The nonprofit St. Paul Downtown Alliance wants to expand its privately funded Downtown Improvement District into the Lowertown neighborhood, a move that would double the group’s budget needs for street cleaners, safety ambassadors and other services aimed at shoring up the capital city’s hub.
The existing district, which launched in 2021, would stretch to cover all of downtown, from the Xcel Energy Center to CHS Field. Thanks to a law passed by the Legislature last year, residential property owners would also start getting assessed for the services.
But for that to happen, the Downtown Alliance needs to drum up support. If owners subject to 35% of the proposed service charges file objections, the proposal is vetoed.
“We really feel we can make some improvements down here,” Joe Spencer, president of the Downtown Alliance, said to a crowd of about 30 downtown residents gathered at the Buttered Tin last month. “We really think we can deliver some good value.”
By this point, Spencer’s pitch was well-rehearsed. The existing district has seen a 40% drop in what St. Paul police call “quality of life” crimes and calls for service, he said, for issues like graffiti, vandalism, disorderly conduct and panhandling. Over the same period, Lowertown saw the same types of calls increase by 25%.
“Making half of downtown better isn’t enough,” Spencer said. “People don’t know where these imaginary lines are.”
The boundaries of the current district were drawn to bypass downtown St. Paul’s largest property owner, Madison Equities, which refused to back the concept in 2021. After the company’s longtime owner, Jim Crockarell, died earlier this year, his wife listed Madison Equities’ entire downtown office portfolio for sale.
Representatives for Madison Equities did not respond to requests for comment. Spencer said the company makes up about 15% of the proposed new district, meaning it cannot single-handedly veto the expansion.