By SEAN RICE 
                  srice@dailystandard.com 
                   
                  Celina City Council denied a motion Monday night that would 
                  have allowed community development director Sue Canary to apply 
                  for grants to fund part of the West Bank Road boardwalk project. 
                  Council members Denny Smith and Angie King gave the negative 
                  votes that stripped Canary’s ability to apply for Clean 
                  Ohio Trails and Recreational Trails grants from the Ohio Department 
                  of Natural Resources (ODNR). Canary applied for the two grants 
                  totaling nearly $600,000 last year and was denied. 
                  She had planned to apply for the grants again this year, and 
                  an emergency resolution was presented Monday to allow her to 
                  meet the Feb. 1 deadline. Council member King questioned the 
                  short notice of the resolution, before she and Smith provided 
                  the no votes to deny the emergency clause. 
                  The grants would have provided funding for phase two of construction, 
                  which would extend the boardwalk from the Beaver Creek Spillway 
                  to Sugar Street. Phase one would take the boardwalk from the 
                  Grand Lake State Park boat launch to the spillway. 
                  The only funding lined-up for the mile-long concrete walkway 
                  planned for the Grand Lake shoreline of West Bank Road is a 
                  $250,000 allotment from the 2003-2004 state capital budget, 
                  secured by state Rep. Keith Faber (R-Celina). 
                  The entire boardwalk is estimated to cost more than $1 million. 
                  On Monday, Canary said phase one of construction also could 
                  be funded by borrowing against future revenue generated by the 
                  tax increment financing (TIF) district that was established. 
                  A TIF district recently was enacted for the area along West 
                  Bank Road, which will, over the course of years, generate funds 
                  for infrastructure improvements in the district. In a TIF district, 
                  property taxes are paid by the property owners just as before 
                  the district was created. Each year when property values increase 
                  because of improvements or inflation, the increase in taxes 
                  paid is directed to a TIF account. 
                  Councilman Smith said members have not yet discussed how to 
                  spend future TIF funds, and a committee will need to meet to 
                  discuss Canary’s plans. 
                  Some audience members Monday voiced opposition to another grant 
                  program under consideration by city administration. Council 
                  members briefly discussed the Community Development Block Grant 
                  (CDBG) revitalization program that can provide more than $1 
                  million for downtown building upgrades. 
                  The main part of the grant provides up to $400,000 for building 
                  and property upgrades in the designated downtown district. That 
                  “tier two” grant requires a 100 percent match and 
                  can be applied for three times. Before that program is applied 
                  to, $15,000 is available to prepare the planning documents, 
                  engineering and community dialogue that is required. 
                  Rules of the program require 20 percent of the building or business 
                  owners in the district to participate, and the city must contribute 
                  at least 10 percent, or $40,000. The remainder of the match 
                  funds required can be tallied with donations and by combining 
                  other concurrent projects, private and public. Also a downtown 
                  district would have to be created. Council member Rick Bachelor 
                  said it would be an extended downtown, reaching down West Bank 
                  Road. 
                  King asked if business owners are on board, or if the projects 
                  to be applied for have been picked out yet. 
                  “The planning grant is to find out these things, to put 
                  the documentation together for what we need for tier two,” 
                  Bachelor said. 
                  “And where is that $40,000 for tier two going to come 
                  from? We don’t have that right now,” King asked. 
                  “And we don’t need it right now,” Bachelor 
                  quickly replied, stating that tier two wouldn’t occur 
                  until 2005 or 2006. 
                  Former city councilor and audience member Ed Jeffries said the 
                  council is ignoring the will of residents. 
                  “In November, the voters went to the polls and said ‘no’ 
                  to downtown revitalization, no to the boardwalk and the whole 
                  thing,” Jeffries said. “But the city chooses to 
                  ignore that.” 
                  Celina resident Don Kohnen also chastised members for missteps 
                  in economic development and the Havemann Road widening project, 
                  and said city residents are “paying for administration’s 
                  past judgmental errors.” 
                  In other business, council members: 
                  • Passed an emergency ordinance raising water rates 20 
                  percent, effective March 1. 
                  • Passed the first reading of an ordinance abolishing 
                  the position of executive assistant to the mayor and laying 
                  off the employee who filled the position until recently, Diane 
                  Link. 
                  • Entered an executive session to discuss personnel negotiations 
                  involving the executive assistant position. No action was taken 
                  after the closed-door meeting. 
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