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Resource Development Where We Were Where We Wanted To Go How we Got There

Resource Development

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Resource Development. Where We Were Where We Wanted To Go How we Got There. Where We Were in 2006. Primary revenue sources: Earned Income from Parking and Shuttles-54% Property Assessments from Business Improvement District-36% Sponsorships, Membership and Contributions-10% - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Resource Development

Resource Development

Where We WereWhere We Wanted To Go

How we Got There

Page 2: Resource Development

Where We Were in 2006

Primary revenue sources: – Earned Income from Parking and Shuttles-54%– Property Assessments from Business

Improvement District-36%– Sponsorships, Membership and Contributions-

10%

TOTAL REVENUE: $2 million

Page 3: Resource Development

Where We Wanted to Go

Program Expansions and New Programs– Expansion of Clean and Safe Services– Add Beautification Programs, Landscaping– Develop and Implement a Comprehensive

Downtown Retail Strategy

GOAL FOR ADDITIONAL REVENUE : $1 million

Page 4: Resource Development

How To Get There:• Get property owners to commit

• Get Board members to commit

• Dedicate staff resources

Page 5: Resource Development

How To Get There: Step One• New 10-year CBID began in 2008, with

expanded assessment district boundaries

• Property owners increased the assessment rate to expand Clean and Safe and to implement Retail Development – Rate increased 57%

• Revenue increase from $600k to $1.5M

Page 6: Resource Development

How To Get There: Step Two• Investment initiated in 2007: Investments to

fund new programs such as a retail strategy.

• Since 2007, 74 investors have committed $1,000,000 to implement key initiatives. The Resource Development Committee, Board and staff, conducts annual peer-to-peer campaign.

• Revenue up from $192k to $350k

Page 7: Resource Development

Our Pitch• Based on results of Initiatives

• Initiatives made possible through additional funding:– Develop Retail Strategy– Implement Retail Strategy– Expanded Clean & Safe Services– Environmental Beautification– Outreach Initiative

Page 8: Resource Development

Hospitality Ambassadors offer visitors guidebooks, maps and printouts of directions, maps, coupons.

Page 9: Resource Development

3,600 mileslogged on

Segways

Page 10: Resource Development

DOWNTOWN BEAUTIFICATION

Page 11: Resource Development
Page 12: Resource Development

In 2012, 447 Hanging Flower Baskets on Eight Downtown Streets

Page 13: Resource Development

New Retail 2012• Savannah’s Candy Kitchen of Nashville

• Modern Trousseau

• Goorin Bros. Hats

Page 14: Resource Development

• 2011 retail openings: 36

• 33 new retail businesses opened or announced between January 1 and September 15, 2012

• 16 food establishments• 12 shopping options• 5 music and nightlife

Page 15: Resource Development

OUTREACH OFF TO GREAT START!

• Social Services Coordinator for Top 50 group -with highest number of arrests in BID

• Since July, 2011, have 3 clients in permanent housing, 7 more in transitional housing

• TOTAL ARRESTS FOR THIS GROUP OF 46 DECREASED BY 51.5% IN 2011-2!

Page 16: Resource Development

Impact

Costs of Housing

• Estimated cost = $5,000 per year for housing each client

• Potential Savings

$1,250,000

Costs of Arrest

• Each arrest costs taxpayers about $1,000

• An average of 30 arrests per year, annual taxpayer cost $1,500,000

Page 17: Resource Development

Impact

Residential Survey

• 2011 Negative Impact of Inebriates, Transients & Vagrants-73%

• 2012 Negative Impact of Inebriates, Transients & Vagrants-61%

Page 18: Resource Development

Resource Development

Where We WereWhere We Wanted To Go

How we Got There