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Yahoo
29-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Portland City Council hits pause on music venue moratorium
Apr. 28—The Portland City Council voted Monday to refer a proposed moratorium on new theater and live music developments larger than 2,000 seats to the Sustainability and Transportation Committee. The decision, which came in a nearly unanimous vote at the council's meeting Monday night, means an order proposing the six-month moratorium will be revisited at the May 19 meeting, at the soonest. That should give the committee time to answer underlying questions about the potential impact of live venues and new parking on traffic and road safety. At-large Councilor Benjamin Grant initially motioned for the moratorium to be simply postponed and revisited at the May 19 meeting, but he later altered the motion to instead refer the issue to the committee, which next meets on May 14. "I don't think we are ready for this question right now," Grant said. "There's been a lot of motion, a lot of activity, but not a lot of progress addressing some of the key issues." Though Grant agreed that additional questions need to be answered before new projects can move forward, he argued that a moratorium was the wrong tool for the job. Councilor Wes Pelletier, who proposed the moratorium along with Councilor Anna Bullet, cast the sole vote against referring the moratorium. He and Bullett had originally sought a full vote Monday. "I'd have preferred that we'd created a more substantive period in which we could evaluate the city's ordinances and land use code to make sure we're planning our city center wisely," Pelletier said in a text message. "But I'm hopeful the Sustainability and Transportation Committee will come back with a strong course of action." Dozens who had filled the council chambers, including members of the public and developers, filtered out of the room following the vote. Many who had come to offer public comment mumbled frustrations as they shuffled out. At its May meeting, the transportation committee will consider questions surrounding parking and congestion related to live events. The moratorium, as currently drafted, would stretch into the fall unless the city first implements new rules related to permitting and zoning for large event spaces and concert halls. In the meantime, "no permit applications for any new theaters or performance halls with a capacity exceeding 2000 people shall be accepted, processed, reviewed, or approved," according to the moratorium order. Pelletier, who represents District 2, and Bullett, who represents District 4, proposed the moratorium this month. It would directly impact a controversial plan to build a new venue at 244 Cumberland Ave. — tentatively called the Portland Music Hall — though it does not explicitly name the project. Pelletier has previously told the Press Herald the moratorium was not targeted at that single application. LIVE NATION PROPOSAL AT CENTER Mile Marker Investments, a Scarborough-based developer, partnered with Live Nation to propose the new venue, which would be about a block from the roughly 1,900-seat Merrill Auditorium. Despite public pushback, the companies have maintained that the music hall would fill a middle-ground niche between smaller auditoriums, like Merrill and the State Theatre, and larger spaces like Thompson's Point, which can fit about 6,000 for an outdoor show. By filling that gap, the music hall could attract acts that may otherwise be simultaneously too big and too small to book Portland's existing venues, the developers have said. But frustrated neighbors, including residents and other businesses, have charged that the relatively large venue and its central placement near several existing event spaces could choke local traffic and create hazardous conditions for pedestrians and cyclists during busy nights. In written comments submitted ahead of Monday's meeting, locals expressed concern with the pace of development, the size of the proposed space and broad distaste toward Live Nation, a live music corporation that owns venues and operates ticketing services across the country, among other activities. The company is currently involved in an antitrust lawsuit for what the Justice Department last year called "unlawful conduct that thwarts competition." The order for the moratorium noted that the city's land use code does not require any spatial buffer between large theaters and performance spaces, "which should be considered to protect public safety and ensure that these venues are not clustered and do not overburden public infrastructure." It applies to all applications submitted after Dec. 1, 2024 — less than three weeks before the proposed venue's application was filed. The order also requires the council's Housing and Economic Development Committee to review the city code "and develop amendments ... to address the concerns" raised. The pause will last through Oct. 25 unless altered by the council, or until any new amendments to the city code take effect, whichever comes first. Construction on the new site was originally slated to begin this fall, with doors opening in late 2027. It's not clear how or whether the moratorium — should it eventually pass — would impact that time frame. Todd Goldenfarb, managing director of Mile Marker Investments, referred questions about the moratorium to a Live Nation spokesperson Monday afternoon. A spokesperson for Live Nation declined to speak in person about the vote after the meeting and instead sent a written statement from Ryan Vangel, Live Nation's president. "We're committed to building a great new entertainment venue that will expand the music scene in Portland," Vangel said, echoing language he used in a statement issued last week. "We look forward to working with the (Portland) Planning Board to show how our plan will make it safe and enjoyable for fans to come to Portland Music Hall." OTHER BUSINESS Though discussion of the moratorium took up a significant portion of the meeting, the council took up a handful of other discussions, including giving a first read to an order that would accept a new contract between the city and the Portland Police Superior Officers Association, the union representing Portland Police Department officers. That order will be read again and voted on at a future meeting. The meeting began with nearly 30 minutes of public comment on non-agenda items, mostly from residents and business owners who expressed frustration about the homeless people who are gathering in Monument Square, saying the group is growing and becoming increasingly hostile. The council also unanimously approved an order to tweak the calculations used in certain ranked-choice voting races. The previous formulas for counting proportional ranked choice-voting were written in late 2023, but the city has not had a reason to use them. "This does not change ranked-choice voting that we use for (the) mayor, City Council — single-race ranked choice in any way," City Clerk Ashley Rand. The new formula for proportional ranked choice voting, which applies only when numerous candidates are running for more than one available and identical seat, is designed to more accurately tabulate the winning candidates, according to the order. Such cases are rare, but could include putting together a City Charter Commission years down the line. Copy the Story Link

Yahoo
28-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Portland City Council hits pause on deciding whether to pause venue developments
Apr. 28—The Portland City Council voted Monday to refer a potential moratorium on new theater and live music developments larger than 2,000 seats to the Sustainability and Transportation Committee. The decision, which came in a nearly unanimous vote at the council's Monday night meeting, means an order proposing the six-month moratorium will be revisited at the May 19 meeting, at the soonest. At-large Councilor Benjamin Grant initially motioned for the moratorium to be revisited at the May 19 meeting, but he later altered the motion to instead refer the issue to the committee, which next meets on May 14. "I don't think we are ready for this question right now," Grant said. "There's been a lot of motion, a lot of activity, but not a lot of progress addressing some of the key issues." Though Grant said he agrees additional questions need to be answered before new projects can move forward, he argued that a moratorium was the wrong tool for the job. Councilor Wes Pelletier, who proposed the moratorium along with Councilor Anna Bullet, cast the sole vote against referring the moratorium. He and Bullett had originally sought a full vote Monday. Dozens who had filled the council chambers including members of the public and developers, filtered out of the room following the vote. Many who had come to offer public comment mumbled frustrations as they shuffled out. At its May meeting, the transportation committee will consider questions surrounding parking and congestion related to live events. The moratorium, as currently drafted, would stretch into the fall unless the city first implements new rules related to permitting and zoning for large event spaces and concert halls. In the meantime, "no permit applications for any new theaters or performance halls with a capacity exceeding 2000 people shall be accepted, processed, reviewed, or approved," according to the moratorium order. Pelletier, who represents District 2, and Bullett, who represents District 4, proposed the moratorium this month. It would directly impact a controversial plan to build a new venue at 244 Cumberland Ave. — tentatively called the Portland Music Hall — though it does not explicitly name the project. Pelletier has previously told the Press Herald the moratorium was not targeted at that single application. LIVE NATION PROPOSAL AT CENTER Mile Marker Investments, a Scarborough-based developer, partnered with Live Nation to propose the new venue, which would be about a block from the roughly 1,900-seat Merrill Auditorium. Despite public pushback, the companies have maintained that the music hall would fill a middle-ground niche between smaller auditoriums, like Merrill and the State Theater, and larger spaces like Thompson's Point, which can fit about 6,000 for an outdoor show. By filling that gap, the music hall could attract acts that may otherwise be simultaneously too big and too small to book Portland's existing venues, the developers have said. But frustrated neighbors, including residents and other businesses, have charged that the relatively large venue and its central placement near several existing event spaces could choke local traffic and create hazardous conditions for pedestrians and cyclists during busy nights. In written comments submitted ahead of Monday's meeting, locals expressed concern with the pace of development, the size of the proposed space and broad distaste toward Live Nation, a live music corporation that owns venues and operates ticketing services across the country, among other activities. The company is currently involved in an antitrust lawsuit for what the Justice Department last year called "unlawful conduct that thwarts competition." The order for the moratorium noted that the city's land use code does not require any spatial buffer between large theaters and performance spaces, "which should be considered to protect public safety and ensure that these venues are not clustered and do not overburden public infrastructure." It applies to all applications submitted after Dec. 1, 2024 — less than three weeks before the proposed venue's application was filed. The order also requires the council's Housing and Economic Development Committee to review the city code "and develop amendments ... to address the concerns" raised. The pause will last through Oct. 25 unless altered by the council, or until any new amendments to the city code take effect, whichever comes first. Construction on the new site was originally slated to begin this fall, with doors opening in late 2027. It's not clear how or whether the moratorium — should it eventually pass — will impact that time frame. Todd Goldenfarb, managing editor of Mile Marker Investments, referred questions about the then-upcoming vote to a Live Nation spokesperson Monday afternoon. A spokesperson for Live Nation and Mile Marker declined to speak in person about the vote after the meeting but promised to provide a written statement later Monday evening. He did not immediately provide that comment. Copy the Story Link We believe it's important to offer commenting on certain stories as a benefit to our readers. At its best, our comments sections can be a productive platform for readers to engage with our journalism, offer thoughts on coverage and issues, and drive conversation in a respectful, solutions-based way. It's a form of open discourse that can be useful to our community, public officials, journalists and others. 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