Just because.

Just because.

Caleb Hannan at the Nashville Scene’s Pith in the Wind blog offers additional question ideas, courtesy of the mayor of Dallas, for those of us going to the convention center panel discussion this Sunday:

Every city reads from the same playbook when it comes to building convention centers. So when you consider a city like Dallas, it’s helpful to picture them about four pages ahead of Nashville.

Whereas we’ve spent the past decade waltzing our way towards a new center, Dallas has spent roughly half that time trying to build an adjoining hotel. Earlier this month, the city finally reached an end point, shooting down a referendum that would have blocked the $500-million, publicly-owned* hotel. The only problem: It’s almost impossible to finance.

In this week’s Liberadio(!) interview with Dr. Heywood Sanders, professor of public administration at the University of Texas at San Antonio and Nashville convention center panel participant, he discusses these not-so-quick-fix “headquarters hotels:”

Listen to the three-minute interview excerpt (full interview here):

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Dr. Heywood Sanders: …In Fact, the latest fillip to this, and it’s one we might want to talk about in the Nashville case, is what happens after you build a new convention center or do a major expansion and you don’t get the business you expect. And the answers the consultants now pedal is, “what you need next door is a headquarters hotel of a least 1,000 rooms.” And if, by the way, you can’t somehow subsidize or induce a private developer to take on that proposition, increasingly we find cities issuing tax-exempt municipal bonds and building their own hotels and going into the hotel business…

Freddie: So this is proposed by the Chamber of Commerce, the Convention and Visitors Bureau, and the Mayor’s Office as an economic development must. If you see it as a bust, then why are all these parties so hot on it?

Dr. Sanders: In Nashville I’m sure individual folks have their own reasons. Mayors and local elected officials often like to support big, large-scale development projects. It gives them something that they can point to and claim as a record of a major public advance. It’s easier to take the money and build things like that than deal with rather more intractable urban problems like the quality of the schools or drug problems or the overall level of violence and criminality. Those are tough things to tackle. They take time and a lot of money. Doing big projects, particularly big projects where you can argue that visitors are paying the tab, that’s a nice quick simple fix.

The panel discussion is this Sunday, May 31, at Vanderbilt’s Blair School of Music (the Steve and Judy Turner Recital Hall) from 2-4 PM.

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Dr. Heywood Sanders: The Interview

This week, in anticipation of his trip to Nashville to participate in a panel discussion on the proposed convention center, we speak to Dr. Heywood Sanders, a notable urban planning and politics professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio and a convention center expert.

In the interview, Dr. Sanders offers lessons from other cities who have proposed and followed through with similar convention center plans, weighs in on a Dallas-based company’s plan to build a 1.5 million-square-foot Medical Trade Center somewhere near downtown Nashville, urges Nashvillians to attend the panel, and gives examples of the kinds of questions we should be asking the business leaders and elected officials who are pushing the project.

He also gives us his opinion on what a city like ours should do if we find ourselves with hundreds of millions of tourism tax dollars to devote to a major project that is not a convention center.

Listen to our interview with Dr. Sanders [download mp3]:

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The convention center panel discussion, which is this Sunday, May 31, from 2 to 4 PM, at the Steve and Judy Turner Recital Hall at the Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University, will feature Dr. Sanders, who has studied the issue of building projects as civic investments in more than 30 cities over the past 15 years, and Butch Spyridon, who, as president of the Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau, has led Nashville’s $4.0 billion hospitality industry since 1991, and will be moderated by Pat Nolan, host of Inside Politics for News Channel 5+.

Organized and sponsored by all five Metro Council At-Large members and Vice Mayor Diane Neighbors, the panel is also sponsored by several district members of Metro Council, including Lonnell Matthews, Jr., Walter Hunt, Michael Craddock, Mike Jameson, Erik Cole, Karen Bennett, Anna Page, Sandra Moore, Kristine LaLonde, Erica Gilmore, Emily Evans and Duane Dominy.

Organizations sponsoring the event include Vanderbilt University, Metro Channel 3, Davidson County Young Democrats, The Tennessean, the Nashville City Paper, the Nashville Scene, and Liberadio(!) with Mary Mancini & Freddie O’Connell.

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