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St Petersburg Times recommends Leslie Curran For City Council District 4

St Petersburg Times

Incumbent Leslie Curran, 53, has led the recent effort to turn the derelict Crislip Arcade in Central Avenue‘s 600 block into an artists’ community. In 2007, she initiated the seasonal Art in the Park in downtown’s Williams Park on Saturdays. Those efforts demonstrate her commitment to the city’s arts scene and to improving the downtown. She deserves another term.

It would be nice to see Curran summon the energy she devotes to the arts and to downtown issues to more aggressively address broader issues. Most of the time, Curran is a solid council member who understands government. But she can let issues run their course rather than push for change.

A notable exception is Curran’s recent effort, along with new council member Karl Nurse, to make the council’s committee meetings, where significant policy discussions occur, more accessible to the public. While this is welcome, voters might wonder why she hadn’t done so sooner. Still, the art gallery owner has demonstrated proficiency in the job and has more expertise than her opponents.

St. Petersburg native Jason Diviki, a printer and Navy veteran, brings a fresh and appealing perspective to the race from Crescent Lake, where he is the neighborhood association president and involved with the Council of Neighborhood Associations. Educator Pamella Settlegoode recently returned to St. Petersburg after living in Oregon where she was a key player in her neighborhood association. Settlegoode, 60, has framed her campaign as the antidote to Curran and has been a vocal opponent of the city’s proposal for revitalizing BayWalk, including vacating the city’s ownership of an adjacent sidewalk. Curran, so far, has supported the reasonable plan. Diviki, 37, has no direct critique of Curran’s performance but believes it’s time for a new face. Curran won her current seat in 2005 but represented another district from 1989-1998.

Neither opponent offers the same command of the issues as Curran. In District 4, the Times recommends Leslie Curran.

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Arts set to brighten St. Petersburg's Central Avenue

A Times Editorial
Even when the economy is running on all cylinders, keeping a downtown thriving is not easy. So the challenge presented by the 600 block of St. Petersburg‘s Central Avenue, with its strip of empty storefronts frequented mostly by the homeless, loomed large. That did not discourage some local residents who saw the dank spaces as a canvas on which to paint their upbeat vision of an art colony. Now, the idea has caught fire and a block that was a detriment to downtown may have a better immediate future.

In recent years the renaissance that transformed downtown St. Petersburg skipped most of the 600 block, leaving a gap as obvious as a missing tooth to those who drove downtown’s main avenue. In 2006 the stores from 601 to 659 Central Ave. were emptied in preparation for a condominium project that never materialized. The property was sold to its current owner, Tom Gaffney, who planned to keep the property vacant until the real estate market improved and flip it.

The specter of years of further deterioration was unacceptable. City officials, spurred on by concerned residents, persuaded Gaffney to rent the small storefronts, including those in the historic Crislip Arcade, to artists for no more than $5 a square foot. In exchange, the tenants would clean up the stores and do their own renovations before opening their studios this fall.

City Council member and art gallery owner Leslie Curran is overseeing the work and has a waiting list of more than 60 potential tenants for only 35 spaces. Because of the robust response, Curran foresees an eclectic mix of tenants in the colony, including working artists, designers, exhibitors and importers. For the colony to succeed, Gaffney will need to offer leases that provide enough time for tenants to recover their costs and build a client base.

Art colonies and studio districts have cropped up around the country in communities that understand the arts can attract more visitors and investment. A lively, walkable collection of small art galleries and studios in the 600 block would be a positive addition to St. Petersburg’s thriving arts scene.

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Re-Elect Leslie Curran For City Council

Re-Elect Leslie Curran For City Council District 4 St Petersburg, Florida