City of Alexander Mayor Paul Mitchell has announced a
developer is ready to convert the former state-operated Alexander
Human Development Center property, along Highway 111, into a
commercial and residential complex. The 40 million dollar project
will include renovating the property’s iconic former tuberculosis
hospital into apartments and extending Brookwood Road through the
property to Highway 111.
The announcement
came near the end of the council’s March 18 meeting. Mitchell said
the developer is, “Anxious to get going.”
Mitchell said the
developer wants to build the road, while the weather is good, and
renovate the hospital building first. At the same time they will be
contacting potential commercial clients. Some of the names dropped by
Mitchell were McDonald’s, Big Red and possibly a Harps.
The developer is Ben
Hanford (DBA 14701 Alexander Road, LLC.), a client of the civil
engineering firm of Hope Consulting in Benton. Bill Hope, Jr. met
with Mitchell and Planning Commission Chairman Michael Huck in 2018
to discuss potential development areas in the city. The main topic of
discussion was the Human Development property.
Hanford will put
$500,000.00 “in escrow” to guarantee completion of the Brookwood
extension Mitchell said. A portion of the extension will go through
property owned by the developer of the Meadow’s Edge subdivision.
According to Mitchell there is a verbal agreement to allow extending
Brookwood Road through the Meadow’s Edge property. However, the
city must acquire easement rights before construction can begin
through Meadow’s Edge.
Strip malls will
also be part of the mix. Mitchell pointed out that strip malls allow
small businesses to set up without the hassle and cost of buying
property and constructing a building.
According to a
drawing presented by Mitchell, the property will be divided into 13
lots (See graphic above). Lot-1 (green) has the hospital building, which
will be renovated into apartments. Next to Lot-1 is Lot-10 (tan),
which will be developed into multi-family housing. The remainder of
the property will be commercial.
During a
conversation after the meeting Mitchell revealed the name of the
shopping center, Alexander Cross Roads. Besides the shopping center
being accessible by area residents from all four points on the
compass, from both inside and outside Alexander, Mitchell sees the
name as a metaphor for Alexander’s future.
“We are at a cross
roads,” he said. “Do we stay where we are or move ahead.”
This is exactly what
Mitchell expected the property would do. He wanted to use it to
attract commercial development that will result in more sales tax
revenue to the city. And, since the city was able to acquire the
property from the state for a whopping $10 Alexander doesn’t lose
anything if the property is given away to the right developer.
During its February
2018 meeting the council approved an ordinance accepting the state’s
offer to take ownership of the Human Development Center. The
65.69-acre property was abandoned after clients were moved to a more
homelike environment.
The closing occurred in 2010 during a federal lawsuit over Arkansas's entire Human Development system. Eventually, all of the Human Development centers were closed.
The closing occurred in 2010 during a federal lawsuit over Arkansas's entire Human Development system. Eventually, all of the Human Development centers were closed.
The center was home
to several adults with special needs that required care and training
from professionals. The statewide lawsuit concerning the treatment
and facilities provided to the clients resulted in the state
shuttering all human development centers and moving residents
throughout the state into apartment-like settings. Pathfinder, Inc.
now provides the life-skills training and housing to anyone needing
those services.
As part of the
agreement with the state the city agreed to “honor” an existing
lease with Pathfinder. While Pathfinder occupies approximately one
acre of the property and five housing units, according to the lease
Pathfinder pays one dollar ($1.00) per year and must maintain the
grounds of the entire property. The lease expires in 2022.
As it turns out,
there’s a reason why the state couldn’t interest a developer in
the property. According to Mitchell the state isn’t allowed, by
law, to sell state property to individuals. Apparently, the state
couldn’t find another use for the property so they came knocking on
Alexander’s door.
“That restriction
doesn’t apply to us,” Mitchell said during a post-meeting
conversation.
Since the state
first made the offer in early 2017 it has been Mitchell’s intent to
use the property as a lure to attract individual businesses or
developers. Mitchell told council members he wants to deed the entire
property to the developer including the Pathfinder lease.
He is currently
looking for a real estate attorney to review the proposal and make
sure all the documents will stand legal muster and there are no
pitfalls that will come back later to bite the city. Ultimately, it
will be up to council members to give final approval on the
transaction.
There is one
downside to all this. For the past two years the old hospital has
been used by Alexander and other fire departments throughout the
state as a location to practice fire rescue skills.
Earlier in the
meeting Fire Chief Ryan McCormick, from the Collegeville Fire
Department, thanked the mayor and council members for use of the old
hospital building. He noted that since last week’s drills, “One
firefighter has been saved.”
In other business
during the March 18 meeting:
The city
council had the first reading of an annexation ordinance involving
property, approximately 1.73-acres, next to Ample Storage along
Highway 5. Mitchell noted the ordinance lacked an Emergency Clause.
Once that’s added he expects to pass it at the next meeting.
Council
members approved the final version of the 2018 budget.
Council
members declared Ward-4 Seat-1 vacant. At the February council
meeting Council Member Melissa Ratliff submitted a letter of
resignation. Since last summer Ratliff has been working part-time at
city hall mainly to organize the thousands of files. With her
resignation she will be working with JoAn Churchill learning the
bookkeeping system.
Mitchell said
someone has already shown an interest in filling the position. Anyone
who is a registered voter and lives in Ward-4 should send their
resume to:
Mayor Paul Mitchell
P O. Box 610
Alexander, AR
72002-0610.
The next
meeting of the Alexander city council is April 15. The meeting is at
6 PM and is held in the courtroom at city hall. The public is invited
to attend.
Please consider how an apartment building of this size would affect the already crowded Bryant School district
ReplyDeleteNot everyone has children. Besides, to attract businesses that require walk-in customers you need warm bodies. If municipalities worried about the schools none of them would allow any residential construction. And, if you're concerned now wait until you see what's going in across from Meadow's Edge. It's still in the design stage but you probably won't like it.
ReplyDeleteIt will be a big step for this small city! GO MR MAYOR
ReplyDeletePopulation, growth brings new schools; not vise-versa
ReplyDeleteI feel about the old T.B.Hospitals,since our government runs them and we don't need more apartment we need to get the Army core of engineers, to make them our ruel,County hospitals in our country and use them form our PANDEMIC, like they where Design for pandemic, then after it gets managed we can still need hospitals, we can utilize,
ReplyDeleteThis thinking is so out-of-date it's not worth a response.
ReplyDelete