Notice of Hearing on proposed budget 2026

Old South Gaylord BID Board Meeting

When:

August 21, 2025 9:30 am

WhERE:

1028 S Gaylord St (Modern Bungalow)

Meeting Notes:

Board Meeting Minutes – August 21, 2025
Location: Modern Bungalow
Called to Order: Matt Hubbard

Attendees
● Board/Officers: [Chair/President], Joyce (Treasurer), Matt (Board),
● Members/Guests: Tim (Broderick — new business owner), Joel (new to block), [others
present not captured in transcript]
● City/Utilities referenced: City Forester, Xcel Energy, Council Office (Paul Cashman)
● Absent: Jackie (Block Manager/Coordinator; noted as absent)
Recording notice: Chair stated meetings are recorded for accuracy;
recordings/transcripts are available upon request. No objections were raised.

  1. Approval of Minutes
    ● Prior minutes were distributed by email to the Board. Hard copies available at the
    meeting.
    ● Motion: Approve prior minutes as circulated.
    Second: Yes. Vote: Unanimous approval. Outcome: Carried.
    Publishing cadence (minutes & agendas):
    ● Target going forward: minutes published within 7 days of each meeting; next agenda
    posted ~1 week prior.
    ● Acknowledged August delays due to travel; process being systemized.
  2. Treasurer’s Report – Joyce
    Budget status (YTD):
    ● Planned 2025 revenue (property tax): $56,571
    ● Actual revenue received to date: $55,322
    ● YTD expenses: $57,147 → over budget due to long-deferred cleanup, tree
    replacements, and addition of Block Manager support.
    ● Reserve (Tree Reserve): $54,660 available; overage covered from this reserve.
    ● Asset sale: Polaris Razor sold for $17,000; proceeds moved to reserve.
    Notable recurring/expected costs:
    ● Block Manager (Jackie): $1,800/month
    ● Front Range maintenance proposal (weekly night cleanup/gutters/issue reporting):
    ~$1,400/month (under review)
    ● Google Workspace/email/storage: $72/month
    ● Electricity (avg): ~$90/month
    ● Water (avg): ~$50/month
    ● Seasonal flower/landscape service: noted; clarification needed (statement during
    meeting indicated likely $640/biweekly through October; Treasurer to verify and
    update ledger).
    Trees — recent spend & approach:
    ● $9,350 for removal/replacement of four problematic trees in Mississippi (included
    removal, new plantings, mulch, rock; city approved).
    ● The strategy is to replace gradually as needed (avoid removing healthy trees) while
    saving annually to replant at least two trees per year.
    Transparency: Members can request detailed ledgers/vendor payments from the Treasurer at
    any time.
  3. Operations & Maintenance
    Cleanup & Street Fixtures
    ● Old/smashed trash cans and redundant metalwork removed; visible improvement noted.
    ● More trash cans to be installed once a consistent design plan is finalized.
    ● Some concrete repairs completed; additional priority spots identified (e.g., former
    driveway scoop in front of Homegrown—discussion ongoing due to delivery needs).
    Sidewalk Repair Assessments
    ● The city is assessing fees for sidewalk repairs citywide.
    ● Action: Jackie to ask whether BID commercial sidewalks qualify for city-funded
    repairs, and if BID can align planned cuts/expansions (e.g., future tree wells, curb
    changes) with city work.
    Lighting — Street Poles (Xcel) & Trees
    ● Many ornamental lamp posts are not lit; Xcel owns/numbers them.
    ● Prior report of underground cable issue “fixed,” but lights remain out.
    ● Action: Continue escalation with Xcel and Council Office (Paul Cashman) to restore
    pole lighting and arrange cleaning.
  4. Streetscape & Tree Plan
    Existing Streetscape Plan
    ● A landscape-architect plan (2024) exists with a full survey (utilities, rights-of-way).
    ● Subsequent City Forester feedback: in some spots, extend existing boxes ~10’ rather
    than build entirely new wells (more efficient, less disruption).
    Access & participation:
    ● PDF is on the website; 11×17” prints are useful for markup.
    ● Action: Create a comment-enabled page (WordPress with merchant/owner login, or
    Canva board) to collect specific, geolocated feedback (bench/trash/bike rack
    locations, tree-well expansions, seating areas).
    ● Action: Print and share updated 11×17 copies for in-person markups.
    Replacement Strategy & Costs
    ● Concrete cutting on Gaylord will be costlier than the Mississippi segments that were
    already open.
    ● Phasing is referred to as reducing disruption and managing costs; full-block replacement
    would be cheaper per unit but may exceed the annual budget.
    ● Funding: City grants previously unsuccessful; explore fundraisers, sponsorships, and
    neighborhood partnerships (e.g., Denver Digs Trees–style residential programs as a
    model; outreach to tree farms for deals/community planting days).
  5. Snow & Ice Management
    Sidewalks (BID vs. Property Owner Responsibility)
    ● By ordinance, owners are responsible for adjacent sidewalks; historically, the BID
    contracted clearing for consistency/safety.
    ● General support to continue BID-managed service to avoid spotty compliance; note
    liability implications if BID performs clearing.
    Vendor Approach
    ● Sold BID’s snow machine (too wide for many sidewalks; storage/insurance issues).
    ● Bidding now for sidewalk service with triggered visits (e.g., clear by ~6 AM for gyms;
    return if accumulation resumes; salting standard).
    ● Front Range is familiar with transit sites; it has gutter-cleaning equipment (beneficial for
    leaf/ice build-up).
    ● Action: Finalize scope & RFP/contract (service levels, triggers, return thresholds).
    Street Plowing (City)
    ● The street is currently treated as residential, not routinely plowed.
    ● Action: Advocate to add the block to the City plow route (justification: one block; tax
    revenue; proximity to the University & Mississippi).
    ● Consider designated snow stacking zones (north/south ends or designated stalls) or
    request city haul-off for major events.
  6. Events & Activation
    Trick-or-Treat Street
    ● Popular, typically run by the Merchant Association, BID may assume that the MA
    budget cannot.
    ● Needs: permits & barricades (cones worked informally before, but permits reduce
    liability), merchant notifications (vehicle removal timing), communication plan.
    ● Revenue ideas: central bar/garden (with proper liquor licensing), tree sales/raffles,
    sponsorships.
    ● Action: Chair to confer with Carla/Christina (MA) on leadership; if BID leads, include in
    2026 budget and initiate permit/tactical plan ASAP.
    Firefly Market (3rd-party)
    ● Benefits: brings new visitors.
    ● Concerns: booth walls block storefronts when placed along sidewalks facing into the
    street; businesses lose access during peak times.
    ● Fire Marshal requires a center lane for emergency access.
    ● Proposal: orient booths toward the sidewalks while preserving the center lane.
    ● Actions:
    ○ Contact Firefly organizers (Beth & Steve) directly to explore layout changes
    (previously filtered via MA).
    ○ Engage Fire Dept/Permitting for a dimensional template (tent sizes, offsets,
    lane width) to pre-approve a merchant-friendly layout.
    ○ If cooperation fails and impacts remain material, consider permitting objections
    (Board approval required for BID action; businesses can act independently).
    New Seasonal Event — Holiday Tree Lighting
    ● Concept: place a central tree; carolers/choirs (volunteer groups seeking audiences),
    light the block; potential building outline lighting, longer-term.
    ● Explore programmable color options for year-round themes (subject to
    power/access/ownership across buildings).
    ● Actions:
    ○ Outreach to local choirs/schools for holiday caroling.
    ○ Lighting contractor to scope options and costs.
    ○ Coordinate with property owners regarding building-mounted lighting and
    power.
    Tree Lights (Existing) — Condition & Plan
    ● Current tree lights are patchy; many segments are out. Bulk replacement was done in
    2022, but failures and trimming damage were noted.
    ● Sequence: Trim trees first, then re-light (contractor offers 2-year guarantee on new
    installs).
    ● Motion: Use reserves to trim all trees and replace tree lights block-wide.
    Second: Yes. Vote: Unanimous. Outcome: Approved.
    ● Actions:
    ○ Jackie to schedule tree trimming (confirm vendor, timing).
    ○ Jackie to schedule lighting contractor to remove old strings, then install new
    after trimming.
    ○ Evening audit of failures to be documented (volunteers offered).
  7. Logistics & Deliveries
    ● Discussion of UPS Access Point relocating to a business on the block to consolidate
    drop-offs/pick-ups and reduce curb double-parking.
    ● Action: Business owner to continue coordination with UPS; BID to monitor delivery
    impacts and alley usage policies.
  8. Budget Planning — 2026 & Beyond
    ● City to release new BID revenue figures by late August; 2026 budget due by Sept.
    30.
    ● If raising assessment beyond the 10% cap, an election of owners/lessees would be
    needed; the earliest effective year would be 2027.
    ● Action: Upon receipt of figures, prepare draft 2026 budget, prioritize O&M (snow,
    cleaning, lighting), trees/streetscape phase(s), events, and contingency. Include potential
    fundraising revenue lines (tree sales/raffles, sponsorships).
  9. Community & Engagement
    BID Happy Hour
    ● Host an informal BID happy hour at Tim’s new establishment to build community and
    solicit input.
    ● Preferred days: Tue–Thu; venue opens at 4 PM.
    ● Action: Jackie to propose dates, email invite to merchants/owners, and confirm
    turnout.
    Adjournment
    ● Meeting adjourned at approximately
    ● Minutes prepared by: Jackie Bouvier