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#1
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 00:50:03 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: Coming before all that very long to the waterfront near you... Pretty sad. Look what happened in New London. Took all of Fort Trumbull neighborhood for condos and who is going to live in them. Gotta love them Democrats. wtf is wrong with people? |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 00:50:03 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: Coming before all that very long to the waterfront near you... Pretty sad. Look what happened in New London. Took all of Fort Trumbull neighborhood for condos and who is going to live in them. Gotta love them Democrats. You crazy 'mericans.... everything has to be political. Much simplier up here...all brands of politicians are greedy and if not corrupted when they enter politics, they spoil shortly afterward. Only answer is a labour/socialist type party. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() Don White wrote: You crazy 'mericans.... everything has to be political. Much simplier up here...all brands of politicians are greedy and if not corrupted when they enter politics, they spoil shortly afterward. Same here, only we don't seem to recognize that yet... Only answer is a labour/socialist type party. Well, I wouldn't get that far carried away.... yet. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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This is a very sad situation but a common one in the United States today.
Any small business that is making it today has to have something special going for it. Cheap rent or just the right location or old money. I don't recommend anyone open or buy a small business in the US unless it is out of their home with no employees. It is all big business now or it is no business. Don't get emotional about it, just believe it and make adjustments. Times change. -- Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA, USA Web site: www.kiene.com "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... Ran into a situation today that I am sure we will be witnessing more frequently. I know a young couple who operate a very decent little sales and service shop in a middle sized city north of Seattle on Puget Sound. It's a family business that has supported them and their kids for the last several years, but when I ran into them today they mentioned they had decided to close up shop. Interesting, and sad, is the reason why: The local marina is expanding at their location. That should be good news, except for the fact that as part of the expansion a "public/ private partnership" is building a fancy new condominium complex. A huge new mooring basin has been dredged and developed, but guess what? Those slips aren't available long term to the general public (i.e. the taxpayers who funded the development of this public land), they are being given to the condo development company as a reward for developing the condo village at the site, and any time that a condo resident wants to purchase one of the slips (from the development company, of course), any tenant that is merely renting the slip will be subject to eviction. How this concerns my friends and their boat shop: They are currently occupying a fairly old building that fronts a road running along the perimeter of the marina. They have a small office and retail area, and several service bays. "Our lease is up pretty soon, and the Port is going to tear down this building," they said. "We've been offered the same square footage in one of the new commercial buildings that will be part of the condominium complex, but there's going to be a difference in rent. Right now, we pay about $25,000 per year to rent this space, but after they force us to move next year the rent would go up to $14,000 a month. That's a total of $168,000 per year in rent, or $143,000 more than we're paying now. We can't see any reason to keep the doors open with that sort of increase in overhead." Obviously my friends did what anybody else would do in the same situation- took a careful look at how much they're able to put in their pockets each year with the current overhead, subtracted $143,000 from that number to reflect the future overhead, and looked at the amount left over and asked, "why bother"? Congrats to the greedy arse port authorities and the high dollar condo developers. They have completely overlooked that fact that most of the infrastructure for boating consists of small and medium size family businesses. Those software millionaires living the fat life in the waterfront condo McMansions have a rude awakening in store......even if they buy the slips out from under the public and moor their gold plated boats, their very presence will have raised real estate values to the point where nobody will be able to remain in business to service or maintain them. Coming before all that very long to the waterfront near you... Pretty sad. |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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This has been happening in Southwest Florida for the past 10 years...and in
Southeast Florida for longer than that. It just started happening in the Keys a couple of years ago, but fortunately the real estate market took a hit and slowed things down. I had a boat stored at a marina that leased the land, and the landlord decided not to re-lease the property *at any price*. They sold it for $20 million to Eco-Group...a large developer out of Tampa. Same thing happened to two other marinas in Naples in the past 3 years. "Chuck Gould" wrote in message oups.com... Ran into a situation today that I am sure we will be witnessing more frequently. I know a young couple who operate a very decent little sales and service shop in a middle sized city north of Seattle on Puget Sound. It's a family business that has supported them and their kids for the last several years, but when I ran into them today they mentioned they had decided to close up shop. Interesting, and sad, is the reason why: The local marina is expanding at their location. That should be good news, except for the fact that as part of the expansion a "public/ private partnership" is building a fancy new condominium complex. A huge new mooring basin has been dredged and developed, but guess what? Those slips aren't available long term to the general public (i.e. the taxpayers who funded the development of this public land), they are being given to the condo development company as a reward for developing the condo village at the site, and any time that a condo resident wants to purchase one of the slips (from the development company, of course), any tenant that is merely renting the slip will be subject to eviction. How this concerns my friends and their boat shop: They are currently occupying a fairly old building that fronts a road running along the perimeter of the marina. They have a small office and retail area, and several service bays. "Our lease is up pretty soon, and the Port is going to tear down this building," they said. "We've been offered the same square footage in one of the new commercial buildings that will be part of the condominium complex, but there's going to be a difference in rent. Right now, we pay about $25,000 per year to rent this space, but after they force us to move next year the rent would go up to $14,000 a month. That's a total of $168,000 per year in rent, or $143,000 more than we're paying now. We can't see any reason to keep the doors open with that sort of increase in overhead." Obviously my friends did what anybody else would do in the same situation- took a careful look at how much they're able to put in their pockets each year with the current overhead, subtracted $143,000 from that number to reflect the future overhead, and looked at the amount left over and asked, "why bother"? Congrats to the greedy arse port authorities and the high dollar condo developers. They have completely overlooked that fact that most of the infrastructure for boating consists of small and medium size family businesses. Those software millionaires living the fat life in the waterfront condo McMansions have a rude awakening in store......even if they buy the slips out from under the public and moor their gold plated boats, their very presence will have raised real estate values to the point where nobody will be able to remain in business to service or maintain them. Coming before all that very long to the waterfront near you... Pretty sad. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 20:37:05 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:
This has been happening in Southwest Florida for the past 10 years...and in Southeast Florida for longer than that. It just started happening in the Keys a couple of years ago, but fortunately the real estate market took a hit and slowed things down. I had a boat stored at a marina that leased the land, and the landlord decided not to re-lease the property *at any price*. They sold it for $20 million to Eco-Group...a large developer out of Tampa. Same thing happened to two other marinas in Naples in the past 3 years. Don't most of those waterfront condo developments build marinas? Maybe not boatyards, but at least berths? I didn't look close, but it seemed that in Punta Gorda dockage increased when they put up condos. They may not be renting out the berths yet, but I suspect they will eventually, as it's money in the bank. From what I've seen in Florida, most canal homes with docks have empty docks. It was the same in Cape Coral, but I haven't been there for years. --Vic |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() Don't most of those waterfront condo developments build marinas? Maybe not boatyards, but at least berths? I didn't look close, but it seemed that in Punta Gorda dockage increased when they put up condos. They may not be renting out the berths yet, but I suspect they will eventually, as it's money in the bank. From what I've seen in Florida, most canal homes with docks have empty docks. It was the same in Cape Coral, but I haven't been there for years. --Vic Maybe the Japanese are buying it all up like Hawaii.... it's probably the Chinese this time around. hooray for NAFTA! |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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Yes, they put in slips. And the slips sell for $400,000+.
But the ones at those two sites are for residents of the condos only. "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 20:37:05 GMT, "NOYB" wrote: This has been happening in Southwest Florida for the past 10 years...and in Southeast Florida for longer than that. It just started happening in the Keys a couple of years ago, but fortunately the real estate market took a hit and slowed things down. I had a boat stored at a marina that leased the land, and the landlord decided not to re-lease the property *at any price*. They sold it for $20 million to Eco-Group...a large developer out of Tampa. Same thing happened to two other marinas in Naples in the past 3 years. Don't most of those waterfront condo developments build marinas? Maybe not boatyards, but at least berths? I didn't look close, but it seemed that in Punta Gorda dockage increased when they put up condos. They may not be renting out the berths yet, but I suspect they will eventually, as it's money in the bank. From what I've seen in Florida, most canal homes with docks have empty docks. It was the same in Cape Coral, but I haven't been there for years. --Vic |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 16:00:13 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote: It was the same in Cape Coral, but I haven't been there for years. Depends. Most of my neighbors are active boaters, some of us with two or three boats. |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 20 Jul 2007 20:37:05 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:
Same thing happened to two other marinas in Naples in the past 3 years. And to a large full service ship yard in Ft Myers, recently replaced by high rise condos. |
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