Old Cafe... |
The old
Chetek Cafe building
Whether or not you agreed with the city purchasing this property, we
feel it was a good investment in our community. A business owner who
had his property up for sale for years (and years) was able to
get out, another business owner whose business was expanding was able
to move in and if nothing comes of the idea of a future governmental
building at the corner of Stout and Second, at the very least we'll
have a nice piece of real estate for a future business to locate to.
...and New |
After we purchased the building, we were approached by a couple of
local business owners about renting space to them until we had the
structure razed. Admittedly, we were open to that possibility
recognizing that the process of securing the grant money for
demolishing an old structure might take some time. Until we inspected
the place after Norbert and Patty had moved on down the street. The
building was in worse shape than we could guess. There was no way the
city was going to put so much as a dime into it to keep it viable for
another season. So we informed the one tenant we inherited at
purchase time that he had to vacate by October 1. After he moved out
we had the place inspected for asbestos and given its age we were not
surprised to learn that it was rife with it.
This past summer and fall, I had a few folks suggest to me that at
the very least we paint the place given the eye sore that it was. But
we're hoping it won't see the spring and that sometime this
winter it will go the way of the dinosaur.
Purchased in the fall of 2016, originally the idea of obtaining this
piece of property was to raze this structure as well and create a
parking lot for The Center. But due to its proximity to the Mosaic
building and due to the fact that this old structure has been built
upon several times over the years we have been unsuccessful (yet) in
attracting anyone to tear it down. A year ago I reached out to Enosh
Yoder, a local Amish man who has a knack for this sort of thing but
the more he walked through the structure the bigger his eyes seemed
to get. You have an old building with at least four roofs on it
(shakes, two layers of shingles and metal sheeting to boot), interior
walls that have been built out and ceilings that have been dropped
down which all spell “buyer beware” to a prospective demolition
man.
In the meantime, following some of the conversations that arose
regarding property purchases in recent years the “Property
Committee” was brought out of mothballs and re-started. While the
council will still have the final word future purchases or major
renovations will be vetted first by the Property Committee. So the
thinking is before we tear down the old Jost building to make way for
a future parking lot let's allow the Property Committee to weigh in
on it. Of course, that slows the process down – or may gum it up
entirely if the committee feels that the property would be better
used in a different way. Personally, I still think The Center needs a
parking lot but we'll wait and see what the others have to say about
it. But just as it is with the old Cafe building, this propety, were
we to tear it down, will have to be tested for abestos but we cannot
do that until the two tenants presently renting there vacate. And of
course we can't terminate their lease until we are in agreement that
a parking lot is the best use for that piece of property. As they
say, there's a lot of moving parts.
Last year the city purchased the vacant lot on the east side of
Ohde's from the Moulettes as an addition to Main Street Park. In the
fall of 2017 our guys tore up the cement pavement that was buried
under the grass, spread grass seed and kept the yard mowed this past
year while the Parks Committee tried to hash out a re-design for the
park. After the tragic loss of Natalie Turner last fall, originally
the idea was to erect a small piece of artwork in her memory and
build a low wall surrounding the small courtyard on Second Street.
Some generous individuals from town contributed to this project or
volunteered their labor when it was time to roll up our sleeves and
begin the work. This past summer around Liberty Fest WEAU-TV 13 did a
short interview with Parks Committee chair Donna Bachowski about
these ideas. Unfortunately for reasons that were not communicated to
me the major donor for this part of the renovations backed out.
What's more, the school informed us that a memorial for Natalie was
going to be erected somewhere on school grounds which made mute any
further conversation about some kind of memorial to her at the park.
In the meantime, the weather became colder and now we've pretty much
lost our window for any kind of concrete work this year.
Before the crew dug up the old slab and planted grass seed |
The other major property the city acquired this past year was the 39
acres where the old Jennie O's Breeder Farm used to stand. The former
manager's home, presently vacant, came with the purchase. One of
things we are trying to come to grasp with is what Dave Armstrong,
Barron County Economic Development Executive Director, says about our
community: “You want people to move to Chetek but they have no
place to move to.” We have a dearth of both rental property
and affordable housing. Note: when we say “affordable
housing” we do not mean “low income housing”. We feel
Chetek has plenty of that. No, we're talking starter homes, duplexes,
and “twindos” (two homes side by side that share a common wall).
We have no interest in developing this ourselves. So we've been
listening to some proposals from various companies who might be
interested in developing this property. One of the barriers in moving
forward with any development is going to be infrastructure,
specifically roads, sewer and water. Due to its proximity to Bailey
Lake, not one drop of water from this future development can empty
into it. Those kinds of things – water and sewer systems – come
with big price tags that tend to scare developers away. The good news
is one of our Tax Increment Districts (we have three) will be paid
off early next year. At November's council meeting the council will
vote on extending it one additional year (allowed by law) and use the
tax dollars netted in this district toward building the
infrastructure we need.
The manager's former home comes with the 39 acres |
While
I just wrote on this matter last week (see We may have inherited a cemetery), suffice to say an
official arrangement with the Town of Chetek has yet to be brokered.
Our current position is we will contribute to the mowing expenses as
well as to the salary of the sexton. However, since the front part
(on city land) is already full, we feel the Township should be the
lead partner on this since the majority of it resides on Township
land. Any future full burials will be done in that part. The council
will weigh in on this at our next meeting.
So
that's a lot of things up in the air that have yet to land or take
full shape. I'd like to see some of them get pinned down sooner than
later but often municipal government matters move at the pace that
military ones do (or so I'm told) and 'hurry up and wait' is our
watchword for the time being.
With extensive waiting list at both Lone Oak and Evergreen, I'm not sure we have adequate 'low-income housing.'
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