If you're interested in participating with the discussions on the designs for updating New Haven's downtown area to replace the old Mall and the old Coliseum, you can go to an upcoming workshop to be held at Ninth Square, in New Haven, CT.
People could break into groups and tour the sites. Ledbetter and Munday agreed that the ideas generated from the workshops should be put up on the city's Web site so that more comments can be added. I feel that this is a great idea. Hopefully, the workshops and Web comments will generate good ideas that will be taken seriously.
The ideas generated so far are controversial. I hope that the new plans encompass all of New Haven's classes of people, not just for those who can spend lots on the stores in the proposed new marketplace. After all, the new Downtown Gateway Master Plan is supposed to serve community college students, not just Yale students.
Some residential units are proposed, but I do not know how many are marked for "affordable housing." There should be a good percentage of units available at very "affordable" rates. If New Haven's urban planning project goes like those of White Plains and Stamford (20 or 30 years ago), then there will be no housing for the poor. We will then continue the cycle of urban homelessness and blight, instead of improving the issue. When White Plains and Stamford "renewed" their downtown areas, they put the poor in temporary housing in motels for a fixed period of time. No permanent dwellings were provided. People were expected to drift off to Bridgeport. This is only one reason why Bridgeport had so many problems.
After Hurricane Katrina, Mayor DeStefano offered housing for New Orleans' newly homeless population. As one could expect, this evoked an outcry from some people right here in New Haven, because they had already been on the waiting list for years!
I hope that New Haven plans intelligently, and does not make the same mistake that other cities have made!