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Keep door open today for waterfront's future

By A TIMES EDITORIAL
Published March 22, 2007


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Finally, there is the promise of new activity on Clearwater's downtown waterfront. It isn't just the voters' approval of the downtown boat slip project in the March 13 election that provides a reason for optimism.

It is also the announcement that a new dinner cruise boat, the sleek Yacht StarShip II, will start plying the waters of the Intracoastal Waterway sometime next month.

And it is the opening of the first block of Clearwater's streetscape project along Cleveland Street, with its more pedestrian-friendly environment.

And it is the slowly rising tower of the Opus South high-rise condominium and retail project on the key corner of Osceola Avenue and Cleveland Street, where Calvary Baptist Church once stood.

These items don't complete the puzzle - they are merely pieces - but people depressed over Clearwater's dreary downtown can find some cheer in them.

While some other proposed condominium projects in or near downtown are languishing in the slow condo market, Opus South keeps going. That project will bring not only new residents, but also new shops to downtown.

Troy Manthey, who operates two dinner cruise ships in Tampa's Channelside district, will dock his newest venture, the Yacht StarShip II, in the Clearwater Municipal Marina on Clearwater Beach. The 118-foot ship, in which Manthey is investing $1-million, will offer sit-down dining for almost 150 people, a dance floor, an observation deck, a cocktail lounge and a bridal suite. The ship's brunch, lunch and dinner cruises on the Intracoastal will give tourists and residents alike something new to do.

The voters' decision on the boat slips gives Clearwater city government, for the first time in recent history, an open door to do something positive on publicly owned waterfront property. The project will bring around 129 rental boat slips, hundreds of feet of side-slip tieups for transient boaters, a fishing pier and a promenade to the Intracoastal waterfront at the base of Coachman Park - provided the city is able to obtain all necessary permits.

The city did a good job of informing residents about the boat slips project in the leadup to the election. Their job doesn't end there, though. Some residents believe Clearwater is inept when it comes to building public projects. Clearwater officials can help address that image problem by updating the public regularly during the permitting process and being completely accountable for any problems that arise.

City officials surely understand that by doing so, they will earn public trust - perhaps enough to gain support for future projects to further improve the downtown waterfront.

[Last modified March 21, 2007, 20:21:41]


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Comments on this article
by Winston 03/22/07 09:01 PM
Right on, Joey and Lisa. The only thing missing from this editorial is a set of pom poms for the writer. The city couldn't have asked for a better spin job on their ineptitude. So much for objective journalism, the Times is in the tank for the city.
by Drew Finn 03/22/07 08:33 PM
Downtown Clearwater (aka Gridlock City) is beyond hope. Empty stores, no parking, and construction. Big draws. We can all go look at the uncontroled growth for fun. BUILD - BUILD - BUILD - that's what we do!!!!!!
by Quaoar 03/22/07 05:26 PM
Lawrence, the active voters were likely helped along by the $cientologists who will benefit directly by anything that paints over their destruction of downtown. Who will feel comfortable under 100 surveillance cameras? These public $$ are a waste.
by gh 03/22/07 12:39 PM
Agree w/Joey, Lisa, & Kay. Why would anyone go downtown? Why would you boat there? Coffee and to pay a water bill? To look at another condo? Common sense says if you put something down there worth going to people will come. Clwtr IS beyond inept.
by roger 03/22/07 11:45 AM
Hey, it seems that the main problem of downtown Clearwater City since 1975 has been neglected as the main stumbling block... Great, do you hope to see TomKate buying flats and the Freewinds come on the pier to make these investments profitable?
by David 03/22/07 11:37 AM
I agree with Kay. Going downtown is like going into bizzarro world with all those crazy cult members in khakis. I wish they would alll get back on their spaceship and go home.
by Kay 03/22/07 11:23 AM
I avoid downtown Clearwater and Clearwater Beach. Downtown: Limited parking, empty commercial units and if it ain't owned by the cult, it's owned by a cult member. The beach is just WAY TOO CROWDED (always has been).
by Donald 03/22/07 11:13 AM
re Joey: I like your thinking. ;-)
by Lawrence 03/22/07 10:42 AM
The beach newspaper is reporting that Clearwater Beach/Sand Key/Island Estates had double the turnout and double the desire for change than the rest of the city. That's called a "motivated base", and that's trouble for the inept and their enablers.
by Sean 03/22/07 10:06 AM
We have purchased a condo downtown and look forward to all of the new developments....finally!
by Lisa 03/22/07 08:55 AM
Yippee, pedestrians! Watch them look for a parking space! Watch them walk by the vacant stores! Watch them get scowled at by the cult! And a condo is going up! Weeeeee! So what if the other projects are dead? Hurray for our city! Cheer, cheer, cheer!
by Joey 03/22/07 08:22 AM
Image problem? Image problem is when a good product is perceived poorly. Clearwater has planning-challenged simpletons whose track record confirms genuine ineptness. The Times is the one with the image problem, trying to put lipstick on the city pig.
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