The Rev. Michael Chapman, pastor of St. John Baptist Church and
president of the Oak-Michigan Housing Development Corp, a
not-for-profit housing development corporation of St. John Baptist
Church, announced on April 5 a step forward for a well-devised,
systematic, business plan to revitalize Buffalo’s East Side
and the critical role of UB in achieving this goal.
In front of hundreds of supporters, parishioners, elected
officials and community leaders, Chapman outlined the Oak-Michigan
Housing Development Corp.’s and the St. John Fruit Belt
Development Corp.’s $500 million East Side development plan,
which he said will be a catalyst for economic development and
improvement in quality of life in one of Buffalo’s poorest
neighborhoods.
Chapman said this plan will focus on development of a High
Street commercial district, to be populated primarily by
minority-owned businesses, as well as the construction of 150 new,
multi-family townhouses for residents of McCarley Gardens, new
housing for seniors, new recreational facilities, a boxing facility
and new infrastructure in the 42-block Fruit Belt neighborhood
adjacent to the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus.
“This is the most comprehensive urban development under
way anywhere in the country,” Chapman said. “Working
with more than 63 community partners and leaders in government, we
will move forward with a bold business plan to revitalize a
community beset for decades by poverty, joblessness and inadequate
housing. We anticipate 15,000 employment opportunities through
construction, new businesses and support services.”
The vision for East Side Development includes
business-development entrepreneurship, $60 million in new
townhouses, two low-rise senior residential buildings, a $20
million youth facility, a $234 million High Street commercial
development project, a building to house corporate offices, a youth
boxing and Business Entrepreneurship Training Center for 300-500
young adults age 21-35, and $20 million invested in infrastructure,
sidewalks, curbs, lighting, greenery, an East Side mental health
facility, assisted living and veterans residential facilities, as
well as a Fruit Belt grocery and petroleum station.
For the plan to be successful, Chapman said, it is essential
that UB implement the UB 2020 plan to develop its Downtown Campus.
Chapman explained that the university's downtown expansion will
produce the critical mass—in new jobs and economic
impact—needed for East Side revitalization to become
reality.
As a first step toward supporting the goal for East Side
revitalization, the UB Foundation will purchase McCarley Gardens
and make the property available to the university for the purpose
of developing its Downtown Campus. Sale of McCarley Gardens is
contingent upon HUD’s approval of several factors be
completed by Oak-Michigan Housing Development Corporation and UB,
and approved by HUD. These include development of a relocation plan
for McCarley Gardens’ residents and establishing a six-member
joint panel to conduct a two-year assessment of economic
opportunities for Fruit Belt and East Side residents.
Oak-Michigan Housing Development Corp. anticipates it will begin
construction of new townhouses for McCarley Gardens residents by
2013 and all conditions for sale of the property will be met by
2017.
“The UB Foundation strongly supports the initiatives of
St. John Baptist Church and its not-for-profit organizations for
development of Buffalo’s East Side, as well as UB’s
vision for expanding in downtown Buffalo,” said Robert
Denning, chair of the UB Foundation’s Finance Committee and
president and CEO of Perry’s Ice Cream.
“We have reached an agreement with the Oak-Michigan
Housing Development Corp. to eventually acquire the McCarley
Gardens property. We view this investment as an important first
step toward realizing the vision of both the church and the
university.”
President John B. Simpson cautioned, however, that the UB 2020
plan for downtown campus development—while critical to
revitalizing the East Side—is at risk. For UB 2020 to go
forward, Simpson said, the state must adopt reforms proposed in the
Public Higher Education Empowerment and Innovation Act (PHEEIA) and
stop cutting UB’s budget.
“We have a shared vision for revitalization and we agree
on how to get it done,” Simpson said. “Now we need the
state to let us do this. We need the tools to get the job
done.”
Passage of PHEEIA will help UB to achieve UB 2020, thereby
creating 6,700 new jobs at UB and 20,000 construction jobs, and
adding nearly $2 billion in additional economic impact to Western
New York.
University leaders say that these common-sense reforms provide a
predictable tuition plan that differentiates the cost and quality
of education at research universities like UB and allows UB to keep
the tuition students pay, instead of sending it to Albany to fill
budget gaps. PHEEIA also gives UB the ability to enter into
partnerships to leverage private sector funding as a way to create
greater economic growth in Western New York.
Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, Assemblywoman Crystal Peoples-Stokes
and state Sen. Antoine Thompson each expressed strong support for
the plan to revitalize Buffalo’s East Side and implored
members of the community to rally together to help legislators in
Albany understand that passage of PHEEIA is critical to Western New
York's economic future.
The Rev. Richard Stenhouse of Bethel AME Church and president of
the Jeremiah Partnership, made up of eight pastors of East Side
churches, also expressed support for PHEEIA and the efforts to
revitalize the East Side.