Fredericksburg.com - City giving $100K to Capital Ale House

search local
Follow us on Twitter Find us on Facebook

Get a printer-friendly version of this page. E-mail this story to a friend.
Make a post about this story on FredTalk.



Visit Emily Battle's blog: The Front Burner
City giving $100K to Capital Ale House
City Council approved incentives package for Capital Ale House


Date published: 2/27/2008

BY EMILY BATTLE

Capital Ale House will get $100,000 in incentives from the city of Fredericksburg to build a bar and restaurant on Caroline Street.

The council approved the incentives package last night on a 5-2 vote, with council members Debby Girvan and Marvin Dixon opposed.

Girvan said she wanted the city to study the impact Ale House could have on similar existing downtown businesses.

"I would feel more comfortable if we knew what impact it was going to have downtown," Girvan said. "Until then, I think I'm going to have to not approve it tonight, but I want to make it clear that I think this is a good business and I welcome it to the city."

Dixon said he didn't think the city should incentivize the business "for a number of reasons I'm not going to go into."

City Economic Development Director Kevin Gullette said Ale House will provide "something that we are sorely lacking downtown"--a private business willing to put on large events that will draw lots of people to the historic central business district. Ale House puts on special events around St. Patrick's Day, Oktoberfest and other yearly celebrations at its other locations.

In response to Girvan's comments, Councilman George Solley said he had asked other bar owners downtown what they thought about Ale House's plans.

"The opinion of the people who run those establishments is pretty much uniformly that Capital Ale will help their businesses by drawing people downtown who would not necessarily come downtown," Solley said. "I don't think we need a formal economic study to realize that."

Vice Mayor Kerry Devine agreed.

"I think it goes directly with what we are trying to do, building up our evening clientele downtown," she said.

And Councilman Hashmel Turner, a Baptist minister, said he'd found reasons to approve incentives to a bar.

"The prices and the menu seem well within my range and I believe they will serve ginger ale," he said.

The incentives package includes a $25,000 grant from the Economic Development Authority upon completion of renovations to the building it plans to rent at 917 Caroline St. The EDA approved that grant last week.

Another $25,000 would come from the city in the form of a waiver of all of Ale House's business license taxes and 13.5 percent of its estimated local sales taxes in its first year of operation.

The city would waive Ale House's business license taxes for the next nine years of the bar's operation to make up the last $50,000 of the package.

To get the incentives, Ale House would be required to invest at least $1.5 million in the building it is renting from Joe Wilson, which was formerly the home of Chords bar and restaurant.

It would have to hire at least 35 full-time and 35 part-time employees, and generate no less than $100,000 in new local sales and meals taxes.

The agreement would require Ale House to have its certificate of occupancy by November of this year.

Over the course of the 10-year agreement, city officials estimate they'll bring in $1.7 million in new revenue over the same period they'd be giving away $100,000 in incentives.

Emily Battle: 540/374-5413
Email: ebattle@freelancestar.com



Read more stories about Fredericksburg
Date published: 2/27/2008



Most recent reader comments:

Viewing 5 out of 19 comments. (Sorted in reverse order, with most recent post at the top.)

Display comments on this page. | Sort:

PLEASE READ: These reader comments are not moderated. Each user is solely responsible for any message (s)he posts here. The Free Lance-Star does not endorse the views expressed within these comments. All users who post to this Web site must agree to the terms of the FredTalk User Agreement. We rely on our readers to police themselves, and report any content that violates our User Agreement. In accordance with our User Agreement, we reserve the right to remove any post at any time for any reason, and will restrict access of registered users who repeatedly violate our terms. Any reader can report inappropriate content by clicking the "Report this post to admins" link at the bottom of each comment. You need not be registered to report a post.

Oops.. (posted by freedomfirst , Feb. 28, 2008 1:01 pm)    0 likes
I got so excited I became anmoured with double "L"

Oh I forgot... (posted by freedomfirst , Feb. 28, 2008 12:59 pm)    0 likes
We have government for the purpose of generating revenue. How forgetfull of me.

The liquor license should be the incentive! (posted by MrZorro , Feb. 27, 2008 10:14 pm)    0 likes
The hard part with a saloon such as this one, is getting the liquor licenses. Then a bar like this is always a goldmine. The Council should have used the liquor licensing as the bargaining chip, not money too. Recall Matt Kelly!

Just to answer your question..... (posted by MattKelly , Feb. 27, 2008 4:08 pm)    0 likes
Rellascout--There are numerous on-line sites and magazines that rate restaurants. Bon Appetit Magazine just did a program on the best restaurants in the nation for certain foods and they are state and regional tourist destination. Alman's has a regional following, as does Capital Ale. The EDA is providing the $25,000 grant not the city. That is money raised from bond sales not city taxes. The rest is fee and tax waivers.

I am all for the Ale House (posted by rellascout , Feb. 27, 2008 12:19 pm)    0 likes
I think that it is great that the ale house is coming here. They are a good business and run 2 nice places in Richmond. My issue is that the citizens of Fred are footing the bill for this private business to come here. Even if you never set foot in the building you are paying for it if you live in the city. There needs to be a plan the assess these proposals as they come in. This 100K is being given under the name of "destination tourism," Since when is a restaurant a tourist destination.

What do you think?
Enter your FredTalk username and password to post a comment on this story. If you are registered on FredTalk or another part of this site, use that login here. Otherwise, you can just REGISTER here... .

Posting guidelines

1. Be respectful. No personal attacks.
2. Please avoid offensive, vulgar, abusive, hateful or defamatory language.
3. Agree to read & follow THE RULES.
4. Use the "report to admins" link for posts which violate the rules. 5. Keep it on-topic. Posts which contribute nothing of value to the conversation will be deleted.

Username:
Password:

Post title:


Please keep it brief (Limit is 512 characters). Please note, attempts to circumvent this limit by making
multiple posts back-to-back (ex: 'continued', 'part1, 2', etc) will be deleted.

Please make sure CAPS LOCK is off. Posts in ALL CAPS will be deleted.)


By checking this box, you agree to the terms of the FredTalk User agreement.









The Free Lance-Star fredericksburg.com 93.3 WFLS Print Innovators Classic Rock 96.9 99.3 The Vibe wntx radio