Political sign on public property
One of the other benefits of "The Retreat," a proposed student housing project in northeast Amherst, besides hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual property tax revenues is the short term shot in the arm for jobs, not that Amherst is now hurting with its usual low unemployment rate standing at 3.1%.
But the Hampshire/Franklin district average is 6%, only a little better than state average of 6.8%, and presumably a construction project like The Retreat will draw local labor from all across Western Massachusetts.
This "hundreds of thousands of dollars in property tax revenue" - I'm assuming this will not in any way relieve the burden of us regular, middle-income-but-struggling Amherst home owners. If that is true, then my sympathies are with the current Cushman residents. It is likely that there will be in fact a retreat, but not necessarily the one that Cowls envisions.
ReplyDeleteHundreds of thousands of property tax? Hmm, who is paying to run the sewer lines and pay for all the additional services this development will require such as sewage treatment?
ReplyDeleteWater sewer is always pay as you go. Even, ahem, UMass pays for water/sewer.
ReplyDeleteYes, but who is going to pay to run the sewer lines to the retreat?
ReplyDeleteRev., lettipAnd who is going to pay the cost of the police, ambulances, etc. that will end up going to the student "Retreat" of 700 people?
ReplyDeleteI believe APD is going to start charging for responses on or after the 3rd call to the same location.
ReplyDeleteNot to mention those expensive $300 tickets they hand out.
and we've seen the deterrent effect those nuisance fines seem to be having.
ReplyDeletesorry, sarcastic.
have we seen a deterrent effect as a result of the nuisance fines policy being implemented?
$300.00 divided by 700 kids equals .42/kid per party!
ReplyDeleteThey should start a fund on their first day of tenancy.
I wonder how Cinda would have possibly survived had she had to pay fines for the parties she had in college.
ReplyDeleteAnon 1:26 PM
ReplyDeleteSubdivision developer pays to get water/sewer and all utilities to site.
Even a simple home developer always pays to have utilities pulled from street to house.
So does the street have water and sewer? If the existing houses have septic systems then who will pay to put in the sewer system that The Retreat will tie into?
ReplyDeleteThey will.
ReplyDeleteInteresting. Where do the current sewer and water lines end?
ReplyDeleteSorry, you've hit your three questions max.
ReplyDeleteThere is public water and sewer to the retreat property, from two locations, Henry Street and Market Hill Road.
ReplyDeleteGuilford Mooring
Superintendent, Amherst DPW.
Thank you Mr. Mooring (by the way, nice tie last night).
ReplyDeleteRev., lettipAnd who is going to pay the cost of the police, ambulances
ReplyDeleteAMBULANCE FEES ARE PAID BY THE USER...AND EVERY STUDENT MUST HAVE HEALTH INSURANCE IF THEY ARE ENROLLED IN THE UNIVERSITY...SPEAKING OFF THE TOP OF MY HEAD NO STATISTICS BUT I WOULD THINK THE AMBULANCES BRING IN THE MOST REVENUE..AT LEAST MORE THAN CHERRY HILL
WAY, way, way more.
ReplyDelete