FORT MYERS, Fla. Dozens of people lined up Monday night at City Hall for their chance to speak about a redevelopment proposal that would bring significant change to downtown and an area to its south.
The City Council is in the midst of a lengthy meeting in which 41 members of the public are expected to comment on the plan, one by one.
The plan has stirred up emotion from those on oppose it, believing it would change the aesthetic character of the town for insufficient economic benefit, and from business owners and city leaders who say it would bring in sorely needed revenue.
It’s based off a study that recommends sweeping changes to density requirements that would allow for more high-rises downtown and redevelopment of an area from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard south to Edison Avenue and from U.S. 41 east to Fowler Street.
The idea would be to create more affordable housing and make the city more attractive to millennials. But many argue the city is attractive just the way it is.
Residents of Dean Park and others have spoken out about a plan that, in the words of “Our Town” committee member Sara Burke, would turn the city into “Miami-light.”
The city has changed much in the nearly six decades Bill Dunn has lived here. He thinks that change will continue, whether or not anyone is ready for it.
“This is inevitable,” he said. “Fort Myers has grown. We’ve been here since 1960 when it was a village, essentially. Now it’s been discovered, and we have to live with the growth.”
Developers would, under the proposal, be able to build to about twice the density currently allowed. The city would reap revenue designed to build more parking, expand utilities and foster affordable housing by charging developers a fee equivalent to 1 percent of construction costs.
“I think developers are looking at Fort Myers as a very favorable place to develop in, to invest in,” Mayor Randy Henderson said. “I think our charge is to make sure we’re ready to receive them.”
Still, the plan is a ways off from implementation. The state would have to approve it even if City Council gives its OK.
“This is not the end of the road tonight,” council member Johnny Streets said. “So I hope people have an open mind and think about, not what they want, but what’s best for this city, when you talk about economic development, business development and jobs and housing that people can obtain, because a lot of people want houses, but they can’t afford them.”