{"id":35647,"date":"2018-09-19T16:19:00","date_gmt":"2018-09-20T00:19:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/mental-health-trust-spending-time-money-on-subport-property\/"},"modified":"2018-09-19T17:14:07","modified_gmt":"2018-09-20T01:14:07","slug":"mental-health-trust-spending-time-money-on-subport-property","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/mental-health-trust-spending-time-money-on-subport-property\/","title":{"rendered":"Mental Health Trust spending time, money on subport property"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority is spending time and money in evaluating its options for a small property in Juneau, and city officials are growing increasingly impatient.<\/p>\n
The AMHTA owns a 3-acre plot of land just off Egan Drive next to Coast Guard Station Juneau, and AMHTA CEO Mike Abbott told the Empire he believes it’s an incredibly valuable parcel.<\/p>\n
“It’s a three-acre parcel and we own a million (acres statewide),” Abbott said, “but on a per-square-foot basis, this may be the most valuable piece of undeveloped trust property.”<\/p>\n
The trust authority’s entire purpose is to make money off the land that it owns and use that money to benefit those who need mental health care in Alaska, Abbott said. The trust acquired the property in Juneau — which is known as the subport property — in the mid-1990s.<\/p>\n
This year, AMHTA hired a nonprofit research firm called the Urban Land Institute to closely examine the parcel and give recommendations to the trust authority about what they can get for the property and what kind of project could work for the land. The researchers began their work Tuesday, Abbott said, and should wrap up Thursday.<\/p>\n
Abbott said AMHTA is paying about $50,000 for the study. Abbott said it’s very unusual for the trust to spend this kind of time and money on evaluating a property.<\/p>\n
“We don’t have a lot of parcels like this,” Abbott said. “Mostly it’s undeveloped land with resource potential instead of real estate potential. We want to make sure we want to get it right.”<\/p>\n
Some people in Juneau, including City Manager Rorie Watt, are running low on patience.<\/p>\n
There have been multiple chances over the years to sell the property, Watt said via phone Thursday. In 2008, the AMHTA nearly completed a deal with the state to put an office building on the land, but the state backed out.<\/p>\n
In the past few years, there has been serious interest from locals wanting to build the Juneau Ocean Center<\/a> — an educational center that intends on doubling as a meeting place for those in the marine science community. Abbott said that possibility isn’t out of the picture.<\/p>\n The CBJ has gone on the record multiple times in requesting that the AMHTA sell the land. The Assembly passed a resolution in June 2017<\/a> to publicly declare its desire for the trust authority to sell the land sooner rather than later.<\/p>\n