Gas meter hearing tomorrow, Weds, Feb. 11, 4:30

This just in from our friends at West Broadway Neighborhood Association,which has spearheaded work to prevent National Grid from forceably installing ugly exterior gas meters on the fronts of our homes. If you care about your curb appeal, check this out.

Hello fellow neighborhood groups,
I plan to call you all individually but in the interest of the time sentivity of this issue, I send this email first.

Representative Costantino has just informed the West Broadway Neighborhood Association (WBNA) that THIS Wednesday, 2/11/09, at 4:30PM in Room 203, RI State House, the House Committee on Corporations will hold a hearing on H5088. See the bill here. This is the legislation to protect Rhode Island homes against visually-intrusive exterior gas meter locations. Many of you are aware of this issue and the damage it can do to historic and non-historic homes in every corner of RI (National Grid’s plans for gas meter relocation applies to all of RI and goes beyond the West Side of Providence). Undoubtedly, National Grid will be there in full force with lawyers et all, which makes it all the more imperative that the people of RI bring out a larger crowd to speak to the importance of passing this legislation.

We appreciate that you share our concern for this issue and ask that you:
1) come on Wednesday and testify
2) sent an email to your friends, neighbors, and other groups who would care about this issue.
Representative Costantino emphasized the importance of having a large crowd of people from throughout the state.
3) let us know if you plan on coming

For your information the legislation is attached. Having someone from your organization at the hearing to testify would make an impact. Thank you!
Kari Lang and Jessica Jennings

House Committee on Corporations Hearing on H5008, the legislation to protect historic homes against visually intrustive exterior gas meter locations
Wednesday, February 11, 2009 at 4:30 PM
RI State House, Room 203
Please help spread the word across Rhode Island! RIers come out to testify in favor of H5088

Kari Lang, WBNA
Email: Kari@wbna.org

Summit Projects Included in Report by US Conference of Mayors

“READY TO GO” JOBS AND INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
America’s Mayors Report to the Nation on Projects to
Strengthen Metro Economies and Create Jobs Now
Release #4: January 17, 2009
Infrastructure Jobs in Cities – “Ready to Go”

Today The U.S. Conference of Mayors releases the fourth in its series of reports on
infrastructure projects that are “ready to go” in cities across the nation – projects that meet local infrastructure needs and contribute to local economic development goals, that can be funded quickly through existing federal channels and start quickly when funding is received, and that can generate the significant numbers of jobs that are needed to counter the severe economic problems we face today in our metro areas and our nation as a whole.

Today we are reporting that, in 779 cities of all sizes in all regions of the country, a
total of 18,750 local infrastructure projects are “ready to go.” These projects represent
an infrastructure investment of $149,758,339,126 that would be capable of producing an
estimated 1,604,371 jobs in 2009 and 2010. These are the cumulative totals of projects,
required funding, and jobs to be created that have been reported in the four surveys of cities
conducted by the Conference of Mayors over the past three months. The populations of the
779 cities submitting projects total 77,946,664.

A list of all Providence projects is attached with Summit area projects highlighted. Of course, Summit residents would also benefit from the other projects.

conference-of-mayors-2009-stimulus-projects-providence

Summit Featured in Providence Journal Real Estate Section

 

01:00 AM EST on Sunday, December 21, 2008

By Christine Dunn
Journal Staff Writer

 

This marker at the intersection of Summit Avenue and Memorial Road shows the spot where French troops commanded by Count Rochambeau were encamped in 1782. The area is now part of the Summit neighborhood.

The Providence Journal / Kris Craig

 

Summit is not a presence on the City of Providence’s official map of neighborhoods, and even leaders of the Summit Neighborhood Association say their group has no formal boundaries defining the area.

But unofficially, this neighborhood near Miriam Hospital includes all of what is called Hope, and parts of Mount Hope and Blackstone, on the city’s East Side. North Main Street and Hope Street are its commercial centers.

Jonathan Howard, vice president of the Summit Neighborhood Association, said that since he moved to Summit 25 years ago, he’s noticed that more families are staying in the neighborhood beyond the time when their children start school.

Howard’s three children attended public schools, and he said the decline in suburban flight has helped strengthen the neighborhood.

It used to be, he said, that “people come here, buy a house, get a dog, have babies… and move out when the kids are 5.”

But today, “I see my neighbors with younger kids getting active in Gregorian, or Martin Luther King [city elementary schools].”

“We really worked hard to get Bishop Middle School preserved and renewed,” he added, and many in the neighborhood are looking forward to the reopening of that school next year.

A diverse mix of ages can be found most mornings at the Seven Stars Bakery at the corner of Hope and Fourth streets, a favored meeting spot in Summit. Parents with babies and toddlers, college students, and older adults fill the tables at the caf? across from the Festival Ballet building on Hope.

Miriam Hospital is the neighborhood’s largest institutional presence, employing about 2,200 people in its buildings in the heart of the residential section of Summit.

More recently the neighborhood association has turned its attention to improving North Main Street.

North Main Street fell into a decline after flagships including Sears, Shaw’s, Window Fashions and Off-Track Bedding closed.

“One of the ideas is around developing North Main into a really useful retail source for the n! eighborh ood,” Howard said.

“It’s been a very vital part of the past for Providence, and it was a much more active street,” he said. There used to be more restaurants, retail activity and entertainment venues, and “our dream is to to try to encourage developers to go that way.”

Another goal is “to get people living on North Main Street,” with the addition of mixed-use development, he added.

“More modest things are happening already,” Howard said. The former Window Fashions store has been taken over by doctors who opened an urgent care center, the old Penalty Box has been fixed up by some young entrepreneurs who have opened a “nice club” that features live entertainment, he said.

In addition, Hope Street merchants have formed an association this year in an effort to make their street a better-known shopping destination.

Summit offers a diverse mix of housing options, including single-family houses, apartment rentals in multifamily houses, owner-occupied multifamily housing, and condominiums and apartment buildings.

Single-family listings in the Summit area last week included a bank-owned house built in 1900 at 70 Woodbine St. in Mount Hope, priced at $146,900, but the lowest-priced non-distressed single-family listing in Summit was a 1940 Cape at 38 5th St., with three bedrooms and two full baths, priced at $289,900. The top price in the single-family listings was a renovated 1902 Colonial at 3 Catalpa Rd., on Summit Hill, with five bedrooms, two full bathrooms and 3,000 square feet of space, priced at $499,000.

Multifamily listings started at $54,900 for a two-family built in 1900 at 89 Knowles St. that has undergone a partial renovation. The listing information said the property needs “completion,” and was to be sold “as is” with a “bank addendum,” indicating the property is a foreclosure.

Non-distressed multifamily listings in the neighborhood started at $329,000, for a two-family at 33 11th St., to $589,000 for a two-family built in 1940 at 207 6th St. that has been “completely renovated,” acco! rding to the listing information.

Prices for condominiums listed for sale in Summit last week started at $104,900 for a bank-owned foreclosure in an 1870 building at 20 7th St., with two bedrooms and one bathroom; the top price was $273,000, for a three-bedroom townhouse built in 2006 at 26 7th St.

POPULATION:

(Providence, 2000) 173,618

MEDIAN HOUSE PRICE:

(East Side of Providence, 2007) $468,075

INTERESTING FACT:

The North Burial Ground, which borders the west side of North Main Street in Summit, was established in 1700, and it was the city’s first dedicated, common open space.

cdunn@projo.com

 

 

Busy fall meeting schedule for SNA

Please join Summit Neighborhood Association and our presenter, urban planner Jonathan Harris, as we investigate problems and potential at underused properties along the northern end of North Main Street. Jonathan has conducted a full study of property ownership and current uses and has interviewed major owners and stakeholders. We will discuss the potential and opportunities to engage the major owners in joint master planning for development of this area. Your views on what should be included will be welcome.
We meet Tuesday Oct. 7 at at the offices of Jewish Family Services, 959 North Main Street at 7 p.m. We will end in time for you to see the Presidential debate at 9 pm.

 

Candidates NIght – October 20, 7 p.m. – Summit Commons 

Ladies Night – November 13 7-9 p.m. J. Marcel, Hope St 

SNA Monthly Meetings All neighbors welcome. Meetings at 7.p.m. at Summit Commons, 99 Hillside Avenue 

  • Monday, • October 27 
  • Monday, • November 17, guest: Public Works Dir. John Nicholson 
  • Monday, • December 15 

North Main Project Workshops 

  • Tuesday, • November 11 Residential North Main, Fantasy or Vision? 
  • Tuesday, • December 2 North Main and the End of Oil 

Workshop on No. Main History – Tues. Sept. 23

Please join expert guests and neighborhood sages for a lively discussion of North Main’s surprising past (and potential rebirth) as a sports, entertainment and retail center at the Carriage House Theater, 9 Duncan Avenue from 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 23. (Duncan Avenue is opposite the Branch Ave. fire house between Action Auto Parts and a law office. The Carriage House is right behind the law office.)

Featured Presenters:
Dr. Robert Cvornyek, Chairman, History Department, Rhode Island College
Mack Woodward, Rhode Island Historic Preservation and Heritage Commission
Special Guests:
Stanley Crum, neighborhood historian
J Hogue, Art in Ruins
Morgan Grefe, RI Historical Society

For more information, visit our new site for North Main Street: www.northmain.wordpress.com

Lead pipe replacement begins in Summit

Providence Water began replacing lead pipes in Summit along Fifth Street between Hope and Bayard during the week of Sept. 8. The contractor expected to finish that block today (Monday, Sept. 15) and move to the next block of Fifth. We can expect street blockages through the fall construction season.

According to letters mailed to all rate payers in Summit this month, Providence Water will replace all the lead pipes it owns as far as the curbside shutoff valve outside each house. (You can usually spot the valve as a three-inch iron disk embedded in your sidewalk or grassy strip somewhere between the curb and the inside edge of your sidewalk.) Providence Water promised additional notices 3 weeks, 3 days and 24 hours before construction begins.

Homeowners have the option of replacing the pipes that lead from the valve into their homes at their own expense. The estimated cost could be as much as $6,000 for a house with a porch to tunnel below, according to a Providence Water rep.

Note that some houses in our area already have copper water pipes and need no work.

The contractor I observed today took care to remove a regular square section of sidewalk from a site on Fifth without damaging other sections. He said that a temporary asphalt patch will be followed up with a permanent concrete replacement. He said valve locations vary and can be anywhere between the street and the inside edge of the sidewalk.

Crime Watch Survey Released

surveyIn coordination with The Miriam Hospital Security Department, The Summit Neighborhood Association, The Hope Street Merchants, and The Providence Police Department, residents living in the Hope (Summit) neighborhood of Providence, RI are in the process of forming a “Neighbors of Hope Crime Watch”.

A meeting was held on May 20 to discuss effective strategies for our neighborhood. We had expert participation as Chief of Police Col. Esserman and District Commander Lt. Schiavulli attended (the Lt. was in on a vacation day)! Monica Anderson offerred the attached survey and everyone agreed this would be a great way to begin since a very strong crime watch program involves close neighbors working together. A year or so ago residents of Dexterdale St.  independently formed their own crime watch. Ideally, residents of each street would get to know each other better and organize.

This survey outlines the different levels of participation needed for the crime watch, and also serves as a tool to gather information about what concerns residents of the neighborhood have about crime in this area. Surveys can be completed and sent to Monica Anderson, Community Relations at The Miriam Hospital 164 Summit Ave. Providence RI 02906. Surveys can also be dropped off at the main desk of the hospital. Please complete all surveys by August 15, 2008

Note- please be sure to download the copy of this survey from the link provided. You can then print it and fill it out; don’t try to send the survey back via email. Thank you!

Yard Sale Held May 17

The Summit Neighborhood Association’s annual yard sale was held on May 17, the  rain date. The sun came out before the  9:00 start and with organaizer Connie Chesbrough’s experience and the hard work of many volunteers, another successful Summit Neighborhood Association yard sale was held. As usual, there was a mad rush as the gate was opened at the 9:00 post time. Offers were made and accepted, and many treasures were discovered and carted away.

This year’s yard sale profits will go to Save the Henry Bowen Anthony Fountain in Lippitt Park.