Any news about Steelepointe these days is good for the city of Bridgeport. I will be more impressed when the Steelepointe developers take a full page ad in the Connecticut post and New York Times touting the new 1 billion dollar project. Imagine, Stamford has taken Steelepointe’s original name and brought it to fruition, “Harborpointe”. I am pleased to see the announcement and hope this project moves forward with serious development. If it starts with a Walmart I can assure you I will teach the city of Bridgeport what a marketing campaign will do. G-d help us if a shovel goes in the ground for a big box , low paying retailer. I do give kudos to the mayor for thinking green.
A word to Zena Lu- iF DIRT IS worth celebrating than lets do it! A word to city hall smoker- Mayor Mary C. Moran got in by winning a primary from a very popular former Republican Mayor, Leonard Paoletta. With the support of a group of youthful supporters known as the New Republican voice, a group that knew how to excite volunteers and keep them coming to a “party” and most importantly, Moran ran against Thomas Bucci whose admministration at the time was falling apart. A Republican in Bridgeport never wins an election, the Democrat looses. Finch is not that awful and that is why he is still in office. The people were just lazy and were not that disappointed with the way things are. I still believe Mary-Jane Foster will make an excellent Mayor. She needs to stay engaged and be seen. I remember Joe Ganim as well as Chris Caruso showing up at every important meeting to make their presence known. I will not be one of those disgrunteled political hacks that will undermine the current administration. I still say Eversley has got to go and the city could do with a few cheerleaders. The Seaview Avenue embarrassment last week was painful for all of Bridgeport. Lets hope we can get the development project off the ground in the South end by the University of Bridgeport that will compelement the neighborhood and school and put a high speed ferry there. May Steelepoint finally become a reality. And hope all of the Foster supporters always support the positive things going on in the city and not feel they need to go to another party unless they feel it will improve the city. At this moment I do not and hope the Finch administration stays focused on development as it the only thing that will help lower taxes. It takes a long time for these edifices to generate any tax revenues so we will all most likely suffer for a few more years. I have met alot of incredible people during the Foster campaign and gratful I am still friends with those that were part of the Finch campaign. When a campaign ends you mend fences and put the past behind you. We will stay in touch and all together strive to make the city of Bridgeport a great place.
Auerbach Post
A word to Zena Lu- iF DIRT IS worth celebrating than lets do it! A word to city hall smoker- Mayor Mary C. Moran got in by winning a primary from a very popular former Republican Mayor, Leonard Paoletta. With the support of a group of youthful supporters known as the New Republican voice, a group that knew how to excite volunteers and keep them coming to a “party” and most importantly, Moran ran against Thomas Bucci whose admministration at the time was falling apart. A Republican in Bridgeport never wins an election, the Democrat looses. Finch is not that awful and that is why he is still in office. The people were just lazy and were not that disappointed with the way things are. I still believe Mary-Jane Foster will make an excellent Mayor. She needs to stay engaged and be seen. I remember Joe Ganim as well as Chris Caruso showing up at every important meeting to make their presence known. I will not be one of those disgrunteled political hacks that will undermine the current administration. I still say Eversley has got to go and the city could do with a few cheerleaders. The Seaview Avenue embarrassment last week was painful for all of Bridgeport. Lets hope we can get the development project off the ground in the South end by the University of Bridgeport that will compelement the neighborhood and school and put a high speed ferry there. May Steelepoint finally become a reality. And hope all of the Foster supporters always support the positive things going on in the city and not feel they need to go to another party unless they feel it will improve the city. At this moment I do not and hope the Finch administration stays focused on development as it the only thing that will help lower taxes. It takes a long time for these edifices to generate any tax revenues so we will all most likely suffer for a few more years. I have met alot of incredible people during the Foster campaign and gratful I am still friends with those that were part of the Finch campaign. When a campaign ends you mend fences and put the past behind you. We will stay in touch and all together strive to make the city of Bridgeport a great place.
Auerbach Post
The City Of Bridgeport, Connecticut, has so much potential. With the right leadership, an individual with vision, charisma and the ability to excite developers, Bridgeport has the ability to outshine its major competitors Norwalk and Stamford, Connecticut. All three urban centers are located in Fairfield county, the wealthiest county in the United States. I believe Mary Jane Foster is that individual that can bring Bridgeport into a new era.
During the best of times, while Norwalk and Stamford have been focused on economic development, Bridgeport was content to be the dumping ground of all social ills, leaving the burden of support on the taxpayers of the city while businesses were quick to relocate. While Stamford proceeds full speed ahead with its Harborpointe development (ironically a name once used by Bridgeport’s project now known as Steelepointe), Bridgeport still has dreams of getting that first shovel in the ground to start the touted 1 billion dollar project, Steelepointe.
Mayor Finch, in a recent Connecticut post article had given himself a grade of A for his performance on economic development in the city. I would not agree.
For the past 4 years Mayor Finch had the perfect opportunity to market Bridgeport to nearly 500,000 vehicles passing on I95 weekly. A simple Billboard on the vacant Steelepointe site touting the future of the city starts here .People would be a buzz with excitment. Maybe plant a few thousand flowering bulbs, after all we are the Park City.The sad reality is that even with a highly paid Development Director, Donald Eversley, The basic marketing skills were never applied and Bridgeport missed an opportunity that can never be regained after 4 years.
While time moves on as it stops for no one, Bridgeport still hopes to become a major destination. Mayors and business leadership continue to pat themselves on the back as though the project, expected to take 20 years to complete, has already been started. The rumor of a big box retailer eg. Walmart on the waterfront property is painful to imagine. Creating nothing more than minimum wage jobs not to mention all the families that had to be relocated. Is this the best Bridgeport can do. Not even a quality Supermarket can be attracted to that neighborhood?
Perhaps the most important element in making Bridgeport’s dream of Steelepointe a reality is an improvement of colossal proportions to the education in the Bridgeport Public Schools. Improved schools will be an incentive for young families to move here. Now it just becomes another burden on the overtaxed resident to send their children to a private school to get the education that they need to succeed in life.So now we have a high priced Superintendent of Bridgeport schools relying on a state appointed school board.
The arts and entertainment are yet another key component to attract developers. The long vacant Poli Majestic theaters in the downtown area remain a constant memory to what Bridgeport’s glorious past used to be. In the past 40 years there have been hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on study after study to see if it was viable to rehabilitate the theaters. So there they stand vacant, dark and dilapidated as one enters a downtown that has been seeing an upswing in development (most notable being the Bijou Square Project). Developer Phil Kuchma has done a great job in creating an arts theater that outshines most theaters from New York To Hartford . Mayor Finch may want to take credit for helping this project along but truth be told, Phil Kuchma does an excellent job marketing his projects and he would have been able to secure the funds without the City's help.
Finally, one must remain optimistic in the future of Bridgeport, the largest city in Connecticut and the wealthiest county in the United States. The question is who will lead us into the future, reduce the taxes and create a quality of life for the working middle class and create the incentive to want to live here, work here and play here.I believe Mary -Jane Foster is that individual. She is thoughtful, charismatic,determined and honest. This September 27th we have a choice.