The Parkway Place project could be in jeopardy after one Blue Springs City Council member abstained from voting Monday night.
Council Member Ron Fowler voted to abstain from three critical proposals related to the project, one of which would have created a community improvement district, or CID, and another that would have permitted the construction of a convenience/spirits store.
The CID would have imposed a 30-year, 1 percent sales tax within the project’s boundaries. The CID would have been meant to pay for approximately $800,000 in traffic and infrastructure improvements.
“It probably hasn’t sunk in how to fix it,” Bill Wrisinger of Adams Dairy Investor’s Group LLC. “I’d say the project is stagnate at this point. It’s not scrapped, but the group is disappointed.”
To pass an ordinance, the City Council requires four votes out of six to pass. But if a measure ends in a 3-3 tie, the mayor can cast a tiebreaking vote. By abstaining from voting for or against the CID, as well as the request to rezone Parkway West, Fowler effectively kept Mayor Carson Ross from breaking what would have been a tie vote.
Fowler said after the meeting he abstained because he didn’t feel like he was given all the necessary information about the project from both the developer and city staff.
“Some of the information about the project was not given to me,” Fowler said. “That’s partly why I abstained. That and I would have preferred to have the entire project, all of the components, presented at one time.”
Fowler said during and after the meeting that developers originally said the $18.4 million project located at Adams Dairy Landing and R.D. Mize Road, described as a mixture of retail buildings, a convenience store and restaurants, would not require any tax incentives.
But developers said the CID is necessary because it would lift some of the financial burden off them.
The developer also agreed to reduce the amount of the sales tax from 1 percent to one-fourth percent once the reimbursable money is paid off.
David Zeiler, speaking for the developer, said they expected to be reimbursed in about 13 years.
But the convenience store/liquor and spirits store, adjacent to Parkway Place, would have served as a significant revenue stream to satisfy the CID and reduce the sales tax amount more quickly.
Developers admitted they weren’t sure how Monday night’s votes would affect the overall project.