenue south of Milwaukee to accomodate the South Milwaukee Downtown Market. The street is literally crumbling, and it’s unsafe for market shoppers … and drivers. A better street will ensure the long-term viability of the market at that location.

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Update: Unanimous Approval for Parkway Extension Study

The Milwaukee County Board’s Transportation, Public Works and Transit Committee unanimously passed a resolution on Wednesday calling for a formal study of the Lake Parkway south to Ryan Road or beyond.

South Milwaukee Mayor Tom Zepecki and South Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce President Bryan Lorentzen were among those who spoke in favor of the proposal at the committee meeting. I also strongly support the idea.

Click here to see the press release from County Supervisor Pat Jursik, who is driving this.

I’ll keep you posted on this issue as it moves forward.

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Keeping Up: Some News from Our Neighbors

Here are some Milwaukee Journal Sentinel headlines you might be interested in.

I especially want to keep my eyes on how effective the Cudahy business initiative is. There could be some lessons for South Milwaukee coming from our neighbor to the north …

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Milwaukee County Board Committee To Take Up Lake Parkway Extension

First, it stopped at Layton Avenue. Now, Edgerton.

Wouldn’t it be nice if the Lake Parkway extended all the way to Ryan Road, or even Racine County?

That’s the subject of a resolution the Milwaukee County Transportation Committee will consider at a meeting on Wednesday. 

The resolution, being introduced by Supervisor Pat Jursik, seeks County Board support for a Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission study of the concept and encourages the city councils of St. Francis, Cudahy, Milwaukee, Oak Creek and South Milwaukee to go on record in supporting an extension to Racine County.

As someone who takes this road every day — and deals with the annoying traffic backups at Edgerton and bottlenecks at College and Pennsylvania — it would certainly have my vote.

To my point, as the resolution states, the Parkway carries more than 46,000 vehicles per day, but “the residents of Oak Creek, South Milwaukee and Racine County are required to use local residential streets to access the Lake Parkway and these streets are not designed for the current or future traffic.”
 
Indeed, an extension is overdue. And give credit to Jursik for pushing for it. 
 
 Read the entire resolution, which I received in an email from the South Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce, here.

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A New Day for Regional Transit Dawns in South Milwaukee

Regional tranportation got a major lift on Tuesday, and it happened in South Milwaukee.

Governor Jim Doyle joined the chief executives of Bucyrus International, Northwestern Mutual, Johnson Controls, SC Johnson, Roundy’s and AT&T to unveil legislation to create a Southeastern Wisconsin regional transit authority and, in doing so, fix our broken system of transportation funding and get the Kenosha-Racine-Milwaukee commuter line back on track. 

It’s a big win for our city and region.

The gathering at Bucyrus International’s Heritage Building showed real alignment of key business, labor and political interests around a unified approach to transit. Their common goal? Economic development and jobs, job, jobs.

I was happy to attend this event, and Bucyrus CEO Tim Sullivan should get a lot of credit for making it happen.

I’ll have more to say about this in an upcoming post. For now, here are some headlines from the press conference:

You can access the full press release here.

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Lots to Talk About: Previewing Tuesday’s South Milwaukee Common Council Meeting

Tuesday’s South Milwaukee Common Council meeting promises to be a busy one. Among the items on the agenda:

  • Several items from the Legislation and Permits Committee, at the request of Police Chief Ann Wellens. I’ve already written about the proposed business security camera mandate and a potential “sober server” ordinance. We’ll also be discussing increasing some ordinance fine amounts. Some of the biggest increases would involve disorderly conduct ($169 to $338), discharge of a firearm ($295 to $676) and misuse of 911 ($169 to $213). I am inclined to support all of these changes … and hopefully others down the road.
  • The Council will also vote on a resolution to set the amount the city would charge property owners for snow and ice removal at $75 per hour “or any fraction of an hour.” Learn more about this subject in this post.
  • We’ll also vote on officially endorsing the Milwaukee Gateway Aerotropolis and on awarding of a conditional use permit for the construction of a new office and storage building at Emerson (formerly Appleton Electric) at 2101 5th Avenue.

One other note: The Council will surely accept South Milwaukee Police Sgt. Glen Gossett’s letter of retirement. He is retiring after 26 years of service. Please join me in wishing him well.

The meeting starts at 7 p.m. at City Hall. You can see the full Council agenda here.

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Business Journal: South Milwaukee’s Bucyrus Investment Pays Dividends

I am a believer in tax incremental financing districts … if used properly. And the city’s decision in 2005 to move ahead with TIF #4 is an example of their value.   

TIF #4, with a preliminary budget of $24 million, was formed to help Bucyrus in its renovation and expansion plans. It’s an investment that is now paying huge dividends, with Bucyrus’ announcement in December that it will acquire the mining division of Terex Corp. and bring up to 500 additional jobs to South Milwaukee in the next several years.

This would not have happened without the TIF district. Don’t believe me? Believe the words of Bucyrus President Tim Sullivan, who said as much in a story in The Business Journal on Friday.

Click here to see  an excerpt from the piece. A subscription is required for the full version. From the story:

Major renovations made to Bucyrus International Inc.’s South Milwaukee manufacturing complex in recent years turned out to be critical to expected future job growth tied to the company’s latest acquisition, the largest in its history.

Bucyrus’ pending deal to purchase a division of Terex Corp. could add 400 to 500 employees at the surface and underground mining equipment manufacturer’s factory and corporate headquarters in South Milwaukee over the next three years, company president and chief executive officer Timothy Sullivan said.

“We have the capacity to move some work to South Milwaukee,” Sullivan said.

That capacity would not have existed without our TIF investment.

You can learn more about South Milwaukee’s TIF #4 on the South Milwaukee Community Development Authority site here.

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