St. Paul's downtown booster group is asking commercial property owners to pay for neighborhood ambassadors, a new public safety communications center and other amenities, the benefits and costs of which will largely bypass downtown's biggest property owner.
After years of planning — and recent delays related to the COVID-19 pandemic — the Downtown Alliance is sending a petition to commercial property owners on Monday that will ask them to pay into an improvement district similar to Minneapolis' Downtown Improvement District (DID). Following city approval, the district could launch this year, said Joe Spencer, Downtown Alliance president.
The district would include much of St. Paul's downtown business core but exclude several blocks east of Cedar Street where the majority of property owner Jim Crockarell's downtown holdings are located. Those properties include Park Square Court, 375 Jackson, the Empire Building, the First National Bank building and U.S. Bank Center.
Crockarell declined to comment Friday.
State law allows owners of 35% of the land area in question to veto a special service district. Crockarell, who owns more square footage than any other downtown property owner, could single-handedly veto an improvement district that encompassed the whole of downtown.
The law also limits payments to commercial and industrial properties, so residential properties that Crockarell owns within the proposed district would be exempted.
Spencer said the improvement district's proposed geography is based on a pilot program last summer and conversations with property owners. As the district gets established, he said, it could expand to include other interested property owners.
"We crafted a proposal that really is concentrated in the place where we had the most amount of support," Spencer said. "These are programs that are meant to be by business and for business."