Monday, January 6, 2014

Op-Ed

Op-Ed: After All These Years, The Old Kmart Property is Still Empty: The City of Bishop should investigate "eminent domain" or other legal tools to fill the vacant old Kmart property. 




"I 'm from down south in Redlands. I and friends always joke how they have that massive lot taped off and guarded. That combo'd up with the abandoned strip mall across the street makes Bishop look so trashy. If I were a local business owner I'd be pissed," says one comment on the above photo posted on my personal Facebook page. It has been a blight and shame on Eastern Sierra locals for about a decade or more: an empty, taped off parking lot and strip-mall befitting more an large, urban wasteland like Los Angeles than a small, rural mountain town loved by outdoor recreationists, Bishop. Yet, the City of Bishop, in fear of "trampling" private property rights, refuses to investigate legal tools at their disposal to force the "old Kmart" property owners to fill it with an actual tenant, or sell it (perhaps to the city who could then resell or lease it out as part of much needed "economic development.")  Administrator Rick Pucci, back at a 2009 Bishop City Council meeting, said that the City could do very little to force private property owners to deal with empty buildings. "Between encouraging a public good and trampling private property rights", the administrator said, "we walk a fine line."


The rumors that have persisted and have inflamed Bishop locals for years, that the old Kmart property owners or lessors are purposely keeping it empty to prevent competition, are actually true, as admitted by Administrator Pucci at that meeting, saying, "Rent is being paid on a monthly basis, but the lessee would rather have that property empty then filled." In an August 27, 2013 Sierra Wave Media article, it states, "The $27,000 a month lease by Vons has kept the former Kmart from getting into the hands of other grocery outlets that might give them competition." The proposal of using eminent domain to address the vacant old Kmart property was discussed at an Inyo County Board of Supervisors final public meeting on the proposal for a new county-lease-to-own building on the Wye Road parcel owned by Joseph Enterprises in August of last year, where the attendees agreed the County should discuss it with the City of Bishop, but that has not happened.

Eminent domain is obviously a very controversial issue, with many city and county governments abusing it for personal financial gain, but there are also success stories and justified cases. The Eastern Sierra Advocate does not by principle agree with eminent domain, with governments  taking private property by force for public use or for public good (even with "just compensation") as I believe wholeheartedly in the American view of liberty, but the owners of the old Kmart property are refusing to sell and are damaging the reputation and quality of life in Bishop.









Update: According to a Sierra Wave news report, major construction is finished on the Cottonwood Plaza and a separate firm would be hired to construct tenant improvements. The property owners said several business have already showed interests in the property, including several franchises looking at the old Burger King building, though nothing is official. I pray some tenants move in as soon as possible and offer jobs to the many unemployed and underemployed in the area and in other ways contribute to our economy and image. 

Cottonwood Plaza: After years of urban blight in a mountain town and of helping to prevent much needed jobs and economic growth, Cottonwood Plaza is now ready to be leased out and should open by this spring, so say the property owners.





As reported by The Inyo Register back on December 4th of 2013 and witnessed anytime you pass by it, Cottonwood Plaza is now advertising for potential tenants and plan to "build to suit," to remodel parts of the interior of the main buildings to the lessors' particulars. As reported by The Register, the owners plan on opening spring of this year, which is good news for the unemployed in the area, not to mention to local businesses and residents in general who for years had to look at an empty, boarded-up property, a form of urban blight here in the mountains. A bustling new shopping center, or really any commercial development there, could also spur more economic growth and help revitalize the economy of the area and raise the quality of life in the Eastern Sierra.
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The Register reported that the advertising at the property itself directs interested parties to their web site, www.cottonwoodplaza.com, where they will find lease applications, a site study and market study. 



For businesses interested in finding out more about Cottonwood Plaza, please visit their web site at www.cottonwoodplaza.com.




Main Street, Bishop, CA

Main Street, Bishop, CA
Looking south down Main Street in Bishop, CA on Christmas Eve.