Feels like this deserves its own topic.
https://www.jaxdailyrecord.com/news/2023/may/05/daniel-davis-move-jail-out-of-downtown-speed-development-process/With so many other needs, prioritizing relocation of the jail remains a
staggeringly insane idea.The question shouldn't be, "Does having the jail in its current location hurt downtown vibrancy?"
The question should be, "If improving downtown vibrancy is our end goal, and we have $500-$600 million we'd like to budget toward that goal, is relocation of the jail the best use of these dollars?"
This is an ASTRONOMICAL amount of money that results in zero immediate net-new addition to downtown.
For context, for the same amount of money it would cost to relocate the jail, you could fully fund the Laura Street Trio renovation project incentives ($62 million), the proposed piers and food hall at Shipyards West ($30 million), the proposed restaurant and public art at Riverfront Plaza ($25 million), the UF Graduate Center ($50 million), a full revamp of JWJ park ($10 million), open up the retail bays at the Main Library to Laura Street ($1 million), pump an extra $20 million into each of the major riverfront parks in the planning stages ($80 million), and still have enough leftover to fund Lot J ($250 million) with CASH TO SPARE to toss at MOSH, build a new museum on the Southbank in the old MOSH space, remediate Hogan's Creek, two-way the streets, incentivize historic rehabs or restaurant/retail leases, etc.
Not saying these are the right projects, but I find it impossible to believe that the collective benefit to downtown from a mix of projects like this is outweighed by the net detriment of having our prison located near the river.
The DIA's end goal for the jail property is a convention center, but with half a billion dollars committed to moving the jail, and likely close to $750 million committed to what the Jags want to do with the stadium rehab and Lot J 2.0, there's no universe where we can afford a convention center in the next 20 years if the jail is prioritized, short of selling JEA or a major new Better Jax-like plan. So, more than likely, the end result of moving the jail would be yet another piece of prime property sitting vacant for decades.
This does nothing to help downtown vibrancy, and the opportunity cost is staggering.
We have spent MORE THAN ENOUGH MONEY removing things from downtown based on supposed opportunity (the Landing, River City Brewing, Greyhound Station, Courthouse & Annex, Berkman 2, a city block at Coastline, etc.) without adding anything concrete back to replace them. It's gotten us nowhere, greatly reduce downtown density, and cost hundreds of millions with nothing to show for it.
Davis (and Curry before) pushing this as high-priority for their buddies at the JSO displays a fundamental lack of understanding about what it will truly take to move our downtown forward.