Tag Archives: Gatlin Development

Council Backs Walmart Development Agreement … And Why I Voted No

Update: Check out Business Journal and Journal Sentinel coverage of the issue. 

Nearly a year after it was first proposed, and several months after it appeared all but dead, the Walmart deal is moving ahead – with the city pledging to spend up to $1.8 million on site cleanup costs to help make it happen.

The City Council, after a lengthy closed session, voted 5-2 in open session Tuesday night to approve terms of a development agreement with Gatlin Development and Walmart.

It passed 5-2. Alderman Craig Maass and I voted no. Alderman Frank Van Dusen III abstained.

Why did I vote no? I felt it was the right thing to do – the only decision I could make if I truly believe in ensuring that citizens’ voices are heard on key issues, if and when possible.

I’ll explain more about my rationale later. First, some background.

The plan itself has not changed much since it was first proposed in late 2010, when the council approved selling its portion of the property necessary for the project to Gatlin Development.

It calls for a 115,215 -square-foot retail store (and outlot) on approximately 10 acres of land in the 200 block of North Chicago Avenue — 3.6 acres of city-owned land on the east and another 5.8 acres west of 11th Avenue. About one third of the building would be devoted to full-service grocery, with the remainder planned for general merchandise and a pharmacy. The project will create between 150 to 200 jobs, with about 60 percent of them full-time.

This, of couse, is year-old information. What has become clearer in recent days, however, is the amount of money that Gatlin and Walmart are seeking to make the project a reality. Early on, Walmart was not seeking any city funds to make this happen. Now, that figure stands at up to $1.8 million.

Why the change? It has to do to with site cleanup costs, both of the city property abutting Chicago Avenue and the privately owned property to the west. Environmental testing has found both sites, especially the private property, to be in need of significant cleanup in order to make it suitable for building.

Consultants have put this cost at about $3.6 million.

  • Walmart has committed to contribute $1.8 million of that.
  • The city would spend $800,000 to clean up the portion of the property it owns between 11th and Chicago Avenues – money we would admittedly have to spend if Walmart wanted to build on the site or not.
  • The city would also contribute up to another $1 million for cleanup of the remaining parcel.  (I say “up to” because included in that figure is $500,000 that the city will pay only if necessary, as the last money into the deal.)

Walmart would fund other site upgrades, including installation of a traffic signal on Chicago Avenue, stormwater management and other road improvements.

The city cleanup costs would come through Tax Incremental Financing District #2, where the Walmart would be built.

As you recall, in a TIF district the city borrows money to fund infrastructure costs to improve an otherwise undesirable property. The loan is paid for by the property tax “increment” of the new development – the difference between the property taxes collected under the old use (in this case, vacant land) and new use (here, a perhaps $12 million Walmart, among other projects in TIF #2).

In fact, it was estimated Tuesday night that the Walmart development could “pay back” the city’s $1 million in “extra” cleanup investment by 2016, with the property going back on the tax roles then.

TIF financing is widely used across the state to help spur development – and it’s being used in bringing Walmarts to other communities (including West Milwaukee). I generally support it. But I know it can be controversial, as it uses city tax dollars to help fund private projects.

That gets to why I voted no.

The addition of the city-funded cleanup costs to the project has changed the debate, in my mind. The “Should Walmart build in South Milwaukee?” question of the past year is now “Should the city contribute up to $1.8 million to help Walmart build in South Milwaukee?” These are two very different questions.

I think there was strong support locally for the former. As to the latter, I’m not so sure. That’s why I felt strongly that the community should be heard on it before the council gave its blessing to the development agreement.

I made a motion stating as much: to hold a public information meeting on the project next week with the idea that the council give its approval or denial at its next meeting on Sept. 20. This seemed to be a fair compromise, one that allows Walmart to continue on its accelerated schedule — one driven by an expiring purchase option on the private land west of the city parcel — while at the same time allowing for at least one round of public comment before council action on the new information contained in the proposed development agreement.

That motion failed, 5-3 (with me, Maass and Van Dusen III voting yes).

Then came the motion to approve the development agreement, and I stand behind my vote on it 100 percent.

Now, I may end up voting in favor of this project in the end – but only after residents share their thoughts at the various public hearings coming up in the next couple of months. Your voices first need to be heard on this. I owe my constituents that much.

(Of course, that starts with this blog. Post your comments below, and vote in the poll question on the right side of this page. Call or email me anytime. And I will keep you posted on the public hearing dates.)

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Updating the Walmart Proposal

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has just posted a story updating Walmart’s plans for South Milwaukee.

Check it out here. From the story:

A Walmart development proposal hasn’t yet been filed with city officials. But Gatlin and Walmart are still working on their plans, says Danielle Devlin, South Milwaukee Community Development Authority executive director.

The project is complicated in part because the proposed site, 10 acres west of Chicago Ave., one block south of College Ave., will need an environmental cleanup, Devlin told me.

Gatlin and Walmart are conducting an environmental study of the site, which includes 3.5 acres owned by the city and 6.5 acres owned by Briohn Building Co. A development plan cannot be filed until the study is completed, with an environmental cleanup plan approved by the state Department of Natural Resources.

“We still expect things to move forward,” Devlin said.

In other words, the story is pretty much in line with what I’ve written about in the past few months. I’ll keep you posted as I learn more.

And here is an update from NOW on the Walmart proposed for Wauwatosa.

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Walmart Backs out in the Falls

Update: Here is a Journal Sentinel story on this.

Walmart is no longer interested in building a new store in Menomonee Falls, according to The Business Journal.

Read the story here. From it:

On Jan. 4, the Menomonee Falls Plan Commission unanimously opposed a request by Gatlin to rezone a site at West Lisbon and Pilgrim roads for a 115,000-square-foot Walmart. Fitzgerald said he’s not sure if Gatlin plans to bring the rezoning request back later or if it’s giving up on the proposal, which faced heavy criticism from Menomonee Falls residents. Lisa Nelson, a regional spokeswoman for Wal-Mart Stores Inc., said the company is taking a fresh look at the site based on feedback from neighbors and the village.

I don’t really have much of an update on the Walmart proposed locally. We are still awaiting submittal of a formal site plan, and environmental studies of the site on North Chicago Avenue continue.

I will keep you posted.

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Walmart Has Eyes on South Milwaukee

Update: Here is the Journal Sentinel story on this. And be sure to vote in the p0ll on the right-hand side of the page.

Walmart wants to come to South Milwaukee.

The world’s largest retailer is proposing to build a store on a 10-acre parcel at 222 N. Chicago Ave. — a more than $13 million project that would provide another local shopping option and potentially more than 120 jobs to area residents.

This would not be your typical Walmart — and not a SuperCenter.

At 115,000 square feet, it will be one of the first in the area to be built using the company’s smaller, neighborhood-focused retail concept, a more upscale version of your traditional Walmart featuring groceries, a pharmacy and general merchandise.

The store would be “tailored to the character of the neighborhood,” according to Gatlin Development, the project developer, and it will serve an approximately two-mile radius, rather than the chain’s typical 10-mile area. The development would also include an outlot to potentially be used for development of a national chain restaurant.

The South Milwaukee store would create approximately 120 jobs, about 60 percent full-time, according to Gatlin.

The store is part of Walmart’s aggressive growth in the region, which also apparently includes plans for a smaller grocery store on 76th Street in Greendale and the recent remodeling of the store on South 27th Street in Franklin, among others.

Of course, more details will emerge in the months ahead.

Tuesday night, the project got a boost when the City Council approved the sale of a 3.6-acre parcel of land between Davis and Carroll Avenues — part of our Tax Incremental Financing District #2 — for $500,000 to Gatlin, which also has under contract the other 6.5 adjacent acres being used for the project.

(Full disclosure: I was not at the meeting because I was out of town on business involving my day job at MillerCoors. I expect I would have voted yes.)

I am interested to know what you think about the project. The proposed development will be subject to public hearings and approvals before several city entities, including the Plan Commission, Community Development Authority and City Council, so there is plenty of time to have your voices be heard on this. I’ll keep you posted when those opportunities occur.

Of course, you can call me anytime, or post your comments below. I’ve also posted a poll question about this on the right-hand side of the page. I appreciate your feeback.

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