{"id":1424,"date":"2018-07-25T19:53:00","date_gmt":"2018-07-26T02:53:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/last-minute-changes-on-the-table-for-jacc-ballot-proposal\/"},"modified":"2018-08-13T13:02:49","modified_gmt":"2018-08-13T20:02:49","slug":"last-minute-changes-on-the-table-for-jacc-ballot-proposal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/last-minute-changes-on-the-table-for-jacc-ballot-proposal\/","title":{"rendered":"Last-minute changes on the table for JACC ballot proposal"},"content":{"rendered":"
The City and Borough of Juneau Assembly members are running out of time to make adjustments to possible ballot measures for the Oct. 2 election. But that won’t stop them from trying.<\/p>\n
Wednesday’s Assembly Finance Committee meeting was for tuning up ballot proposals before they go to the Assembly for final approval, but committee member Beth Weldon proposed making a few key changes to one ballot measure.<\/p>\n
The proposal would have the city assist with renovations to Centennial Hall and the construction of the new Juneau Arts and Culture Center with a $12 million general obligation bond. It would also shift ownership of the new JACC to the city.<\/p>\n
What Weldon proposed was reducing that amount to $9 million and keeping the new JACC privately owned. This $9 million would be paid through a combination of sales tax revenue, hotel tax revenue and bonds, Weldon’s amended proposal read.<\/p>\n
Many Assembly members and JACC proponents in the audience were surprised by the motion, especially with it coming so late in the process. The Assembly is set to make a final decision on ballot proposals at its Aug. 13 meeting, and the ballot gets printed Aug. 28.<\/p>\n
“I also was not a big fan of us owning the facility, so I appreciate all of that,” Assembly member Maria Gladziszewski said. “It’s just a big change to absorb.”<\/p>\n
The Assembly members agreed by a 6-2 vote to take a look at Weldon’s new proposal while not ruling out the original $12 million bond proposal. There likely will have to be a special meeting to make time for the discussion before the Aug. 28 deadline, Finance Director Bob Bartholomew said.<\/p>\n
Committee chair Jesse Kiehl and Assembly member Norton Gregory were the two dissenting voters. Kiehl expressed doubts about the feasibility of the newly proposed plan. Gregory was vehement that with other projects including airport renovations and a Housing First expansion, the new JACC is “a want, not a need,” and that the city should focus its money elsewhere.<\/p>\n