Unfortunately, thank you for posting the above pic for us to commiserate over or discuss. I made my annual pilgramage back to Portland the other week and like all of us with an eye for observation around the city. The last few years I noticed the homeless encampments that the city was working on removing, which seems to have had some success. But what I noticed is what others have mentioned. I could not get over the amount of loiterers along Congress Street, Marginal Way, and near Deering Oaks. The panhandlers were out along the exits of 295, but noticed them around 302 and Riverside Drive too near the new shelter. On two occasions during the morning I noticed city staff breaking up groups of homeless under bridges along 295. What I found alarming was the growing amount of graffiti throughout the city on buildings, walls, signs and telephone poles. Worse than I can remember or recall. Never a good precursor.
Driving down Congress Street past Monument Square toward Maine Med was clearly an area in decline. No wonder the office buidlings can't attract tenants and Reny's wants the lease to expire. The state tree could be switched to a 'For Lease' sign, which are everywhere. A family, I'd guess from out of town, was waiting to cross at Congress and High Streets and looked visibly troubled about which way to cross to avoid undesirables on both sides of the street. All I remember a few years back when the Westin wanted to build event/conference space on Congress Square Park and the outrage of losing that space and trying to come up with ways to activate that space. Fast forward to present. You turned a tax generating use that would bring people downtown and at the current rate the Westin flag could be lost due to a decaying situation. The Longfellow Hotel had a lot of fanfare for opening, but I wouldn't be in a hurry to stay right around it. And the Musuem of Art's plan to spend 10's of millions and give a reason for more people to come downtown, let's find a way to kill that too. New concert space and venue to come downtown? Let's make sure to roadblock that. At the rate its going fewer people will want to go to the State Theater and dinner nearby. A few years back many said the city staff and council were all shills for the developers and the change we got were policies to penalize, add delays to the development process, and moratoriums to those looking to bring money into the city. I hope there is still a focus on turning non-profit and underutilized parcels into higher tax generating parcels. Hopefully, the Re-Code efforts and additional height allowances will help. Building condos for wealthy out of town residents to live in a portion of the year? Great. Add to the tax base and not utilize or burden hardly any city services? Seems better than the alternative. Observing city hall's policies, inabilities, and lack of elected leadership is disheartening. Almost like shooting yourself in the foot and then stopping to reload. Hard to beleive that the mayor is the ex-sherriff and has citizens and business owners saying areas of his city are becoming no-go zones. Do we beleive the city will be effective in the correction efforts?
And while we can come up with a laundry list of items to complain about, there are many bright spots. I still believe the city has the ability to continue to grow and be one of the renowned small cities in the country (with a decent sized metro). City and developer focus centered on the Old Port and eastern waterfront out to the old B&M plant is paying dividends and looks good. I am impressed with the new national retailers that are bullish on, and locating along, Middle Street. This is where visitors want to be and spend time. From Franklin Arterial along Fore around the Eastern Prom really plays on the city's current and scenic strengths. Redevelopment and new uses, like the proposed music hall, Herald Square, and the Casco generate an interest and energy as people want to experience what is new and the synergy associated with it. The City can then focus efforts on revitalizing Congress Street. They did it back in the 90's with a focus on retail. Now the focus will be housing. There are great developers in the city, such as Redfern, that can, and have, delivered as many have pointed out. That is where I put my hope and that they can push forward and take the risks in carrying the city forward.
We're often critical in this forum because we care, and we want the best for this special city and its potential. I still like the prior marketing line- Portland. How Maine does a city. The state has tens of thousands of square miles of rural land, can we just have a few square miles to try to achive a truly positive urban experience without constant pushback?! We hope that many of these bold proposals, along with smaller infill projects, come to fruition. It's why we follow this forum. As it is said in The Shawshank Redemption, "Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies"!