Office of City Councilor Pat
Davis
Nob Hill | Highland
|UNM | International District | SE Heights | Mesa del Sol
Putting Central Ave
Back Together Better Than Ever
As you've probably seen in
the news, many of our Nob Hill merchants and neighborhood leaders were
frustrated to learn that final ART plans for Nob Hill included wider
sidewalks and landscaping improvements for some blocks, but not all.
I believe that every business who suffers through construction should
share in the improvements, but everyone agreed that no one wanted to
extend construction into the holiday shopping season to make that
happen.
A few weeks ago, I introduced a bill to widen
sidewalks, bring back mid-block crossings
taken out (including the ones at Amherst between the new Empire Board
Game Library and Mariposa) and fund the International District
station promised to those residents in community
meetings.
After initially opposing the
sidewalk plan, the Mayor's office agreed to a new plan setting funds
aside to work with merchants after major construction ends to evaluate
sidewalks block-by-block and funding the new station and bringing back
the crosswalks. I'm set aside $500,000 in local street funds to
guarantee our businesses they'll have resources for that work and the
Mayor added $600,000 to fund the new International District station in
the compromise.
The final bill will be before Council on
Monday.
Thank you to the businesses and neighborhood leaders
who asked for help and who worked with us to be sure everyone benefits
from this project when it is done!
Read More:
COUNCIL NEWS
Davis introduces bill to
bring back Green Parking Permits
Last year, the city
ended it's green parking permit program. Originally meant to
encourage green vehicles like a Prius, vehicle emissions standards had
improved enough that some new Chevy Tahoes qualified under rules that
hadn't been updated in more than a decade.
So instead
of letting the program end, I asked our staff to write a new Green
Vehicle Permit ordinance updating the standards to incentivize today's
greenest cars. My new ordinance passed our Finance
Committee last week and will be heard at the Council later this month.
Under our updated rules, more than 90 different green
vehicles qualify for a Green Parking Permit (allowing free parking at
a city meter for up to 2 hours a day).
Let me know what you think of bringing
back this program and see if your green vehicle qualifies under our
improved Green Parking Permit program here. If your vehicle's "Greenhouse Gas Rating"
is 9 or more and your vehicle's combines rating is 17 or more, your
vehicle qualifies!
Davis, Winter, Sanchez and Mayor Introduce New Property Crime
Investigators
This week, I joined 13 of
APD's newest employees at the APD Training Academy to announce our new
Property Crime Investigator Program. Last year, Councilors
Winter, Sanchez and I began working with the Mayor's office to look
for a way to tackle property crime in neighborhoods. We took
the initial proposal to contract out investigative services short-term
and turned it into a full-time program deploying a total of 25 new
investigators trained not just to take reports, but to do the CSI and
follow up investigations necessary to solve property crimes quickly.
The first class of investigators started at the academy this
week and we'll see them on the street next month.
This new program is part of $7
million new dollars earmarked for APD programs in the city's budget,
including:
- Fully funding 980 police officers (we have just over 800 now)
- Fully funding police academy training for 96 new officers next
year
- Almost $1 million to test our rape kit backlog and hire new staff
to fund my initiative to test every new kit within 90 days
- New officer-worn cameras for every officer
Read more
ASK THE COUNCILOR:
What about ART funding?
I've gotten a lot of questions about ART funding
since President Trump released the outline of his proposed budget
reducing funding for Small Starts grants funding projects like ART.
Here are the facts: Albuquerque will finish ART construction
and we are paying for it with existing federal transportation dollars.
The Small Starts grant is set up to reimburse us for those
costs. Even if that grant is never funded, we aren't on the hook for
unpaid construction costs. Unfortunately, it could mean we wouldn't
receive reimbursement that we could put towards future street
projects.
But as we've seen in recent weeks, the president's
proposals is far from a done deal in Congress.
I recently
traveled to Washington, DC to meet with hundreds of mayors, city
councilors and new Trump officials to talk about needs for cities.
We're standing united to protect funding for housing, health care and
transportation and our Congressional delegation is with
us.
I've heard loans for Central Ave businesses are
delayed. Is that true?
Yes. But my office teamed up with other councilors and businesses
to get it going. After businesses who had applied asked why they
couldn't get a loan, I started asking why the Mayor's office had not
completed the program.
You might have seen me and other councilors on the news calling
for the administration to step up their efforts to fund the loan fund
for Central Avenue businesses.
After weeks of work, on Monday
we passed a bill freeing up funds for businesses in redevelopment
areas along Central and that opened up existing funds for businesses
in Nob Hill, UNM and EDO areas.
If your business is waiting,
or if you want information on loans available to support ART
businesses, contact Vanessa Roanhorse at the Small Business Resource
Collaborative:
The Small Business
Resource Collaborative (SBRC) is an alliance of Albuquerque’s leading
nonprofit small business development organizations, local business
advocates, business consultants and small business owners. The purpose
of the SBRC is to prepare independently-owned businesses who rely on
walk-in traffic along the Central Avenue Corridor (Coors Blvd. to
Louisiana Blvd.) for the Bus Rapid Transit construction.
We are comprised of
consultants with over 20 years experience working with businesses
throughout Albuquerque.
Our team provides
customized on-the-ground support for business owners who don’t have
time to attend trainings and events. We bring the resources to you!
Contact us today to set up an appointment with one of us at www.sbrcabq.com.
Need help from City Hall?
Contact our office at 768-3152 or call 3-1-1
--
Pat
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