Crown Point City officials reviewed 10 years of façade- and storefront-rehabilitation projects and discussed a proposed change to the application process during a routine meeting.
City staff reported that 52 projects participated across four combined programs over the past decade, with 21 projects on North Main Street and 31 in the downtown area. Staff said the average grant or rebate value was just under $11,000 per project on North Main Street and about $22,000 per project in the downtown area, where work was typically more intensive and included façade rehabilitation of older buildings. North Main Street projects were described as smaller-scale beautification work such as signage, awnings and parking-lot improvements.
Greg, a city staff member, told the board staff supplied the same application presented the previous week but removed a percentage-based option. Greg said staff also discussed an alternative described during the meeting as “50% … up to $25,000,” and he said he believed the revised approach would simplify administration; the application language shown during the discussion did not further clarify that formula.
Mayor (unnamed) and other board members asked if there were questions; the mayor noted the materials were for internal review and did not require board approval at the meeting. No motion or vote was taken on changes to the rebate or application language.
Meeting participants also briefly recognized a longtime RDC member for service and noted funeral services for that individual were scheduled for Thursday. The discussion about the rebate and downtown program was informational and staff indicated any formal changes would return later if board action were required.