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Another
year has come and gone and the headlines
for 2007 weren’t so very different from
those of 2006.
Easily
at the top of the headline list was the
fate of the Beach Theatre. The ups
and downs of the efforts of the Beach
Theatre Foundation (BTF), formed in
March and headed by advertising mogul
Steve Jackson, dominated the headlines
from early March straight through to
December. The fate of the Washington
Street Mall was also up in the air most
of the year. In between there were any
number of assorted controversies – what
to do about tents on the beach; what
size should Convention Hall be; what to
do about feral cats; should Lyle Lane be
opened or closed during band concerts
and of course, let’s not forget the
great beach-tag caper of 2007. So let’s
take a closer look at some of the
stories that made 2007’s headlines.
The Beach Theatre
Foundation finally took possession
of the Beach Theatre Oct. 1 and acquired
a lease/purchase agreement from Frank
Investments, owners of the property,
something which no other group had been
successful in achieving. However, while
the Franks were negotiating with BTF,
they were also pursuing, and received,
demolition permits from the Historical
Perseveration Commission (HPC). Should
BTF fail to find a developer for the
Beach Theatre Complex within the 12-18
month time period of the agreement,
Frank Investments has the go-ahead to
demolish the 1950s historic structure
and make way for a renovated retail area
and two stories of residential
condominiums. The Franks’ plan does not
include a movie theatre.
In addition to the
Franks, BTF was simultaneously
negotiating with the city and the
state’s Department of Community Affairs
(DCA) for a $100,000 Small Cities’ loan
to help the group seal the deal with the
Franks. Problems with the group’s
eligibility for loan plagued BTF for
months. City Council approved new
guidelines for the revolving loan
program in early September delaying the
vote to loan $100,000 to the Beach
Theatre Foundation (BTF). Just when
everything seemed to be in order and as
the clock was ticking on the time in
which an agreement with the Franks had
to be in place, DCA officials still were
not convinced BTF had sufficient
collateral to secure the loan. A
property assessment of the Beach Theatre
Complex fell far short of the $12
million price tag the Franks have put on
it and DCA officials balked at lending
the money. Members of the foundation
spent the last weekend of September
scrambling to secure $100,000 in
personal guarantees from sympathetic
residents to put the final requirement
on the collateralization of the loan.
BTF finally deposited the $100,000 check
on Oct. 1 and finalized an agreement
with the Franks that same week. The
Beach Theatre opened their doors to the
public during the New Jersey State Film
Festival’s annual event Nov. 17. The
theatre is open for business Friday,
Saturday and Sunday and one Thursday a
month for a La Scala Opera series which
is shown in Theatre Number One as a High
Definition offering.
What to look for in
2008? Will BTF be successful
in finding a developer for the Beach
Theatre Complex, who is willing to lease
or sell the historic movie theatre back
to the foundation or will we be looking
at more beachfront condominiums come
2009?
One of the hottest topics for 2007
ironically involved tents used to
shelter tourists from the heat.
Residents rose up in arms in early
February at the
prospect
of hotels – Congress Hall and the
Montreal Inn in particular – erecting
what they maintained would be an endless
row of tents from one end of the beach
to the other, obstructing their view of
the ocean and impeding on what they
considered the rights of all residents
to enjoy the beach. It was in the summer
of ’06 that Congress Hall erected
11-foot tents on the beach in front of
the historic hotel – allegedly without
first securing the necessary permits.
The controversy spilled over to this year and it was
standing room only in early April for a
public hearing on the proposed
introduction of an ordinance regulating
the height of the tents. But the
hoteliers took issue at the 8-foot
height restrictions. The result was a
compromise, passed just before the
Memorial Day weekend restricting the
height of tents to 9 feet and limiting
how many can be placed on the beach and
the distance between them, to take
effect this coming summer. The result of
the compromise? No one was happy – not
the hoteliers and certainly not the
residents who objected in the first
place.
What to look for in 2008?
Shorter tents.
Will the Washington Street Mall
finally get the re-do it’s been looking
or not?
That was the question for most of
2007. The fate of the mall captured
headlines beginning in January when
retailer Pierce Herbst proposed to City
Council a plan to fund the scaled back
renovations project. You’ll recall that
in 2006, voters shot down in an August
referendum a $5 million bond ordinance
to renovate the mall which has not been
received a face lit since its inception
in 1971. The 2007 project comes with a
price tag of $3.2 million (it cost $3.8
million in 1971). Herbst’s plan called
for the placement of kiosks or RMUs
(Retail Merchandising Units) in the
center of the mall. The city would
benefit from the rental of the kiosks to
interested merchants. It didn’t take
long, however, for members of the
Washington Street Mall Merchants
Association to rail against the proposal
as being an unwelcome addition to the
mall. The plan was subsequently shot
down as being logistically impractical
by the city’s Revitalization Committee.
City Council passed the bond ordinance
May 17 and crossed their fingers hoping
no one would oppose it this year. The
current project even received the
endorsement of the Cape May Taxpayers
Association.
But hold the phone – this is Cape May. The newly formed
“Concerned Taxpayers Association” (NOT
to be confused with the Cape May
Taxpayers Association) sued the city in
June over the mall bond seeking to force
the Washington Street Mall merchants to
pay for the sidewalk portions of
shopping area. Who were these
“concerned” taxpayers? They did not
reveal themselves until later. As it
turns out, the organization is led by
B&B owners, Jay Schatz of The Abbey and
Larry Meuntz of Alexander’s Inn and
Restaurant. At a Sept. 27 hearing, the
taxpayers group told a Superior Court
judge that the mall merchants should pay
for the sidewalks. On Oct. 11 the judge
ruled against the taxpayers’ group,
dismissing the lawsuit. Work on the mall
began in early November and the work is
expected to be completed by early May.
What to look for in 2008? A newly
renovated mall. Plans include brick
pavers, new street lights, fountains and
planters filled with any number of new
trees and shrubs including Red Maple,
Chinese Elm, Flowery Cherry and a
selection of hydrangeas. Don’t look for
the Concerned Taypayers to go away just
because the lawsuit was dismissed.
According to Schatz, they are regrouping
and gaining in momentum looking, it
would appear, to challenge the Cape May
Taxpayers Association.
In politics, City Manager Lou
Corea took the heat over a couple of
different issues, not to mention the
negotiation of his contract at the
beginning of the year. In February City
Council renewed Corea's contract for
three more years with a salary increase
which averages 3.8 percent. His current
salary of $107,610 increased this year
to $111,062. But the raise and renewal
came with stricter reins on the city
manager. He will be required to meet
with and consult with council members on
a regular basis. Controversy ensued in
2006 when, unbeknownst to council,
members of the Cape May Beach Patrol
were summarily fired about
a
week to 10 days earlier than was
customary. These new restrictions are
expected to prevent such incidences from
occurring in the future.
But the city manager found himself under the microscope again
in September as he defended the “beach
tag sting” perpetrated against LeMer
Hotel owner Gus Andy. The headline in
The Press of Atlantic City read:
Slick
detectives in Cape uncover alleged
beach-tag caper. La Mer cited for
transferring seasonal passes among
guests during summer. Several
years ago City Council passed an
ordinance outlawing the practice of
accommodations owners buying beach tags
in bulk and offering them as an amenity
to their guests. The accommodations’
owners challenged the ordinance in court
and have been subsequently shot down.
Corea defended the city’s beach-tag
restriction stating that if the
accommodations’ industry violates
beach-tag laws, taxpayers will have to
cover the lost revenue to operate city
beaches.
September was a
rough month for Corea, next he came
under fire for closing Lyle Lane
during concerts in Rotary Park.
Since the concert series’ inception 13
year ago, Lyle Lane has always been
closed to traffic on Wednesday and
Saturday nights. Corea maintained it
hurt business and diminished parking on
the very nights and times when parking
was most in need. Protests were
especially vocal from residents of the
Victorian Towers retirement center but
their protests fell on deaf ears. Corea
maintains the street will remain open
and that some people just don’t like
change.
What to look for in 2008? Don’t
look for Gus Andy to go gentle into that
good night. Accommodations’ owners
are bitter about the beach tag
restriction ordinance and have never
forgiven the city for imposing the
dreaded room tax levy. This might be
just the “sting” their looking for to go
back to court.
As for Lyle Lane,
this is one in which Mayor Jerry
Inderwies and City Manager Lou Corea are
locking horns. It’ll be interesting to
see who wins.
So with all this controversy brewing
over here in Cape May, what was
going on in West Cape May? It seems
the small borough was quietly but
effectively
moving to change with the times
beginning with a meeting of borough
officials, the planning group Rhodeside
and Harwell and residents to discuss the
changes. At the heart of the issue are
plans for creating a vision for West
Cape May’s commercial/historic district
which will create “a real community” and
one which is pedestrian friendly and
encouraging to small businesses.
Prospective changes include much needed
traffic patterns, (especially at the
intersection of Park, Perry and Myrtle,
near the CVS); the widening of Park
Boulevard and the creation of bike lanes
– in July the borough commission
approved making an application to the
state Department of Transportation (DOT)
for a $180,000 bikeway grant to create
bicycle lanes on both sides of Park
Boulevard and install a sidewalk and
curbing on the west side of the street.
West Cape May also hopes to buy
25 acres along Cape Island Creek to
create an approximately 100-acre public
park, with walking trails and kayak
launches.
Other changes include
the formation of the West Cape May
Taxpayers Association in September.
West Cape May’s newly formed Historic
Preservation Commission (HPC) moved into
high gear with a survey identifying more
than 200 structures worth saving.
Construction techniques, old maps and
archived newspaper articles helped two
historic preservation consultants
compile the list. And the results
of their work were presented at a
gathering at West Cape May’s Borough
Hall at the end of November.
Additionally, a mural by West Cape May
resident Doug Flanagan depicting the
finds was also unveiled.
The story which received
the most headlines in West Cape May this
year centered around the borough’s
plan to ease budget woes with the sale
of two liquor licenses – one for
packaged goods and one for restaurant
use. The move was supposed to appear on
the November ballot as a referendum but
an alleged “clerical error” in the
clerk’s office put “a cork” in the vote.
An on-going story which
has plagued most shore towns and has
been particularly vexing to West Cape
May is the issue of affordable housing
in an escalating real estate market. In
October of 2006 the borough’s planning
board and developers of a proposed 70
townhouse-unit plan for Sixth Street
each maintain the other side walked out
of negotiations regarding the density of
the zoned area. The board turned
down Sixth Street Partner’s proposal in
an 8-0 decision because the project
allegedly greatly exceeds the density
requirements for the zone. In 2006 the
developers, Sixth Street Partners, filed
a builder's remedy suit maintaining that
the borough has not done enough to
provide affordable housing. They have
offered to provide such housing in their
proposed project. Under the old
regulations, WCM was obligated to come
up with 23 such units by the year 2014.
However, changes in the state’s
affordable housing law this past year
did not make the lawsuit go away.
What to look for in 2008 in West Cape
May? Residents and officials will
have to wait until at least spring
now since it was determined that a
special election to put forth the
referendum would be cost prohibitive.
Look for a consolidation
of resources in 2008 including a merger
with Cape May City’s court system.
In April Borough commissioners hired an attorney specializing
in affordable housing cases to fight the
on-going battle against Sixth Street
Partners. Look for some kind of
decision regarding this controversial
issue. At year’s end Mayor Pam Kaithern
said the borough solicitor provided her
with details of updated recommendations
from the Coalition on Affordable Housing
also known as COAH. Among the
recommendations – an extension to 2018
to comply with state regulations and a
reduction in the previous requirement of
one affordable housing unit for every
eight market priced units would be
reduces to one for every four
market priced units. Additionally the
borough is looking for some creative
ways to comply including apartments atop
garages. The borough is also looking
into loosening the rules to allow more
residential uses on top of commercial
businesses.
A new landscape for West
Cape May may not materialize in 2008,
but certainly it looks as though plans
for a new and improved borough will be
underway.
All in all it’s been a
very good year for West Cape May.
Not to be left behind, Cape May
Point is also looking to preserve
its past. Historic preservation
is a vital aspect to the borough’s
Master Plan. In another kind of
preservation, the state Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) has
reserved up to $500,000 to create
additional gabions, wire mesh containers
filled with rocks placed at the dune
line, as part of the Shore Protection
Stabile Funding Program for 2008. And
there will be a new administrator for
Cape May Point in 2008. Borough
commissioners at year’s end were
considering the hiring of an
administrator to coordinate the affairs
of all departments, negotiate employee
contract and be responsible for public
bidding and contracts.
What to look for in 2008 in Cape May
Point? The creation of a
Historic Preservation Commission (HPC)
and a survey of significant structures.
What to look for in the island
landscape in 2008? Other
than the change in the Washington Street
Mall which will greet tourists this
coming season, the focus for 2008 will
affect the beachfront landscape. A
decision on what Convention Hall
will
become must be made in 2008 or the city
faces the loss of Casino Reinvestment
Development Authority (CRDA) funding.
Look for a big, huge hole in the ground where the Coachman’s
Motor Inn and Rusty Nail restaurant used
to be. Demolition work will begin
sometime after the first of the year to
make way for the more upscale Ocean
House.
Visitors and resident alike will be pleased to see the
completion in the spring of the Sea
Mist.
There was much concern that
she would never come back to her wedding
cake beauty again when the much
photographed wedding cake house was
stripped down to its bare bones this
past summer.
New for 2008? Wifi.
All the shore communities seem to be
geeked up on WiFi access and look for
Cape May to find a way for this happen
in 2008.
A park for pooches is in the stars on Lafayette Street
probably within the first quarter of the
year.
So that’s the year-end wrap up. Stay tuned to this Dot Com
frequency for weekly headlines in the
coming year. Meantime, stay well and
prosper. |