While SB 177 was passed by the Senate and finds its way through the legislative process, our Mayor is invisible.
For forty years, Republican Mayors have supported the Historic Neighborhoods and the Indiana Historic Preservation Commission.
It will be under this Mayor’s watch that the IHPC and all of the private investment that historic preservation has brought to the City will be reversed. It will be Mayor Ballard’s legacy that beautiful neighborhoods and cultural Icons like Lockerbie Square, Herron Morton Place, The Old North Side and yes, even the grand homes on North Meridian Street may no longer be protected.
It will be under this Mayor’s watch that the IHPC and all of the private investment that historic preservation has brought to the City will be reversed. It will be Mayor Ballard’s legacy that beautiful neighborhoods and cultural Icons like Lockerbie Square, Herron Morton Place, The Old North Side and yes, even the grand homes on North Meridian Street may no longer be protected.
State Senator Pat Miller has come completely unhinged and authored a really poorly thought-out piece of legislation. Senate Bill 177 violates virtually every Republican Ideal. You simply don’t dictate neighborhood-level issues from the Statehouse. Pat Miller's bill is Big Government meddling in what is clearly a local issue. See the Indy Star Editorial.
These neighborhoods chose to become historic districts with a super-majority of property owners voting for it (70%). These neighborhoods then developed their own Historic Preservation Plans – an act of self-determination. And now Pat Miller and Ben Hunter believe that they know better than the neighborhoods -- and want to dictate to the neighborhoods how things are going to be.
Pat Miler’s amended bill potentially impacts every neighborhood in the state of Indiana – including the Governor’s mansion and homes on North Meridian Street that are protected under a separate state statute. It’s shocking, really, that a nationally known corridor like Meridian Street could be ravaged by a State Senator with an ax to grind.
This law is so poorly written that a property owner with virtually any imagined injury could appeal an adverse finding – and it would be compelled to be approved.
Nonetheless, this isn’t just about Pat Miller any longer. This is also about our Mayor. This is where Mayor Ballard should show leadership and should be talking to his fellow Republicans and letting them know how wrong-headed this bill is.
This is about David Wu, the Mayor’s Policy Director – with a degree in economics – who should be explaining that private investment is essential to restoring neighborhoods in the core of the city. He should be explaining that property values improve the tax base that the City so desperately needs.
He should be pointing out that it simply doesn’t make economic sense for an individual to invest the huge amount of money in an old house without some guidelines that everyone agrees to live by.
He should be pointing out that it simply doesn’t make economic sense for an individual to invest the huge amount of money in an old house without some guidelines that everyone agrees to live by.
David Wu should be advocating for the thousands of property owners in what are currently protected districts who will see their property values precipitously drop under this legislation - because he's an educated man who understands these issues.
I hear urban legends of economic hardship that are caused by historic districts. Let me tell you about real economic hardship: A home in my neighborhood that was in good shape – new windows, new furnace and wiring, hardwood floors, a charming home -- sold at auction for $25,000 a couple of weeks ago. It was bought by vultures. It will be pimped-out as a rental.
To put that in perspective: that’s just a few thousand more than I paid for my modest car five years ago. That house is similar to a third of the homes in my neighborhood – including my own home. It’s also sold for substantially less than one-half of what I paid for my home… more than 16 years ago.
Homes represent the largest single asset that most families own. The loss of net-worth to families in neighborhoods that aren’t protected by a conservation district is the real economic hardship. That’s what David Wu-- Mayor Ballard’s Policy Director-- should be saying; but he isn’t doing that. He seems to be standing on the sidelines cheering on on the supporters - but we need more support than that.
While I appreciate the mansions on N. Meridian Street which may no longer be protected because of Pat Miller’s ill-conceived legislation, that’s not where my passion is. If it’s not clear already, I don’t live on Meridian Street.
I don’t mean to berate my own community that many of us work so hard to improve– but I am going to be candid for a moment: Parts of this city look like a third-world country. The disinvestment, the crumbling infrastructure, the crime is unfathomable. I’m showing my age that I’m reminded of a phrase in a Joni Mitchell song:
I don’t mean to berate my own community that many of us work so hard to improve– but I am going to be candid for a moment: Parts of this city look like a third-world country. The disinvestment, the crumbling infrastructure, the crime is unfathomable. I’m showing my age that I’m reminded of a phrase in a Joni Mitchell song:
Pawn shops glitter like gold tooth caps
In the grey decay
They chew the last few dollars off
Old Beale Street's carcass
In some of neighborhoods in Indianapolis that I know, Pawn shops would be considered economic development.
I know the neighborhood on Hamilton Street where an entire family – seven in all-- were gunned down in their home– children, parents, everyone. I worked on the home across the street. That’s a neighborhood that I know.
Some of the neighborhoods I know don’t have a grocery store. You can buy drugs or guns, but not a loaf of bread.
The neighborhoods I know saw a beloved and respected business owner robbed and shot in his glass shop – his body found by the mail carrier.
In the neighborhoods that I know - people die in house fires every winter because their gas is shut off and the space heaters catch fire.
In the neighborhoods that I know - people die in house fires every winter because their gas is shut off and the space heaters catch fire.
That some of these neighborhoods persevere, that they move forward and organize and fight for dignity is amazing. The community leaders in these neighborhoods are nothing short of heroic. These neighborhoods face insurmountable challenges, and the one thing that works – the one tool that has proven to attract private investment—is being taken away from them.
Let me share with you a couple of photos: It’s of a house at 39 N. Randolph Street that’s been boarded up since April of 2008. It’s not unlike the thousands of vacant and abandoned houses on the near-east side.
Except that it’s Mayor Greg Ballard’s boyhood home. He evidently points it out – so I will too. (Thanks to Advance Indiana for the photos)
You would think that he would be more supportive of neighborhoods desire for self-determination, private investment and increased property values that come with a historic district.
But our Mayor is silent and is nowhere to be seen.



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