BRONZEVILLE ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Regular MeetingMilwaukee, WI · September 20, 2021
Minutes
200 E. Wells Street
City of Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53202
Meeting Minutes
BRONZEVILLE ADVISORY COMMITTEE
LASHAWNDRA VERNON, CHAIR
Deshea Agee, Vice-Chair
Theresa Garrison, Anthony Smith, Baboonie Tatum, Rayhainio
Boynes, and Vanessa Claypool
Staff Assistant, Chris Lee, 286-2232, Fax: 286-3456,
clee@milwaukee.gov
Legislative Liaison, Ted Medhin, 286-8681,
tmedhi@milwaukee.gov
Monday, September 20, 2021 9:00 AM Virtual Meeting
This will be a virtual meeting conducted via GoToMeeting. Should you wish to join this
meeting from your phone, tablet, or computer you may go to
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/683170037. You can also dial in using your phone United
States: +1 (312) 757-3121 and Access Code: 683-170-037.
1. Call to order.
The meeting was called to order at 9:02 a.m.
2. Roll call.
Present 5 - Agee, Garrison, Vernon, Boynes and Smith
Excused 1 - Tatum
3. Review and approval of the previous meeting minutes from August 2, 2021.
The meeting minutes from August 2, 2021 were approved without objection.
4. Review of Bronzeville RFPs, listings, projects, programs, initiatives, events, grants,
activities, plans or updates.
a. DCD Commercial Corridor grants
This item was not discussed as there was no presentation.
b. DCD Real Estate projects
i. Bronzeville Estates scattered sites project (Maures Development Group)
Appearing:
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Amy Turim, DCD Real Estate
Matt Haessly, DCD Real Estate
Melissa Allen, Maures Development Group
Ms. Turim said that the project was a low income tax credit one with residential (single
family, duplexes, town homes) and commercial with a community center.
Ms. Allen gave an overview as follows:
Project partners included Scott Crawford (Que El Amin) and the City. There would be
bulk purchases of foreclosed, dilapitated, and vacant lots/homes in Bronzeville. Total
project cost was approximately $8.5 million. There would be 30 total units at 30%,
50%, 60% AMI and 5 market rate units. Bedroom units would be 2, 3, and 4.
Targeted closing date was for January/Februrary 2022. Completion would be
staggered throughout 2022. Team Management would be the property manager.
Rehab projects consisted of addresses on N. 5th St. (2633, 2317, 2323, 2335), 2421
N. 6th St., 629 W. Clarke, 2427 N. Teutonia Ave., 1950 N. MLK Dr., and 540 W. North
Ave. New construction projects consisted of addresses on N. 5th St. (2369,
2326-2334, 2528), addresses on N. 6th St. (2354, 2433, 2523), and possibly 1940 N.
MLK (under RFP review). Similar scattered sites have been done for Lindsay NSP and
Milwaukee Prosperity (75 units) and in Harambee.
Project elements would include green features, passive home design with model block,
art elements and features in all units (possibly an emblem for branding), visitable
units, 1st floor bedrooms for elderly family members, and Emerging Business
Participation target of 40%. Project financing would include debt, investor equity
(LIHTC), AHP, to be determined City funds, deferred developer fee, and green grant.
Partners would include the American Black Holocaust Museum (ABHM) and Northcott.
There were future conversations with the BID and Halyard Park.
The community service center would be at 540 W. North Ave. ABHM would be the
anticipated operator. Other partnerships may be considered. There would be
programs to underscore mission and strategic partnerships. Programs would range
from art and culture, health and wellness, job/skill training, and employment
counseling. Space would be utilized for workshops by small business entrepreneurs
and at least 10 hours per week. The property management firm would help coordinate
and maintain the facilities.
The project timeline entailed LIHTC announcement (May 2021), site confirmations
(June-Sept. 2021), architectural design (July-Nov. 2021), bidding (Nov.-Dec. 2021),
closing (Feb. 2022), groundbreaking event (March 2022), and construction/leasing
(Feb.-Dec. 2022).
Members inquired about right-to-own options, art housing possibilities, environmental
concerns with polluted sites, and promotion of the houses (including during Bronzeville
Week).
Ms. Allen replied. The houses are for lease only for 15 years as required by the low
income tax program, but there would be plans to sell after 15 years. There are no live,
work options for artists. At a minimum the facilities would have an art feature. Clean
drinking water and lead abatement were focuses. Water pipes would all be replaced,
water lateral would be replaced as needed, water filters would be installed, new
windows installed, and new walls installed. One to two properties would be started
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each week. Pre-leasing would not be an issue. A prospect list would be compiled.
Signs would be placed in front yards. Construction would possibly be an issue. The
marketing of houses as a part of Bronzeville Week would be welcomed and supported.
Mr. Haessly added that environmental analysis was done as well as soil tests.
Vice-chair Agee moved approval, seconded by member Smith, of the Bronzeville
Estates scattered sites project. There was no objection.
ii. MLK Library redevelopment project (General Capital Group and Emem Group)
Appearing:
Matt Haessly, DCD Real Estate
Michael Emem, Emem Group
Mr. Haessly said that for consideration was the right to negotiate with Emem Group
and that the developer was awarded tax credits.
Mr. Emem gave an overview as follows:
The proposed project had evolved over the years. The project was comprised of three
buildings: the MLK Library, a new construction located at the northern corner of MLK
Dr. and Chambers Ave., and an adaptive reuse of the existing Garfield theater. The
MLK Library would be developed into a 17,000 square foot library at the corner with
apartment units above the library. The new construction building would add additional
apartments located at the north corner of MLK Dr. and Chambers Ave. All of the
tenant and resident parking will be inside all the buildings. The final details of all three
of the buildings were being worked on with the City.
The new library building would have 41 apartment units above the first floor. There
would be 45 total parking stalls dedicated to the library in the back. Green roofs and
infrastructure were being explored for the library. There would be a small rooftop
terrace coming out of the community room on the second floor. Main entrance would
be at the corner for safety reasons. There would be 1,000 square feet of outdoor,
public plaza, and multi-purpose space for the library's dedicated use. The apartments
entrance would be separate at the northern end of the building along MLK Dr. The
apartment would be completely separate from the library. There would be multiple
points of egress.
The 93 unit apartment building would be an affordable housing project. The
development team was awarded a 4% tax credits and being planned are 38 1-bedroom
units, 21 2-bedroom units, and 33 3-bedroom units. Rents would range from 30% to
80% area median income. There would be 3 walk-up units along the streets. The
project was in the design development phase with thematic drawings completed. The
drawings would evolved throughout the fall. Final construction plans would be
completed by the end of year. Ground breaking was anticipated for Spring 2022. Final
project completion was anticipated by Summer 2023.
There was numerous thought on how to repurpose the Garfield Theater without
demolishing it. A compromise was done to rehabilitate the lower 2-story frontage on
MLK Dr. while demolishing and replacing the theater mass behind the frontage and
replacing it with 43 apartment units and on-site parking. The storefront would be
converted to 9 walk up live,work units. All of the masonry and decorative terracotta at
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the frontage would be restored. There would be 2,000 square feet of potential indoor
event/gathering, community, and storefront space. There would be individual
entrances with hung balconies.
Chair Vernon said that a theater should be put back into the community.
Members inquired about the live-work unit bedrooms and the condition of the theater.
Mr. Emem replied. The live-work units would have 3-bedrooms, front and back doors,
rear parking, and rear private spaces. The theater has not been used as a theater for
over 30 years. The theater had been used as a church worship space and more
recently a daycare. The theater was in poor shape with water and other damage, and
restoring it would not have been financially feasible. Also considered was the lack of
on-site parking. The decision was made to demolish considering all factors but
restoring the frontage.
Vice-chair Agee recused himself as he was part of the development group.
Member Boynes moved approval, seconded by member Garrison, of the MLK Library
redevelopment project. Vice-chair Agee abstaining. There was no objection.
c. City Plan Commission change of zoning applications
i. 2319 N. Vel R. Phillips Ave.
Appearing:
Bachan Singh
Kulbir Sra
Kristin Connelly, DCD Planning Division
Monica Wauck-Smith, DCD Planning Division
Ms. Sra and Singh gave an overview. Ms. Sra is the daughter and Mr. Singh was the
owner and father of the gas station (408 W. North Ave.). They own the residential
vacant grass lot to the north (2319 N. Vel R. Phillips Ave.). The station currently has 3
pumps with 2 on the south end under a canopy (North Ave.) and 1 on the east end
under a canopy (Vel R. Phillips). They planned to move the east pump to the northern
portion of the gas station where a new pump would be added there as well. The east
canopy would be removed. A new canopy would be installed at the north portion for the
two pumps (existing east pump that would be moved there and the new pump). In total
there would be 4 pumps after completion. They sought to change the zoning of the
adjacent northern grass lot from RT-4 to LB-2 to permit the addition of an entrance/exit
way on Vel R. Phillips Ave. into the gas station. The total project would combine the
gas station and grass lots, expand the gas station business, and maneuver land for
the business.
Members inquired about adding employment from the community to the gas station,
adding landscaping, and additional review processes, project timeline, and additional
renderings of the project.
Ms. Sra and Mr. Singh replied. There were 2 employees presently and a 3rd one would
be after the project was completed. There would be new landscaping around the
signage on the southern end.
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Ms. Connelly commented. In addition to review by the advisory committee, the change
of zoning application required review via public hearings by the City Plan Commission
(10/18/21) and Zoning, Neighborhoods and Development Committee (11/16/21).
Additional requirements may be required from the Board of Zoning Appeals. Her office
dealt with change of zoning applications, has not received much information yet, was
working to gather further information from the applicant, and did not have any staff
analysis as of yet.
Ms. Wauck Smith added that the Transit Oriented Development Study and
comprehensive planning efforts strived for walkability and not for auto-oriented uses
and that the project may need to be evaluated in this respect.
Member Boynes moved approval of the change of zoning application at 2319 N. Vel R.
Phillips Ave.
Members inquired further about the aspects of the project that they were to make a
recommendation on for the change of zoning application, were uncertain about what
aspects (gasoline pump/tanks, canopy, entrance/exit way) they were approving, and
asked for more visual/architectural renderings of the project.
Member Boynes withdrew his motion.
The item was held later in the meeting for reconsideration after public comments were
made.
After public comments, the committee reconsidered this item.
Members inquired about concerns made by those who gave public comments and
about reviewing rezoning applications only after they have been reviewed first by the
City Plan Commission so that more concrete analysis would be presented to the
advisory committee to review.
Ms. Sra and Mr. Singh replied. They wanted to seek approval from the advisory
committee first before they would proceed with the rezoning process with the City Plan
Commission and other bodies. A cell phone business was in the works to occupy the
space on North Ave. They wanted a recommendation as soon as possible before
making a decision to buy a new gas tank, which would take 4 months to receive after
ordering.
Members asked clerk staff for clarification on the aspects of the rezoning project that
the committee was reviewing.
Mr. Lee replied that it appeared the gas station was implementing two separate but
interrelated projects. The first project entailed only the existing gas station footprint in
moving the east pump to the northern portion of the gas station where a new pump
would be added there as well. The east canopy would be removed. A new canopy
would be installed at the north portion for the two pumps (existing east pump that would
be moved there and the new pump). In total there would be 4 pumps after completion.
The second part seemed to be the rezoning project for the adjacent northern grass lot
to add a new access way into the existing gas station footprint.
Members said that some members supported the new entrance/exit way to improve
service to customers and traffic safety, but members were not comfortable enough to
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move forward with a recommendation without seeing more clarifying information, visual
renderings, and further clarification.
Mr. Boyes moved to hold review of the rezoning application at 2319 N. Vel R. Phillips
Ave. for further information and architectural drawings to be submitted to the
committee. There was no objection.
d. Wisconsin DOT projects
Appearing:
Beth Foy, Dept. of Transportation
Brian Bliesner, Dept. of Transportation
Mr. Bliesner gave an overview as follows:
WisDOT's goal was to manage its assets to get as much useful life and to rehabilitate
until replacement was needed.
i. I-43 project from Brown St.-Capitol Drive
The I-43 Project was full rehabilitation of the existing freeway infrastructure including
the pavement and repairing of bridges at Brown, Wright, Center, Locust and Burleigh.
Other various maintenance work would be done, including sidewalk repairs and
painting of the steel underneath bridges. There would be safety and operational
improvements. Examples would include auxiliary lanes for only ramping on or off and
for easier merging and high friction surface treatment on the pavement to improve
friction and performance against water and ice. The preliminary noise study
recommended noise walls for 4 main areas: Locust to Keefe (east side), Capitol
off-ramp (east side), Chamber to Keefe (west side), and Brown to Walnut (west side).
Adjacent owners and renters within these locations would have the ability to vote for
the walls.
The project schedule entailed finalizing the environmental study, doing public outreach,
and doing the noise barrier public process for 2021. Plans would be finalized in early
2022 with potential construction in late 2022 to mid-2024.
ii. I-94 East-West project, from 70th to 16th Street
This corridor study project also included Hwy 175 from Wisconsin Ave. to south of the
American Family Field stadium. The project was within the City of Milwaukee and
adjacent to West Allis/West Milwaukee. The project would not be a rehabilitation but
rather, a complete redesign and reconstruction of the freeway. The environmental
impact statement was in process, and different alternatives were being evaluated. The
rebuilding, the alternative chosen would be to eliminate left hand entrance/exit ramps
and redesign the freeway to modern safety standards. 6-lane and 8-lane alternatives
were under consideration with the latter adding one lane in both directions. The double
decker option at the cemetery was no longer being pursued, and the graves there
would not be moved. The goal was to stay within the existing right away. Regarding
construction mitigation, transit opportunities would be explored. Workforce
development activities would be explored to assist disadvantage businesses. Contrary
to the perspective that the freeway was for white suburbanites to come into the City,
traffic volume data showed a 50/50 split in both directions for the morning and
afternoon peak hours. Many local people use the freeway. The project would help City
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residents have safer, more reliable roadways and get them to use the freeway.
For 2021, WisDot was in its alternative analysis phase with the goal to come up with a
recommended plan. Data (traffic, safety, census) was being gathered and analyzed,
alternative designs being developed and studied, and input being gathered from
stakeholders. Anticipated for December is a formal public meeting. 2022 would
consist of continuing study and analysis, identifying preferred alternative, continued
community input, and a public hearing in the summer. 2023 to 2025 would consist of
the Federal Highway Administration reviewing the recommended plan and the approval
of a final design plan. Construction would occur 2024 to 2027.
Chair Vernon said that historic creative communities should be preserved, racism was
a public health crisis, highway expansion projects have destroyed communities such
as Bronzeville and harmed disadvantaged residents, the proposed projects already
have been federally committed.
Chair Vernon questioned a creative mitigation plan to include safety for people,
creative installations, and hiring/representation of the community (to work) on the
projects.
Mr. Bliesner replied. Standard noise walls would be installed if supported by the
impacted owners/residents. There were State limitations to enhance the noise walls
further. There would be opportunity for those walls to be enhanced artistically by local
groups, which had been done in the past. There are typical contract requirements.
They would be working to recruit and bring awareness to the contracting opportunities.
They were exploring the human resource requirements of the City, which they've been
asked by the City. There was perception that City human resource requirements would
not be permitted for federal highway projects. There was opportunity for possibly pilot
projects to permit locally based requirements under the new presidential
administration, which were being further explored.
Member Garrison concurred that highways have come through and destroyed many
homes and livelihoods of people of color.
e. Bronzeville Week recap
Vice-chair Agee said that Bronzeville Week was great, had a mix of activities, was
supported by the community, 2022 would be the 11th year of the event, and the event
was being planned for August 6-13, 2022.
Member Garrison said that the marketplace was great for Bronzeville Week, the lack
of church involvement was disappointing, that Garfield Days were no longer
commencing due to the retirement of the organizers.
Chair Vernon said that there was no festival and stage and was hopeful for better
success next year.
5. Public comments.
Chair Vernon inquired about how to proceed with public comments.
Mr. Lee said that the committee had wanted to designate an agenda item for all public
commenting so as to not interfere with internal discussions by the committee and that
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Chair Vernon has discretion to preside over public commenting.
Paul Bahusky appeared and testified. The gas station at 408 W. North Ave. should
open up a business in the building on W. North Ave. belonging to the gas station prior
to expanding the gas station itself, and it should address its interior conditions prior to
expansion. Expanding gas stations was not part of the Bronzeville plan. The existing
entrance/exit way on the south end of Vel R. Phillips Ave. at the gas station is a traffic
safety issue, and installing a second entrance/exit way on the northeast side could be
done without expanding the gas station footprint. Regarding freeway expansions, DOT
does not factor in students and parkgoers in their formula to install noise walls. Noise
levels would go up at parks and schools with the freeway expansions. He has been
advocating for changes to the formula and to install noise walls. Noise walls should be
installed the entire length of the Bronzeville District.
It was noted that Marty Wall made comments in the chat with concerns about the
freeway expansion.
6. Next steps.
a. Prioritizing presenters
Members reviewed the list of proposed presenter and agenda topics and noted the
priorities of Thrive On, Medical College of Wisconsin, Greater Milwaukee Foundation,
Royal Capital, Office of African Affairs, and antidisplacement/gentrification plan
update.
Members said to have Thrive On and an update on the City's
antidisplacement/gentrification plan at the November meeting.
b. Agenda items for the next meeting
2319 N. Vel R. Phillips Ave. rezoning application at a special meeting.
Thrive On and the City's antidisplacement/gentrification plan at the November meeting.
c. Next meeting (November 15, 2021 at 9 am)
Also, a special meeting for Monday, September 27, 2021 at 9 a.m. to review the 2319
N. Vel R. Phillips Ave. rezoning application.
7. Announcements.
Chair Vernon announced that she had received training for creative disaster
preparedness and was available to assist anyone wanting arts and creative crisis
planning.
8. Adjournment.
The meeting adjourned at 11:48 a.m.
Chris Lee, Staff Assistant
Council Records Section
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City Clerk's Office
City of Milwaukee Page 9
Agenda
200 E. Wells Street
City of Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53202
Meeting Agenda
BRONZEVILLE ADVISORY COMMITTEE
LASHAWNDRA VERNON, CHAIR
Deshea Agee, Vice-Chair
Theresa Garrison, Anthony Smith, Baboonie Tatum, and
Rayhainio Boynes
Staff Assistant, Chris Lee, 286-2232, Fax: 286-3456,
clee@milwaukee.gov
Legislative Liaison, Ted Medhin, 286-8681,
tmedhi@milwaukee.gov
Monday, September 20, 2021 9:00 AM Virtual Meeting
This will be a virtual meeting conducted via GoToMeeting. Should you wish to join this meeting
from your phone, tablet, or computer you may go to https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/683170037.
You can also dial in using your phone United States: +1 (312) 757-3121 and Access Code:
683-170-037.
1. Call to order.
2. Roll call.
3. Review and approval of the previous meeting minutes from August 2, 2021.
4. Review of Bronzeville RFPs, listings, projects, programs, initiatives, events, grants,
activities, plans or updates.
a. DCD Commercial Corridor grants
b. DCD Real Estate projects
i. Bronzeville Estates scattered sites project (Maures Development Group)
ii. MLK Library redevelopment project (General Capital Group and Emem Group)
c. City Plan Commission change of zoning applications
i. 2319 N. Vel R. Phillips Ave.
d. Wisconsin DOT projects
i. I-43 project from Brown St.-Capitol Drive
ii. I-94 East-West project, from 70th to 16th Street
e. Bronzeville Week recap
5. Public comments.
6. Next steps.
a. Prioritizing presenters
b. Agenda items for the next meeting
c. Next meeting (November 15, 2021 at 9 am)
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7. Announcements.
8. Adjournment.
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