Category Archives: City of Peoria

Fines for loud parties, underage drinking may rise

Following a couple of raging parties in the neighborhoods surrounding Bradley University, Second District Councilperson Barbara Van Auken promised to propose “a $1,000 fine for both the host(s) and the property owner if it’s owner-occupied.” That proposal will be presented to the City Council at tomorrow evening’s meeting.

The municipal code already has the following fines in place:

(a) A person who knowingly enters or remains in any house, building, yard or other premises, other than premises licensed to sell alcoholic liquor, under circumstances where the person knows or reasonably should know that alcoholic liquor is being illegally possessed or consumed by persons under the age of 21 years shall be guilty of a petty offense and, upon conviction, shall be punished by a fine of not less than $200.00 nor more than $500.00.

(b) It is unlawful for a parent, legal guardian or other person to knowingly permit a person under the age of 18 years old in his or her custody to violate the provisions of subsection (a) of this section. Any person convicted of a violation of this subsection shall be fined not less than $500.00.

The ordinance requested by Van Auken would add the following:

(c) Any owner or person in actual or constructive possession of a property, including, but not limited to, an occupant or tenant of property who suffers, allows, consents to, acquiesces by failure to prevent, or expressly assents or agrees to a violation of paragraph (a) of this section shall be guilty of a petty offense and, upon conviction, shall be punished by a fine of not less than $1,000.00.

It is hoped that this ordinance will motivate property owners and landlords to evict chronic disturbers of the peace by hitting them where it hurts — in their pocketbook. I wonder how property managers feel about this ordinance. I can tell you that homeowners and responsible renters in Bradley’s adjacent neighborhoods love it.

Next critical thing for Civic Center: parking

Peoria Civic Center logoEver heard of those stories where a person buys a single new piece of furniture and then ends up redecorating the whole house around it? That’s kind of like what the Peoria Civic Center is doing these days.

First, it was critical that they expand — there are too many conventions they have to simply turn away because they’re not big enough, we are told. If the Civic Center is going to be viable, it must add more exhibition and meeting space. $55 million later, the expansion is well underway.

But wait! That’s not enough. Now we’re told that the $55 million expansion will be “all for naught” if they can’t get an attached hotel, too. You see, these big convention-goers want to stay close enough that they never have to walk outside and brave the elements. That’s so much of an expectation these days that if we lack this amenity, “the Peoria Civic Center’s expansion and operating performance will be at risk.” So a $33 million, 250-room, full-service hotel with 21,000 square feet of additional meeting space has been proposed.

But wait! According to the report from HVS International (3.5M PDF), the site for a hotel adjacent to the Civic Center has a fatal flaw: “The limited amount of convenient on-site parking presents a key disadvantage.” Later in the report, they flesh out the implications of that:

Development cost calculations include a cost-free land lease and City-provided parking. These added incentives are necessary in order to encourage a developer to build a Civic Center Hotel.

I’ve joked about this before, but I’m afraid I was unwittingly prophetic. It looks like the next “critical” thing the Civic Center Authority is going to be requesting of the city, if the hotel proposal moves forward, is more parking — probably a parking deck.

Don’t you just love how, whenever it’s a downtown project, it’s just assumed that the city’s job is to provide parking for everyone? I mean, that’s an essential service, right? That’s why we pay taxes, isn’t it: for police protection, fire protection, and downtown parking? (I’m being facetious, of course.)

Jefferson Street

Ironically, there used to be a hotel on the Civic Center site. Local magazine “Arts Alive” made a passing reference to it in its 2002 article celebrating 20 years of the Civic Center: “The implosion of the Jefferson Hotel in 1978 was the official start to transforming the idea [of building a Civic Center] into reality….” The Jefferson Hotel was a luxurious, first-class hotel that sat at the corner of Jefferson and Fulton, across the street from “Civic Center Plaza” (formerly known as the Jefferson Building) where WMBD radio’s studios are located now.

Next thing you know, they’ll be telling us that there’s not enough entertainment surrounding the new Civic Center hotel for convention-goers to enjoy at night, and they’ll want to rebuild the Palace and Rialto theaters, with their own city-provided parking decks, of course.

Museum Partners answer readers’ questions (Pt. 1)

Museum Square

You asked, and now the museum is answering!

Rather than wait until all the answers were in, Kathleen Woith of Lakeview Museum has provided the answers she has received so far. “Some of the questions concerning the Peoria Historical Society and the Peoria Regional Museum Society (which owns the Duryea) I have sent along to them and will get back to you next week,” she writes.

My thanks to Kathleen Woith for taking the time to get answers to our questions, to the museum partners for answering them, and to Neil Hardin for getting the ball rolling by contacting Kathleen in the first place.

And now, without any further ado, here are your questions (in bold) and the museum’s answers:

How much retail space will be available? Total square footage?
We will have 15,000 square feet on Water Street. In addition, a Museum Store and Book Court will be located inside the museum. They will be accessible without having to pay admission to the museum.

Why not increased density? Too much open space will make the downtown “Lakeview” just a nicer version of their existing suburban facility. If the museum doesn’t need the space, why not increased space for retail / hotel projects? MORE DENSITY!
The partners have worked closely with the Heart of Peoria Commission to formulate plans for the project. We consider the open space to be an extension of the museum. The café will offer outside dining in warm months, the science and art parks will offer sculpture and hands-on activities for families. If you look at the diagram of the plaza, the grids represent an important part of Peoria’s history. Grids running from the direction of the river reflect the street patterns that the original settlers laid out. The north to south and east to west grids represent the Jeffersonian plan of running streets in those directions. If you notice, streets often take a jog when you reach the top of the bluff. This stems from when the street patterns were altered as Peoria grew.

Much of the green space near the corner of Main and Water and Liberty and Washington are bioswales. These bioswales will capture the rainwater runoff from the site and filter it through native plantings and rocks, naturally cleansing it before it is returned to the river watershed. We will make bioswales educational, developing natural environment programs for students and visitors.

The plaza will provide space for 1,000 students visiting on a spring or fall day to have lunch and just fun. We also envision concerts, markets and shows, all which will bring people downtown and encourage their use of other riverfront and downtown stores and businesses.

As we sought architects, all of the firms we received proposals from reiterated the same position. While the site is great, it is not large enough to include hotels and condos, a museum, visitor center and businesses and still include the required parking each of these entities would need in order to be financially viable. Our parking on the site will be under the museum, which is a direct result of influence from the HOPC.

If not, just expand the existing museum. There seems to be some existing land around the museum and YWCA / Owens Center area.
Lakeview Museum opened in 1965 as Lakeview Center for the Arts & Sciences. The Galleries consisted of a huge hall-like wing of the building. Today this same 10,000 square feet of exhibit space holds the permanent hands-on Discovery Center and the growing Illinois Folk Art Galleries. The Permanent Collection also takes up a sizeable portion of the space. Just 3,000 square feet is left to bring in first-class traveling exhibitions . Everything from Rodin to dinosaurs has filled the galleries, but outstanding exhibitions today require much more room — most now need 4,000 to 6,000 square feet. We routinely let outstanding exhibitions pass us by because we simply don’t have the room for them. Our Affiliation with the Smithsonian Institution has opened the doors to the “nation’s attic.” We have been disappointed several times that we had to let pass nationally known Smithsonian shows because our gallery space would not allow us to host these shows.

Other areas of the museum are bulging at the seams. The museum opened with just three employees. Today there are 21 full-time and 19 part-time. Offices are doubled, tripled and quadrupled up. Through the gifts of generous donors, the Permanent Collection has grown to more than 14,000 items. Vault space is at a premium and just a small portion of the collection can be exhibited at any one time.

In September, 2001, the Board of Directors of Lakeview Museum accepted the recommendation of E. Verner Johnson, museum planner and architect, and the Museum Site Selection Committee of 14 citizens, to focus development of the new regional museum on the riverfront Sears block. The Museum Collaboration Group also were pleased that the city-led Duany Plater-Zyberk charrette study recognized the riverfront and the Sears Block as the cultural and entertainment center of downtown.

The Museum is considering increasing its size from the current 38,000 square feet to more than 96,000 square feet, with an additional 15,000 square feet of commercial/retail space. If this expansion were done in Lakeview Park, this would consume quite a bit of green space. Other developments by our neighbors also are impacting the park. The YWCA has opened a state-of-the-art pool and expanded their facility; Owens Center could be expanded, as well. The Peoria Public Library Lakeview Branch continues to be it’s busiest. It’s apparent that Lakeview Park would become Lakeview Parking Lot if the museum expanded on site.

Another consideration is the impact on traffic and the surrounding neighborhood. Our current site, when developed in the mid 1960s, was considered the far end of Peoria. Now, it’s right in the center. Lovely neighborhoods and two busy streets, Lake and University, surround us. The additional traffic generated by an estimated 300,000+ visitors annually would be a challenge to add to these already crowded thoroughfares and cause many problems for those who live nearby.

Attractions of this size must draw out-of-town visitors. To do this, it must be visible and in a location visited and passed by thousands every day. The Sears block site provides the opportunity to be seen and also to give Peoria a new look. Imagine crossing the interstate bridge and looking to a vista unfolding around a first-class architectural statement. The lovely wooded acreage of Lakeview Park is both beautiful and a detriment to Lakeview Museum. Often visitors drive by the park looking for the museum. They are unaware that the two entrances to the park also lead to our front door and to the doors of the YWCA, Lakeview Library and the Girl Scouts offices.

Other issues to consider include the increased quality of life, making Peoria attractive to outside visitors. Enhanced educational opportunities, new revenues and critical customer mass helping to strengthen existing new businesses are vital to the area.

Why not use IMAX instead of ‘off-brand’ IMAX. The name has appeal to greater numbers. What are plans to make the screen usable for special events or showing of first run movies?
We are planning a giant screen theater that will provide an experience that you find when you visit an IMAX theater — or even better. (IMAX is like Xerox or Kleenex, it’s become a generic term for the giant screen experience.) Everyone knows that technology is changing by the day. The same goes for the theater industry. Digital projection is future of theaters. Currently IMAX theaters still use film. But we’re watching the industry as new developments unfold. We are visiting other theaters around the country to test the quality of other types of theaters. As we continue with the detailed design development for the theater and the rest of the museum, the architects are laying out a flexible theater that could be adapted to any brand we finally choose. We will wait till the last minute to choose the vendor. But we promise you will be just as thrilled whether it’s IMAX or an other brand.

Staffing Levels. Are there going to be more employees for a larger, more complex facility?
Absolutely and unequivocally we will add staff. Exactly how many we can’t say right now. It all depends on the programming of the building. We’ll increase both our full and part time staffs and will know more will know more about numbers in the future. Here’s a bit of trivia: When Lakeview Museum opened in 1965 it had two and one-half staff members. Today we have 21 full time and 19 part-timers.

What is the organization of the museum collaboration? Are all the museums being rolled into one organization, or will they continue to exist as distinct entities? In other words, after the museum is built, will there just be one organization called “Museum Partners” (hypothetically) that would own all the collections of Lakeview, the Historical Society, the African American Hall of Fame, etc., and have one board of directors that will decide what’s displayed, stored, or disposed of? Or will all those organizations continue to exist independently, administer their own separate collections, and have their own boards? How was the organization of the collaboration decided?
We’ve been working for more than a year to come up with a viable plan that is acceptable to all of the partners. Each will make their own decision as to whether they merge into the new museum or remain their own entities. Our Task Force on Organizational Effectiveness includes all the partners and is considering issues such as governance for the new museum. The new regional board will likely be composed of representatives from all of the partners in designated seats. Will the partners maintain their own boards and collections? That is a decision for each of them to make.

As for the collections in the new museum, they will continue to be preserved, protected and presented in accordance with the rules of the American Association of Museums. Lakeview is one of only 800 museums (of more than 17,000 museums nationwide) that are fully accredited by the AAM. This means we adhere to the strictest high standards of museums on everything from collections to exhibitions, from education to the planetarium, from public relations to program outreach. Every few years we must go through a reaccreditation process. A team of evaluators comes in for a week and pores through every inch of the museum. (Have you ever seen anyone measure the acid content on a gallery wall?) During our last reaccreditation, we had to send in 17 inches of paperwork before the team even arrived! The partners are in agreement that we will continue this prestigious accreditation, as well as continue our Affiliation with the Smithsonian Institution.

Are all the “partners” in this project represented equally? I noticed in the paper today that Lakeview gets to choose the name for the museum, and the “Contact Us” page on the name-the-museum website lists all Lakeview representatives. Yet the downtown museum project was originally headed up by the Peoria Historical Society. Does Lakeview have more pull, or more say, than the other partners?
Yes, all of the partners are represented equally in the new museum project. It’s true that the Lakeview board will vote on the final name because Lakeview Museum itself will cease to exist as Lakeview and will become part of the new entity. But all of the other partner boards will consider the name, too. The naming committee is composed of representatives from the partners, so every organization has a voice in the process. And the Lakeview board itself is composed of representatives from the partners.

The Peoria Historical Society did consider a small museum building on the Sears block. At the same time, Lakeview Museum was considering a small expansion of our current building. As we all sought out advice from our local political leaders, Rep. Ray LaHood took the initiative to invite the groups to meet together. This was the birth of the Museum Collaboration Group. We knew we would accomplish much more working together than separately. We also realized that Lakeview Museum would have a difficult time rehabbing the existing building and adding on. (See the question about expanding the current museum.)

As for Lakeview Museum having more “pull,” it just seems that way because we are the largest entity of the group. Believe me, we always refer to the museum partners and try to correct the media and others when they refer to the new “Lakeview” regional museum. We hope when we have a new name it will help deflect the spotlight from Lakeview.

Why has the Peoria Public Library not been included in this endeavor?
We work with the library to provide reading lists for our exhibitions and programs. We also offer Museum passes that are available at all library branches. Families may check out the “book” for a week and gain access to all of Lakeview Museum’s exhibitions. We’ll continue to work with them in the new museum.

Will the Peoria Street exhibit have representations of buildings that exist currently or once existed in Peoria?
The Peoria Stories Street will consist of facades that can be interchangeable. For example, one exhibit could be on the 1850s and 1860s with Abraham Lincoln speaking to the people of Peoria during a campaign stop. Exhibits inside the building would reflect that period of life here. Next, it could be turned into the Roaring 20s in Peoria, or the time when the whiskey barons ran the town. The shell will be designed that the buildings will take on the look and feel of the era that is being represented. Yes, they could include facades of buildings that existed or do exist now. We’ll know more when the exhibit design phase begins. To see more of the exhibit details, go to the Lakeview Museum website lakeview-museum.org and check out the storyboards.

Hotel optional six months ago, now critical

The city commissioned a feasibility study recently to see what impact a proposed hotel connected to the Civic Center would have on other hotels downtown. The Journal Star gives us our first peek at their results today.

After all the money that’s been put into the the recent Civic Center expansion, now we’re being told that it could be “all for naught” if a new hotel isn’t built as well:

“They say that the Civic Center can’t live up to its full potential without a connected hotel,” said Civic Center Authority commissioner Dan Silverthorn. “It’s critical to us, to our success. Yeah, it might affect some hotels.”

Oh, it will affect some hotels alright, and it will affect taxpayers, too. “Peoria could compete [with East Peoria’s new Embassy Suites] by building a new upscale hotel connected to the Civic Center, but HVS estimates it will cost $33 million – or about $132,000 per room – and the city will have to pony up,” the Journal Star reports. As if the city has any money! Furthermore, the study says, “Despite the projected growth in demand in the marketplace, the impact of a new Civic Center hotel will depress occupancy rates in the Downtown area for years.”

This sure is a far cry from past statements from the Civic Center. Just six months ago, in a memo from the Civic Center Authority to the Peoria City Council dated March 24, stated:

The Peoria Civic Center Authority is not now and has not previously requested public funding for a hotel. We have always hoped that a private development would be interested by the Peoria Civic Center expansion and upgrade to come forward with a proposal. We hope that the community will enable such a development.

The Peoria Civic Center Authority is committed and continues to be committed to the success of the expanded facilities. We believe it can be successful without an attached hotel but more and larger regional opportunities will be possible if more and better downtown hotel rooms are available.

So, six months ago the Civic Center Authority believed they could be successful without an attached hotel and were not requesting any public funding. Now, an attached hotel is “critical” to the Civic Center’s success, and city will have to pitch in to make it happen. I wonder what they’ll discover is critical another six months from now. A new parking deck? Connected restaurants and bars? A covered walkway to Museum Square?

It’s especially hilarious to hear Chuck Grayeb, who recently voted against spending $5,000 for a part-time training coordinator down at city hall because the city’s so broke, “has said he favors a new connected hotel as long as the city isn’t giving away too much to lure developers.” How could even consider giving away anything to “lure developers”?

This project is too big of a change order. Original plans for a Civic Center hotel were that it wouldn’t impact the costs of the expansion project. In fact, in 2004, David Manica, lead project designer for HOK Sport+Venue+Event, met with the Heart of Peoria Commission. Their minutes record: “Mr. Manica indicated there are plans to add a hotel at a future date without impacting the current cost of the project.” Now, just two years later, the hotel is suddenly a critical and very expensive component of the success of the project. To say this was poor planning would be an understatement. If it’s a critical component now, it was a critical component two years ago. Somebody didn’t do their homework.

Now there’s no money left for this project. Not with the city’s current budget woes. If the Civic Center, which has plenty of extra HRA tax funding to give away to ArtsPartners and the Peoria Area Visitors and Convention Bureau, can’t underwrite the cost of luring a hotel to their newly expanded facility without additional public funding, then they’re going to have to find a way to make their facility successful without it. Lack of planning on their part does not equal a crisis on the city’s (and the taxpayer’s) part.

Museum Partners back to the drawing board for names

I received this press release today from Kathleen Woith, Lakeview’s Vice President of Community Relations & Communications:

Museum Partners Going Back to the Public to Choose Favorite Name

We heard you!

The Museum Partners asked for the public’s opinion on proposed names for the new museum and more than 4,000 responses and votes came back!

Love them or hate them or something in between — the four original names —
Port of Exploration Museum, Amazeum, Museum on the Square and ExploraSphere — inspired passionate and impassioned opinions. Reactions ranged from “All these names are terrible!” to “fascinating names, I can’t decide which one I like best.”

So the Museum Partners are going back to the public to help choose a name. What will the new choices be? They will be revealed when the vote reopens Friday, Sept. 22. Polling will continue through noon, Monday, Oct. 2. The Naming Committee will meet that week to choose a name. The Partner Group Boards will consider the names with an announcement to come in November.

What will the choices not include? Some of the write-in names popular with the public just aren’t available or can’t be used. Including words in the names such as Riverview, River’s Edge and Riverfront aren’t available because they are trademarked or close to names of other museums.

Popular sentiment ran in favor of recognizing the museum’s home city in the name and that is being considered by the group. Other names suggested were trademarked names of existing museums, such as the Exploratorium or Discovery Museum.

Another name that won’t be an option is Lakeview Museum. The museum was gratified to see that more than 150 people wrote-in or commented that they would like to retain the name — especially since the museum finally will have a “lake view.”

With the collaboration of all the partners, including the Peoria Historical Society, the African American Hall of Fame Museum, the Peoria Regional Museum Society, Lakeview Museum, the IHSA, and others, the museum is growing into an entity that embraces all of the disciplines. Art, history, science and achievement will be explored and displayed in a museum unlike any other in the country. Lakeview Museum was created by 26 groups who joined together in the early 1960s. Today, that legacy is continuing with the groups who are forming the new regional museum. The new museum will continue the tradition of offering outstanding exhibitions and programs created by the partners.

The Museum Partners continue to involve the community in the process with the new vote.

Rumor mill: CIRY wants to stop service to Pioneer Park

I got the most interesting e-mail today stating that “CIRY [Central Illinois Railroad Company] wants out of their contract/agreement to provide rail service to Pioneer Park.” CIRY is the carrier that the city hired to replace Pioneer Industrial Railway to provide service on the Kellar Branch and western spur. They’re providing rail service to Carver Lumber at the northwest end of the Kellar Branch, as well as O’Brien Steel at the southeast end.

I can’t independently verify that CIRY wants to stop serving Carver Lumber, but it wouldn’t surprise me. In a filing with the Surface Transportation Board on July 24, they stated, “The 50 rail carloads per year currently shipped to Carver does not provide sufficient revenue to make it economically viable for an operator to operate the Kellar Branch line from the east or west.” (emphasis mine)

Note that they stated they can’t make sufficient revenue to keep providing service from the west either — that is, over the western spur. In other words, the city’s plan to replace reliable and profitable rail service via the Kellar Branch with unreliable, monopolistic service over the western spur has been a failure. This had been predicted and warned against years and years ago, most notably by the city’s own railroad commission (which was recently disbanded), but all warnings were ignored.

Now the city is reportedly threatening to sue CIRY if they try to get out of their contract. After all, if CIRY bows out, the city will likely be unable to convince the STB to allow service to be discontinued on the Kellar Branch; and that means they won’t be able to put a dedicated trail in its place.

Isn’t it ironic that the city wouldn’t sue CIRY for endangering Peorian’s lives after the runaway train incident last year, nor for costing Carver Lumber over $60,000 in additional shipping costs because of their refusal to haul up the Kellar Branch, but they will reportedly sue them for endangering the city’s plans to turn the Kellar Branch into a trail?

Where are the city’s priorities?

“Target Peoria”: On target or off?

The town hall meeting is over and already one review has come in: Scott Janz was unimpressed, saying “nobody had any real substantive answers” to the questions raised.

I really want to be positive about it, but I have to admit I was a little disappointed myself — no offense to the participants. I know there’s no magic wand that will solve all our crime problems, and I wasn’t expecting all crime issues to be resolved in a one-hour town-hall meeting.

But I came away from the meeting feeling like all these officials were telling me they’re doing everything they can to combat crime, and there is little else they can do. In fact, it felt like a vehicle for “educating” the public rather than getting public input. Maybe that was the goal, since they’re planning to have three more forums.

The most surprising thing I heard all night was Peoria Police Chief Settingsgaard and Peoria County Sheriff Mike McCoy passed up a golden opportunity to say they needed more resources, saying they’re doing just fine with the resources they have. Really? Well, that should take a little pressure off the council this budget season.

What did you think of the program?

Ask the Museum

Museum proponent and recent commenter Neil Hardin has thrown out a challenge to those who have questions about the downtown museum project:

Talked with Lakeview’ P.R. person, Kathleen Worth [sic], and she says she will put together a meeting anytime to answer questions about the museum, it’s process, the name, etc. It’s your chance to participate. Any takers?

Of course, I’ll be more than happy to meet with Ms. Woith. However, I know that some commenters are anonymous and wish to stay that way, so here’s your chance to ask some questions and get some answers. I’ll work with Neil to set up a time and place and will post it here for any who would like to come. In light of Neil’s latest comment, here’s the new plan: I’ll set up an appointment with Ms. Woith to ask her our questions. I’ll accept questions up until the day I meet with her.

As for anyone who can’t come, don’t want to come, or don’t want to reveal their secret identity, please leave your question(s) in the comments section of this post. I will make a reasonable effort to ask all questions that are submitted, as long as they’re pertinent and respectful.

What could be done with $565,000?

The Journal Star reports on the City Council’s budget meeting last night, which centered on police protection:

In May, the City Council approved a one-time $100,000 transfer from the capital budget to the Police Department for “saturation patrols.”

On Tuesday, the council got its first glimpse at the payback: 619 traffic citations, 99 vehicle impounds and $17,752 in drug money, 103 grams of narcotics, 434 grams of marijuana and four firearms seized.

Wow, all of that for only $100,000. Of course, they can’t keep robbing the capital budget to fund operations. I wonder where they could get some extra funding? I saw Councilman Chuck Grayeb on WEEK last night saying:

“We bite the bullet and we go to the public and say look, we’re down to the bone right now and we have a deficit and we cannot afford to take away from police and fire and we’re going to have to raise taxes.”

But others don’t think that’s such a great idea. They want to just maintain the status quo, “work smarter,” do more with less, etc.

Meanwhile, Pioneer Railcorp still has an offer to purchase the Kellar Branch rail line from the city for $565,000.

$565,000.

Imagine how many saturation patrols that could finance. Or what equipment it could purchase. Or other ways it could be invested. While the council tries to pinch pennies, they keep overlooking the most obvious, easiest money they could get, and instead want to lease the right-of-way to the park district for $1 per year for 99 years, only to have them tear out the rails and ties. Kind of like they’re throwing away the entire Sears block for a museum project that is only going to develop 1/3 of the land.

Boy, if the city council keeps throwing away assets at this rate, I don’t even want to know how much our garbage taxes are going to be in a few years.