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Brewer awarded $3.55M for development
Wednesday, August 03, 2005
The city and developer Michael Stern have members of
Maine's congressional delegation to thank for two transportation bill earmarks,
totaling $3.55 million, that will be used along the river and at The Mill at
Penobscot Landing.
"The $1.75 million was spearheaded by [U.S.] Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan
Collins on the Senate side for improving the entrance and along Route 15, which
is Main Street," Drew Sachs, Brewer economic development director, said Tuesday.
"The $1.8 million was spearheaded in the House by Congressman [Michael] Michaud
in his role on the transportation committee.
"The whole delegation came together and coordinated the whole package," he said.
The Brewer funds are folded into the $286 billion transportation bill that
Congress approved last week and President Bush is expected to sign next week. An
earmark is a special request outside the normal funding process.
Stern plans to refurbish the abandoned former Eastern Fine Paper Co. mill on
South Main Street into a multiuse facility called The Mill at Penobscot Landing
and needs the federal funds to jumpstart the multimillion dollar project.
"It's extremely important," he said Tuesday during a phone interview from his
office in Plymouth, Minn. "Federal, state and local assistance is crucial to the
success of the project because it's such a massive undertaking."
The funds will help reduce site redevelopment costs so the project "can afford
to rent to the cultural arts, small businesses and businesses who can't afford
typical market rents," the developer said. The goal is to return jobs to the
defunct mill site and the region, he said.
Stern, Sachs, Brewer Councilor Gail Kelly, who also is the regional director for
Snowe, and D'arcy Main-Boyington, the city's deputy director of economic
development, traveled to Washington, D.C., in March for face-to-face talks with
Maine's congressional delegation.
"Our meetings in Washington proved to be very successful, and the delegation has
responded in a way that truly exemplifies their interest in returning the
Eastern Fine Paper site to its status as a major contributor in the region -
both for jobs and economic growth," Stern said.
After two meetings with Gov. John Baldacci, Stern remains optimistic that the
state will demonstrate more support for the project in the future.
"I have had two seemingly positive meetings with Governor Baldacci, but at this
point I have received a $15,000 planning grant and only numerous assurances that
significant assistance will be made available," Stern said. "My most recent
discussions with his office have made me hopeful he will come through for the
region, but at this moment, I can't point to any guaranteed funding sources."
The Mill project plans include refurbishing the building with 32-foot-wide
corridors designed to look like an old-fashioned streetscape with three or four
high-end restaurants, an open market, art galleries, a cinema pub, affordable
housing, condos, a marina and ice arena.
Stern also has offered to move City Hall to the former mill's administration
building, which is under consideration by city leaders.
A portion of the Senate earmark provides funding to construct a turn lane and a
traffic light at the entranceway.
The House earmark is more open-ended and doesn't list specific projects, but
must be used for transportation improvements associated with the city's
waterfront.
"What we're hoping to do with it is fund the commercial marina, some parking to
serve the marina and a park and ride [commuter service] on The Mill property,"
Sachs said. "We want to have a covered bus facility for both public
transportation and coach [buses] and a covered public bike facility."
Connecting The Mill project to a historic walking trail that will eventually
span the length of the Penobscot River between the three bridges that connect
Bangor and Brewer is another project that might be funded using the funds.
"At this point, it's pretty much a waiting game to get the money released,"
Sachs said. "But this is money we can bank on for the project."
U.S. Rep. Michael Michaud is hosting a press conference at 3:45 p.m. Thursday at
The Mill entrance to announce the federal funding he helped to secure for Brewer
and The Mill project.
A copyright article from the Bangor Daily News, Wednesday, August 3, 2005.
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