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With area鈥檚 reputation on the line, Fort Worth鈥檚 West 7th developers invest in safety

Bar goers walk past police cars at 1 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 14, near West 7th鈥檚 Foch Street. Officers park their cars at the intersection to manage traffic and respond to calls.
Rachel Behrndt
/
Fort Worth Report
Bar goers walk past police cars at 1 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 14, near West 7th鈥檚 Foch Street. Officers park their cars at the intersection to manage traffic and respond to calls.

As city of Fort Worth officials toured safety consultants around Fort Worth鈥檚 entertainment districts last week, they were treated to a peaceful and an evening at Mule Alley in the Stockyards.

Assistant City Manager Fernando Costa accompanied the consultants, The Responsible Hospitality Institute and Safe Night LLC, on the tour. However, it wasn鈥檛 the best illustration of the city鈥檚 challenges with safety in the four nightlife-centric neighborhoods: Fort Worth Stockyards, Downtown, Near Southside and West 7th.

鈥淲e told them we want to talk about problems, and all they saw was vitality and safety,鈥 Costa said.

The tour also included meetings with civic, business and residential leaders 鈥 in each of their neighborhoods 鈥 who described their unique challenges with safety and security.

City leaders and business owners began looking for new ways to invest in the safety of Fort Worth鈥檚 entertainment districts following the . The city had already increased police presence, installed cameras and banned open containers in the area.

Now, Fort Worth plans to invest about $500,000 through the Crime Control and Prevention District into the safety of West 7th and other entertainment districts. The is a pot of money separate from the police department鈥檚 annual budget; it鈥檚 funded through sales tax revenues and used for public safety.

The city will use CCPD funding to spend $140,000 on traffic bollards to create a one-way traffic flow out of the West 7th area after bars close for the night. The change will allow officers working in West 7th to spend less time blocking off roads and more time patrolling the area when bars close.

The city is joined by several private organizations who plan to form a that will create a new source of revenue to spend on new lighting and security measures.

Moody Younger and Kathy Permenter, co-owners of Younger Partners, have a hand in several efforts to reinvest in the safety of West 7th. They are leading the charge to establish a public improvement district in the area, which will pay for things such as ambassadors to serve as extra eyes on the street.

While the improvement district is getting established, the city will spend $315,000 to float a one-year pilot program to employ three ambassadors. The ambassador program planned for the area in 2024 is patterned after downtown鈥檚 similar program, which has seen significant success, Costa said.

Several public and private partners will fund the safety in entertainment districts study. The city is contributing $50,000. The rest will come from Visit Fort Worth, organizations in the four entertainment districts and Younger Partners, the company that owns the in the West 7th area.

An 18-member steering committee interviewed the two consultants being considered to lead the entertainment district study. After the interviews, the committee chose its preferred consultant. Another group of residents who live near the districts also had a say in the final decision. The city has begun negotiating the terms of the agreement, which will be considered by the City Council in January. From there, it likely will be 12 months before the city receives the finished report.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to be collecting a lot of data about how well these districts are functioning, various factors influencing safety and security in these areas and basing recommendations upon our analysis of the data,鈥 Costa said.

Based on the consultant鈥檚 initial analysis, issues seem to be the most pressing in the West 7th and Stockyards districts, Costa said.

Property owners to contribute $1.85 million annually for improvements

Despite the stats, developers are drawn to invest in the city鈥檚 entertainment districts. Younger Partners, which describes itself as 鈥渂ullish鈥 on Fort Worth, is working to establish a public improvement district that will include properties around West 7th, including the Cultural District and Montgomery Plaza. The public improvement district鈥檚 primary function will be improving safety in the district.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all perception. It鈥檚 completely a perception issue within the city, and within the community,鈥 Younger said. 鈥淏ut we want to be the safest.鈥

West 7th district鈥檚 Crockett Row has been rebranded as Artisan Circle.
Courtesy rendering
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Younger Partners
West 7th district鈥檚 Crockett Row has been rebranded as Artisan Circle.

Younger鈥檚 property, Artisan Circle, is adjacent to the West 7th bar district. The company鈥檚 priority is ensuring people feel safe in and around their property, Younger Partners co-owner Permenter said.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 going to make you feel comfortable? It鈥檚 more lighting, more police presence,鈥 Permenter said.

To that end, alongside a rebranding effort, the company announced plans to install new lighting, landscaping, signing, benches and parking garage elevators. The private investment is paired with several public efforts to improve the reputation of the West 7th area, and link it more closely with the nearby cultural district.

Younger Partners hopes to expand these efforts by creating a public improvement district that every property owner will pay into, and reap benefits from.

A public improvement district is a defined area where property owners pay an additional tax to fund specific types of improvements or maintenance. Property owners and will have control over the types of improvements, level of maintenance and the amount property owners pay into the district.

Private businesses have invested millions of dollars in the West 7th and adjacent cultural district. Two luxury hotels, and opened this winter. recently announced plans to build a $400 million mixed use development on two sites. The city agreed to furnish a $30 million economic development agreement with Goldenrod Companies.

鈥淚t鈥檚 surrounded by great real estate, some of the best real estate in the city,鈥 Younger said.

The proposed West 7th public improvement district will include the West 7th district, Montgomery Plaza properties and some parts of the Cultural District, between University Drive and Clear Fork of the Trinity River.

The area鈥檚 commercial properties have a taxable value of $921.9 million. If a public improvement district is established, property owners could pay an additional 20 cents on top of the city鈥檚 property tax rate.

That means, a property with a taxable value of $2.19 million will pay an additional $4,287 in property taxes. The city expects the public improvement district to have about $1.85 million in revenue to spend it its first year.

An ordinance establishing the public improvement district could go to City Council for a vote in spring 2024, Costa said.

鈥淎 lot of work remains to be done, literally going door to door, getting people to sign a petition saying we want to pay, effectively, additional taxes,鈥 Costa said.

The city currently has 13 public improvement districts, including two in the Stockyards and Downtown.

Scott Wilcox, chief financial officer at the Amon Carter Museum of Art and chair of the , agrees that a public improvement district will be beneficial to the entire area.

鈥淭he focus, of course, is initially going to be on the West 7th area, but if we can get those safety and security issues solved, then there鈥檚 no reason that it wouldn鈥檛 benefit everybody that鈥檚 functioning in it,鈥 Wilcox said.

Despite the broad mix of West 7th businesses 鈥 from clubs to ritzy hotels 鈥 most organizations operating in and around the area are eager to invest, Wilcox said.

鈥淎ll of the owners of these new hotels and properties 鈥 I think they are very quick to understand that what benefits one part of the Cultural District benefits all of it,鈥 Wilcox said.

Buy-in from private businesses will be key to implementing the study鈥檚 recommendations, Costa said. He鈥檚 encouraged by the number of businesses who have chosen to participate so far.

鈥淭he city of Fort Worth is providing leadership on the study, but the city by itself cannot effectively address all of the issues that are affecting the entertainment districts,鈥 Costa said.

Rachel Behrndt is a government accountability reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at  or via . At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy .

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