Tag Archives: Redevelopment Plan

“The AECOM Plan”

False Premises, Misdirection, and Dismissal of Public Input Characterize Aiken’s Master Economic Development Plan. 

Recently obtained information (1) has revealed that the City of Aiken’s Master Economic Development Plan, also known as “The AECOM Plan,” (2) was formulated, in part, on the basis of a “stakeholders workshop” that involved a single non-governmental group: The Aiken Chamber of Commerce.

The only other participants in the February 24-25 “stakeholder workshop” conducted by the AECOM Corporation’s Planning and Consulting Division were city employees. One City Council member attended each day; Mayor Osbon attended on the first day, but not the second. No local media were invited and there was no public notification of any meeting to discuss Aiken’s economic future.

The AECOM Plan, formulated in the total absence of public input, was eventually approved and adopted by Aiken City Council under a false premise, and the report provided to City Council lacked eighty percent of the information found in today’s complete edition. Adoption and pursuit of the AECOM plan eventually led to the cascade of costly decisions and the current fiasco known as Project Pascalis. 

I. The AECOM Presence in Aiken 

The AECOM Corporation is a Fortune 500 company with nearly $20 billion a year in revenues. It is self-described as “the world’s trusted infrastructure consulting firm, partnering with clients to solve the world’s most complex challenges and build legacies for generations to come.” According to its 2021 Annual Report, AECOM’s urban planning division “continues to shape the growth of the world’s major cities, while envisioning entire new urban areas to meet future needs.” 

AECOM’s Urban Master Planning/Design sector provides “strategic planning and master planning services for new cities and major mixed-use developments in locations such as India, China, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States.” AECOM’s urban vision is largely devoid of historical preservation, and focused on eliminating “fragmented” property ownership from landscapes that can impede redevelopment into glittering, shining new landscapes. (3) 

In April 2019, the AECOM corporation’s subsidiary Management Services group, a $4.5 billion per year government services contractor, was the lead contractor in the consortium known as Savannah River Remediation, LLC (SRR, LLC) — the Department of Energy’s (DOE) primary contractor handling the massive Cold War nuclear weapon materials production legacy of dangerous, unstable, radioactive liquid waste at the agency’s vast Savannah River Site (SRS). The consortium employed nearly 2500 workers, about one quarter of the entire SRS workforce. Since 2009, SRR, LLC’s cost-plus-fee contract has been worth an average of a half billion dollars a year, and its bonuses ranged from $15 to $20 million per year. 

Partners in the consortium were other powerhouse government contractors: Bechtel National, CH2M, and BWX Technologies, Inc.; and subcontractors Orano, Atkins, and AECOM N&E Technical. When the consortium signed an eighteen month, $750 million contract extension (4) in April, 2019, AECOM Management Services’ executive workforce included future Aiken Economic Development Commission (AMDC) member and Chairman, Keith Wood, and AECOM Manager of Governmental Affairs, Lessie Price — also a longtime City Council member. 

AECOM maintained a prominent presence in downtown Aiken beginning in 2015, following its multi-billion dollar acquisition in 2014 of former SRR, LLC lead contractor, URS, Inc. The upper management team from URS transferred to AECOM. 

Next to its downtown office on Newberry Street, leased from the Aiken Corporation, was the city-owned AECOM Center of the Performing Arts, home to the nearly seventy-year old Aiken Community Theatre, which had been lured to its new downtown location in 2002 after decades of operating in Virginia Acres park. Across the street is a public art display in the parkway involving an empty, ten foot high, half-ton radioactive waste canister from the liquid radioactive waste operations, which was unveiled on November, 15, 2016. 

In February of 2020, AECOM sold its Management Services Division to private equity firms, who renamed the new company Amentum. Within a year the AECOM signs on Newberry Street were replaced by Amentum. Once again, the executive management team transferred to the newly conceived firm. Amentum-owned AECOM Energy & Construction, Inc took the place of AECOM Management Services on the waste contract. 

SRR, LLC relinquished the radioactive waste contract in early 2022, when DOE selected a new firm, Savannah River Mission Completion, LLC, to work on the tens of millions of gallons of legacy waste remaining. AECOM Energy & Construction remains a lead contractor in the new consortium. While the Amentum name is now dominant, AECOM’s presence is only slightly diminished. 

II. AECOM Takes the Economic Planning Lead in Aiken

The City of Aiken’s “Strategic Economic Development Action Plan,” also known as “the AECOM plan,” was developed between April 2019 to March, 2021 and is now considered the city’s “Master Economic Plan.” The AECOM plan subsequently provided a nebulous justification for much of the City’s $100 million dollar plus downtown demolition and redevelopment endeavor effort known as Project Pascalis. 

A key passage in the AECOM plan reflected the company’s preference for property consolidation, and would be recited in the necessary steps towards funding Project Pascalis property purchases, particularly the $10 million, August, 2021 municipal bond issuance: 

One of the major barriers to new development/redevelopment in downtown Aiken are the small parcel sizes and fragmented property ownership. This makes it difficult for both public and private entities to assemble land for larger-scale redevelopment.

According to the AECOM plan, in April, 2019 the City of Aiken “engaged” its Urban Planning and Consulting Division “to assist in the development of this strategic economic development strategy.” However, according to the newly updated document, made available via a FOIA request, the effort does not appear to have begun in earnest until December of 2019. In the newly released Appendix C, AECOM’s project leader Marcia Tobin wrote: 

As described in the opening statement and ‘Project Scope of Services’in the December 12, 2019 Economic Development & Master Planning Services, ‘The City of Aiken (Client) wants to forge a path forward for its growth and development, and to this end, is seeking the services of consultants to create a roadmap that leads to this goal.’ As an initial due diligence step in the AECOM Master Planning team’s process, the team has reviewed applicable material from numerous documents. Each of the 21 documents was reviewed and high-level goals, themes, conclusions, and recommendations were outlined. Specific, actionable vision statements were pulled out of each of these documents and organized into overarching themes.

III. The “Stakeholders Workshop” and the Four-Hour Trolley Tour

Following the document review (which produced a 45-page summary that escaped final publication), the second key basis for the AECOM plan occurred: a “stakeholders workshop” held on February 25-26, 2020. The importance of the workshop was highlighted on Page One of the plan’s Executive Summary: 

In February of 2020, AECOM held a two-day workshop with Aiken City officials and key stakeholders to discuss the City’s past, present, and future. AECOM was given a tour of the City’s historic downtown, many unique neighborhoods, key gateways, and commercial and employment nodes. Representatives discussed what they see as key impediments to the City’s future growth and development, as well as areas of opportunity. These discussions provide the framework for this Strategic Economic Development Plan.

Even though the final document repeatedly refers to a “stakeholders” meeting, implying a wide range of attendees with diverse viewpoints and interests, there was in fact only one non-governmental group represented: The Aiken Chamber of Commerce. The full listing of workshop attendees identified in the AECOM workshop summary, recently obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request, were: 

  • Two Aiken Chamber of Commerce employees: President J. David Jameson and Business Vitality Manager Mandy Collins. 
  • Mayor Rick Osbon and Council Member Ed Woltz (Council member Gail Diggs replaced Woltz on Day Two) 
  • Six City of Aiken employees (5) 
  • Five AECOM urban planners, designers, and economic analysts. (6) 

According to the newly released Appendix E, Meeting Materials, the workshop occurred over a two-day period. Day One involved a meeting with “core group (including Mayor),” followed by a half-day Trolley tour of key sites: “Downtown, Eastside, I-20 corridor, Aiken Regional Airport, USC Aiken, Southside, Westside, Aiken Mall, etc;” and finishing with a wrap-up of the day’s findings. 

The sign-in sheet shows representation by the Chamber of Commerce, Mayor Osbon, Council member Ed Woltz, and six City of Aiken employees. 

Click image to view full size.

The second day of the workshop, which included “core group checks” and “meetings with key stakeholders,” was even less well-attended, with only four employees, Council member Gail Diggs, and AECOM Urban Planner and Project leader Marcia Tobin signing in that day. 

Click image to view full size.

By the end of the workshop, a vision for Aiken was articulated that included “Continue to build its employment, both with small businesses/entrepreneurs, and with larger employers;” and “Diversify its economy, building on its strong technical and scientific professional community.” Yet, of the five “Identified Opportunities and Catalysts,” two involved major efforts for Savannah River Site, two involved other major governmental initiatives, and the remaining opportunity was the twice-annual Steeplechase event at its new property whose purchase was funded by a million dollars of City funds: 

Eighty percent of the opportunities and catalysts were predicated entirely on government funding. No small business opportunities were identified and no major private industry initiatives were envisioned. 

IV. Followup to the Workshop

Appendix E also contains a page of “interview” subjects, but there is no indication these interviews were completed. When AECOM project manager, Marcia Tobin, spoke four months later to the newly formed AMDC at its June 20, 2020 public meeting, she only referenced feedback from the workshops. According to the meeting minutes (7), she cited the “workshop” eight times in her discussion, including this relevant passage insinuating the workshop was well attended and the community was well represented. From the minutes:

She said they took that information and used it in the Goal Workshops on February 25 – 26, 2020. The purpose there was to get people together who know the area– residents, city employees, volunteers and leaders within the community who understand what has been done and where they would like to go.

On October 8th and October 27th, 2020, two more “working meetings” were held, but the meeting attendees were not noted. By this time the AECOM plan was already on the minds of AMDC members. Two days prior, at its October 6, 2020 meeting, newly appointed commissioner Philip Merry, a real estate investor and former City Council member, cited the work in the context of reworking the City’s stormwater ordinance to allow higher density housing. From the minutes:

He thought the vehicle of the AECOM Economic Development Plan might be a good place to give credence to those concerns. He noted one example is the city’s mandate for stormwater retention. He pointed out that he thought Aiken has the highest stormwater retention requirements of anyone in the state. He pointed out this requires the developer to buy more land in order to do their project, or do the project smaller, or not do the project at all. (8) 

A major new dynamic in the mix, unrecognized by the AECOM planners, was the $600 million Plutonium Settlement between the State of South Carolina and the U.S. Department of Energy. The AMDC, however, was already lobbying for a major cut of the settlement pie for Aiken County, including $15-20 million for downtown redevelopment. For the next three months, the issues of plutonium money and the AECOM Plan merged at AMDC meetings. 

V. The Final Plan 

The final plan, condensed into 43 pages, was complete by March 2021. After the AMDC passed a resolution to adopt and approve the plan, the next step was City Council approval. What amounted to a Reader’s Digest version of the AECOM Plan was included in the agenda packet for Aiken City Council’s March 22, 2021 meeting. Omitted were Appendices C, D, and E — the document review, maps and graphics, and presentation material. In fact, even the blank cover sheets for the appendices found in the final, subsequent, published edition were omitted. Less than twenty percent of the document was provided to City Council and for public viewing. 

Whereas the terms “public perception” or “public misperception” occurs six times in the original 43-page document; the term “public input” is absent. Also absent from the final report are: 

  • the word “plutonium,” despite the prospect of SRS fabricating new nuclear explosive components called “plutonium pits” being identified as an original economic “catalyst.” 
  • the term “radioactive waste,” even though the report states “the largest industry in Aiken County remains waste remediation.” 

“Plutonium” did not appear in the final product. 

Despite the absence of any significant “stakeholder” presence and local media, Tobin and her fellow project members cited the Feburary 2020 “stakeholder workshops” nine times within thirty-five pages of discussion as a validation of its work and recommendations: 

AECOM’s key takeaways from this (document) review can be found in Appendix C, Aiken Document Review. This information was reviewed and discussed with City representatives at the February 2020 workshop, to ensure that this Strategic Plan would be thorough, well-informed, and not duplicate efforts. (Page 10). 

During the two-day February 2020 workshop that AECOM held with City of Aiken stakeholders, several key issues for the City rose to the forefront of the discussion. (Page 14) 

As was discussed during the February workshop, the City is in the fortunate position of being within a reasonable commuting distance of several major employers; however, they have struggled to attract and retain young professionals/young families in recent years.” (Page 15)

With the exception of AECOM planning staffers, no major employers were present at the workshop, and no major employers or small business owners were subsequently interviewed.

During the February 2020 workshop, City stakeholders discussed a need for more housing/mixed-use residential development in the downtown area. (Page 17)

No property owners, business owners, developers, builders, or realtors were present at the workshop. 

The Hotel Aiken redevelopment project was cited by City stakeholders as another ongoing challenge(Page 18). 

The Hotel Aiken’s owner was apparently not invited to the meeting. 

During the February workshop, participants noted that, although there is some programming downtown in the form of festivals and events, there are opportunities to better activate the downtown area and make it a more vibrant, lively space. (Page 18)

No center-city merchants, residents, or property owners were present at the workshop to address the “live/work/play, 18-24-hour downtown” vision that emerged. 

During the February workshop, it was noted that outside of the annual Aiken Steeplechase event, the City has not been able to leverage its renowned equine heritage into any other significant economic development opportunities. Aiken’s horse community, many of whose members live in the historic Horse District section of the City, has a reputation for being somewhat insular. As previously noted, the City is also home to a 2,100-acre park, Hitchcock Woods, that is a popular location for trail riding, but is not well utilized by the rest of the community. (Page 24). 

No representatives from the equestrian community were present at the workshop. Despite larger discussion of equine activities and industries during the October workshops, the final report only contains references to Hitchcock Woods and the Aiken Steeplechase. The word “Polo,” for which Aiken is renowned, is missing from the final document. The highly successful Bruce’s Field equestrian center is only referenced in the context as the “former home” of the Aiken Steeplechase — and one in need of development. 

The AECOM plan failed to recognize the “old Steeplechase site” is a thriving equestrian park funded entirely by private enterprise. 

In meetings with stakeholders and during the February 2020 workshop, desire was expressed to identify and celebrate key entrances to Aiken.

This list of projects is based around key areas of focus discussed during the February workshop. (Page 31)

Although the AMDC had yet to meet by February, 2020, it figured prominently in the list of projects within the final report, including 

Explore options for property acquisition by the City/Aiken Municipal Development Commission of parcels that can be acquired, assembled, and developed for medium-to- high-density mixed-use, mixed-income residential development….Work with the Aiken Municipal Development Commission to increase awareness of available incentives for downtown development/redevelopment.

VI. The AECOM Plan Approval: No Hearings and a False Premise

A week after the March 15, 2021, announcement of a stealthy, vaguely defined AMDC-led redevelopment effort called Project Pascalis, during its meeting on March 22nd, Aiken City unanimously passed: 

A RESOLUTION ADOPTING THE AECOM ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ACTION PLAN AS RECOMMENDED BY THE AIKEN MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION, AND MATTERS RELATED THERETO.

This was a resolution, not an ordinance, and as such was not subjected to two public readings that require hearings. Instead, the meeting agenda merely listed a one page item under new business: 

3) Approval of AECOM Strategic Economic Development Action Plan.

The document provided in Council’s agenda packet did not include the final three appendices. If any Council members had read the document, they did not raise this point. 

Paragraph three of City Manager Stuart Bedenbaugh’s supporting memorandum presented Council with the false premise that the AECOM plan was a Redevelopment Plan: 

This Redevelopment Plan is prepared pursuant to Section 31-10-100 of the South Carolina Code of Laws.

Section 31-10-100 is the subsection of SC Community Development law that specifies ten requirements for a legal redevelopment plan. The AECOM plan addressed a few of these requirements but did so only in a general manner that does not comply with redevelopment law. At no time does the plan’s authors state it qualifies as a legally valid redevelopment plan. 

In fact, City Council had already approved a downtown Redevelopment Plan in June, 2020, called the Redevelopment 1 plan, and this is the only redevelopment plan presently approved by City Council. 

In spite of this grave oversight by Bedenbaugh and City Attorney Gary Smith, who is responsible for preparing and signing off on ordinances and resolutions, the AECOM plan was approved under this false “redevelopment plan” premise, one that Bedenbaugh argued would authorize the AMDC: 

 to acquire property, to execute contracts for clearance and preparation of land for resale, and to take other actions necessary to carry out redevelopment plans, in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.

Bedenbaugh and City Attorney Smith also failed to inform City Council that a redevelopment plan under Section 31-10-100 required a public hearing by the AMDC, followed by two public readings and hearings by City Council. This lack of diligence precipitated, in part, the lawsuit filed against the City of Aiken by nine plaintiffs on July 5, 2022, seeking an injuction against Project Pascalis. 

The following table illustrates the legal requirements for any redevelopment plan under the SC Community Development Act; and whether the AECOM plan and the Redevelopment One plan are compliant; While the Revelopment 1 plan meets legal requirements for a plan, it does not qualify as a legally valid plan for Project Pascalis, as the boundary is substantially different, no street changes are proposed, and no demolition is proposed. 

Redevelopment Plan Requirements    SC 31-10-100 AECOM Plan ComplianceRedevelopment 1 Plan Compliance 
The boundaries of the redevelopment area, with a map showing the existing uses of the real property thereinNo Yes
Land use plan of the redevelopment area showing proposed uses following redevelopment;No Yes, but nochanges in use proposed
Standards of population densities, land coverage, and building intensities in the proposed redevelopment;No Yes 
A preliminary site plan of the redevelopment area;No Yes, but much smaller than Pascalis project
A statement of the proposed changes, if any, in zoning ordinances or maps;NoAddressed, but no major changes ID’ed
A statement of any proposed changes in street layouts or street levels;No Addressed, but no changes identified 
A statement of the estimated cost and method of financing redevelopment under the redevelopment plan;NoRough cost estimates, but no definitive finance methods
A statement of such continuing controls as may be deemed necessary to effectuate the purposes of this chapter;No Yes. 
A statement of a feasible method proposed for the relocation of the families displaced.No. Addressed, but no relocations proposed. 
The commission shall hold a public hearing prior to its final adoption of a redevelopment plan. Notice of such hearing shall be given fifteen days prior thereto in a newspaper of general circulation in the municipality.No public hearing, no readings and hearings; only passed as a resolution by City Council. No public hearing by AMDC, two readings and hearings by City Council. 
A redevelopment plan may be modified at any time by the commission; provided, that if modified after the sale of real property in the redevelopment area, the modification must be consented to by the redeveloper of such real property or his successor, or their successors in interest affected by the proposed modification. N/A No modification since June 2020. 
The AECOM Plan vs. the Redevelopment One Plan: SC Community Development Act compliance

There was minimal discussion about the resolution prior to its passage. Only eleven citizens attended, as the meeting minutes describe COVID concerns and prevention guidelines as having limited attendance. 

VII. The AECOM Plan In Action: Misdirected and Misapplied

The day after the meeting, AMDC officials signed a “Cost Sharing Agreement” with Weldon Wyatt’s development firm GAC, LLC to move forward on the initial Project Pascalis effort — an agreement that would collapse within forty five days. Within the agreement was an option for the AMDC to purchase any property GAC or its affiliates purchased, or held by contract. By this time, Wyatt’s WTC Investments, LLC had already signed a $7.5 million purchase and sale agreement with Hotel Aiken owner Neel Shah involving the hotel and five other downtown properties owned by his family—The Berkman Building on Laurens Street (housing Ginger Bee, Vampire Penguin, and Beyond Bijou), the vacant Holley House, the Taj Aiken Restaurant, the historic McGhee Building (housing the vacant former CC Johnson Drug Store and three service businesses), and Warneke Cleaners. 

On March 29, 2021, building on Council’s resolution, Mayor Rick Osbon penned a letter to the AMDC: 

We appreciate the efforts the economists, planners and other experts from AECOM put into crafting it for us, but, from here on out, it becomes the AIKEN Economic Development Action Plan. It’s up to every resident of Aiken, the AMDC, the Aiken Corporation, the City Council and countless stakeholders throughout the community to join together and make this document more than a plan for the future. We need to make it our present and our reality as soon and as successfully as we possibly can. (7) 

Among Osbon’s key requests were: 

  • immediate attention to the Parkway District; 
  • the “expedited redevelopment of the stalled Hotel Aiken project;”
  • a “conference/convention facility….adjacent to sufficient first-class lodging to accommodate as many as 500 overnight and multi-night attendees.” 
  • “package and market sufficient acreage and appropriate sites” to help create more “urban-scale residential condo and apartment inventory within the downtown area.”
  • a “structured parking solution.” 

Efforts to meet all these goals were already underway with Project Pascalis, although no details would be released to the public until eight months later. 

The first Pascalis project collapsed in early May when Weldon Wyatt withdrew from the deal. As part of the negotiations to salvage the deal, Mayor Osbon met with Weldon Wyatt and Greenville based developer Andy Cajka, President of Greenville, SC based Southern Hospitality Group. A memorandum from Tim O’Briant to AMDC members Jameson, Chris Verenes, and Chairman Keith Wood described the May 3rd meeting: 

The Mayor and Weldon met with Andy on Monday, I was out of town, apparently shg hotels will possibly deliver a LOI (letter of intent) regarding the hotel this week. The mayor agreed the meeting went well and Andy was engaged in making a deal that would be privately funded based on the public dollars and incentives driving the project. Mayor indicates he deferred question about Friday negotiations and City’s position on deal points citing my absence and his lack of information on the subject.

A day later O’Briant and AMDC Treasurer and Chamber of Commerce President David Jameson had lunch with Weldon Wyatt, his investment and development partner Thomas “Chip” Goforth, and GAC Management Services employee Ryan Bland, who two weeks earlier had still held the position of City of Aiken Planning Director. O’Briant described that meeting as follows: 

David Jameson and I went to lunch with Weldon, Ryan, and Chip. Weldon continues to promote the benefits of 100 percent public funding of the entire project, but now says he doesnt’ intend to participate in the cost or the proceeds—just wants a fee/commission for the project to be successful. This despite bringing in a potential private partner with money to spend just yesterday. He is somewhat cagey and defensive and says he believes I have conveyed messages not representative of the City’s position. Indicates he believes there is some possibility the city council would accept the deal that I rejected Friday. Indicates Lessie (Price) is setting up the Thursday meeting to get everyone in one room to verify my position does not reflect that of leadership.

After that point the known paper trail ends, and the outcome of any meeting set up by Council member Lessie Price is unknown. What is known is:

  • On May 10, 2021, Aiken City Council met in closed door Executive Session for nearly two hours to discuss a range of topics, including “a possible purchase of real estate” and “a possible contractual arrangement with a real estate developer.” The outcome of that meeting was not summarized during the subsequent public session. 
  • On May 14, 2021 the Aiken Chamber of Commerce took assignment of the purchase and sale contract for the Shah’s suite of properties; and then on June 3rd took assignment, of the Anderson (Newberry Hall) contract. In all, the Chamber reimbursed Wyatt’s firms $135,000 of otherwise nonrefundable earnest money managed by City Attorney Gary Smith’s law firm. From that point, the AMDC secretly referred to the properties as “AMDC controlled.” 
  • In August 2021 Aiken City Council approved a $10 million bond issuance in support of AMDC property acquisitions in the “Parkway District,” with the AECOM Plan’s reference to “fragmented property ownership” a key justification in the supporting bond documents. 
  • AMDC Chairman Keith Wood, whose letter to City Council urging the bond passage included citations from the AECOM plan, also wrote in a July 26, 2022 letter to the Historic Aiken Foundation: “The AMDC first pursued the purchase of the property in question and those adjacent to it at the behest of Aiken City Council.” 

There is no record of Aiken City Council asking the AMDC to purchase the Pascalis project properties. Any such request made in closed-door, Executive Session would constitute a serious violation of Open Meetings law, which dictate that no votes are to be taken in Executive Session. 

When questioned about the origin of this unsubstantiated statement, neither Chairman Wood nor Tim O’Briant have offered any reply. 

VIII. Conclusion

The AECOM plan was formulated by a subsidiary of a major contractor for the largest employer in Aiken County and the entire Central Savannah River Area (CSRA). It was commissioned by a newly formed City of Aiken Economic Development Department, despite the company’s relative absence of experience in planning for small Southern towns like Aiken, whose primary draw includes the charm of its historic downtown area dominated by small, locally owned businesses, a vibrant equestrian community, and a lack of traffic jams. 

The plan was pursued in a stealth fashion with negligible public input. A “stakeholders workshop” was dominated by City of Aiken employees, many of whom did not reside in the City of Aiken at the time. The Chamber of Commerce was the only nongovernmental entity attending, and only attended the session dominated by a four-hour Trolley tour.

Yet, AECOM staff, most notably AECOM Urban Planner and Project Leader Marcia Tobin, consistently misrepresented the workshop as a diverse “stakeholders” meeting, when in reality it was at best a small, subjectively chosen, private focus group. Moreover, AECOM staff were absent when City Council approved adopting the plan, and have not issued any concerns publicly that Council and the public received less than twenty percent of the final product for review. No Council members appear to have detected the omission or registered any concerns if they had. 

While the AECOM plan does not purport to be a redevelopment plan, it was blatantly misapplied as one by the AMDC and Aiken City Council, and repeatedly used to justify huge expenditures of tax dollars to establish what City Manager Stuart Bedenbaugh openly referred to as a “land bank.” Again, AECOM planners have registered no concerns publicly over this gross misrepresentation of their work product. 

Less than two months after the AECOM plan was approved and adopted under a false pretense,  the first Project Pascalis failed. Undeterred, Aiken City Council and the AMDC doubled down, plowed forward, and then spent the next year compounding the failure to the tune of nearly $10 million of taxpayer money.  The obvious alternative of regrouping and publicly reporting the status of downtown redevelopment efforts appears to have escaped the thought process of city officials.” 

________________

References

(1) Freedom of Information Requests and Responses:

FOIA Request  #191-2022. Filed on 8/2/22 by Donald Moniak. 

Request: “Attendee list and meeting notes or minutes for the workshop described in the AECOM authored Aiken Economic Master Plan: ‘February of 2020, AECOM held a two-day workshop with Aiken City officials and key stakeholders to discuss the City’s past, present, and future. AECOM was given a tour of the City’s historic downtown, many unique neighborhoods, key gateways, and commercial and employment nodes.’ Since this is the master economic development plan, the requested information should be readily available. Posting this information to the City’s website and providing that link would constitute a sufficient FOIA response.” 

Response: The summary for the February 25-26 workshops; and the Presentation to AMDC at its June 20, 2020 meeting. 

FOIA Request #225-2022. Filed on 8/23/22 by Donald Moniak 

Request: “A copy of the AECOM contract and/or agreement to prepare and develop the “Strategic Economic Development Master Plan” for the City of Aiken, which states that “AECOM was engaged by the City of Aiken, beginning in April of 2019, to assist in the development of this strategic economic development strategy.” 2. A copy of all invoice statements for work completed by AECOM in relation to this contract, and payments for the work. 3. A copy of the following items in the report’s Appendices C, D, and E ( which are empty in the document): City of Aiken Document Review, Maps and Graphics, and Meeting Materials. This information is in the public interest, as illustrated by an abundance of references to the document by City of Aiken officials since March, 2021. Therefore, all fees should be waived and in the interest of government openness, the documents should be made available on the City of Aiken’s website. This information should also be readily available as this document forms the basis of the city’s economic plan.” 

Response: On September 5, 2022, an updated version of the AECOM plan that included Item 3 of the request, Appendices C, D, and E, was posted to the AMDC website at: 

The 43 Page document approved in March 2022 by Aiken City Council now was 247 pages. 

This document was posted surreptitiously by the AMDC, and without proper notification as required by SC FOIA. 

(2) AECOM Plan. The original document with three empty pages of appendices was removed sometime after August 23, 2022, and replaced on September 5, 2022 with the following: 

(3) AECOM 2021 Annual Report: https://aecom.com/wp-content/uploads/documents/reports/aecom-annual-report.pdf 

(4) In April 2019, AECOM led Savannah River Remediation, LLC was awarded a $750 million extension of the Savannah River Site liquid radioactive waste processing contract. In a news release about the award, AECOM described itself as: 

“AECOM (NYSE:ACM) is built to deliver a better world. We design, build, finance and operate infrastructure assets for governments, businesses and organizations. As a fully integrated firm, we connect knowledge and experience across our global network of experts to help clients solve their most complex challenges. From high-performance buildings and infrastructure, to resilient communities and environments, to stable and secure nations, our work is transformative, differentiated and vital. A Fortune 500 firm, AECOM had revenue of approximately $20.2 billion during fiscal year 2018. See how we deliver what others can only imagine at aecom.com and @AECOM.”
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190402005391/en/U.S.-Department-Energy-extends-AECOM-led-joint-venture

Photos of the Radioactive Waste Public Art can be found at: https://www.postandcourier.com/aikenstandard/news/art-canister-installed/collection_354aaa5e-52c2-5887-8ae9-930a3779a18d.html#9

(5) City of Aiken employees: 

**Tim O’Briant  —  Economic Development Director

Sabine Craig  — Assistant Economic Development Director

*Stuart Bedenbaugh  — City Manager

**Ryan Bland — Planning Director (former) 

**Joy Lester — Capital Project Sales Tax Administrator

**Kim Abney  — Finance Director (former) and Assistant City Manager (former)

*Known to be a City of Aiken Resident. 
**Primary residence in 2021, according to County records, not within the City of Aiken 

(6) AECOM Team

Marcia Tobin, Project Director; a twenty two year AECOM employee based out of Knoxville,TN and Arlington, VA. 

Christine Graziano, Project Manager, Economic Development; a thirteen year AECOM employee based out of Arlington, VA 

Sarah Richards, Senior Analyst, Economic and Community Planning; a five year veteran of AECOM based out of Richmond, VA

Mickey O’Brien, Senior Urban Designer; a nineteen year AECOM veteran based out of Atlanta, GA 

John Hightower, Senior Urban Designer; a ten year AECOM/URS veteran based out of Atlanta, GA

(7) AMDC Meeting Minutes for June 20, 2020 are within the July 7, 2020 Meeting Agenda Packet: 

(8) AMDC Meeting Minutes for October 6, 2020:
https://edoc.cityofaikensc.gov/WebLink/DocView.aspx?id=531104&dbid=0&repo=City-of-Aiken-LF&cr=1

(9) Aiken City Council Meeting Agenda and Minutes for March 22, 2022:
Agenda Packet: 
https://edoc.cityofaikensc.gov/WebLink/DocView.aspx?id=553405&dbid=0&repo=City-of-Aiken-LF

Meeting Minutes:
https://edoc.cityofaikensc.gov/WebLink/DocView.aspx?id=594313&dbid=0&repo=City-of-Aiken-LF

(10) Letter from Rick Osbon to the AMDC.
https://www.cityofaikensc.gov/mayor-outlines-key-priorities-for-development-in-aiken/

(11) Memorandum from Tim O’Briant to AMDC Executive Committee. May 5, 2022. 

(12) Based on the Memorandum, Andy Cajka’s proposal is believed to be second from the bottom on the redacted review of bidders to the secretive May 2021 Solicitation for Proposalstitled “Pascalis offers comparison_Redacted

  • A “very complete letter of intent” 
  • A proposal to “contribute $1.5 million to property purchase but requires that incentives equal to any purchase price be equaled by the City incentives for a zero sum gain.” 
  • a group with “considerable experience in all aspects of project pascalis.” 

A Project Pascalis Timeline

This is “a timeline,” regarding the creation, promotion, and stealth of the $100 million dollar plus downtown Aiken demolition and redevelopment endeavor known as Project Pascalis from February 2019 through June 2022. 

It is not “the timeline.” Due to the City of Aiken’s continued secrecy surrounding key aspects of Project Pascalis, gaps in knowledge remain. For example, the city still refuses to release its full May 2021 solicitation for a Request for Proposals. 

Therefore, it is unknown whether any option to renovate the Hotel Aiken was offered to prospective developers; although the evidence to date strongly suggests the only option was demolition. The importance of this key issue cannot be overstated: if the solicitation dictated what the city wanted, then Project Pascalis is a homegrown project and its developers are mere contractors undertaking the wishes of its client. 

February 2019 

February 1: : Weldon and Tom Wyatt of “Wyatt Development” (which was dissolved in 2013) meets with Aiken Mayor Rick Osbon to discuss his $1.1 million offer to Aiken County to purchase the 9.3 acre “old hospital” and county administrative building property at 828 Richland Avenue, E. for $1.1 million 

February 5: Mayor Osbon sends letter to Aiken County Chairman Gary Bunker describing his meeting with Wyatt executives and expressing his support for their vision for the old hospital property. 

February 19: WTC Investments, LLC is registered as doing business in South Carolina with the Secretary of State. Attorney Ray Massey is the listed agent. (Unknown: presence of absence of Mr. Massey at February 1 meeting with Mayor.)

April 2019 

April 16: WTC Investments, LLC enters into a purchase and sale agreement (PSA) with Aiken County to purchase the “old hospital” property at 828 Richland Avenue, E. for $1.1 million dollars.  

WTC manager Tom Wyatt, son of Weldon Wyatt, announces plan to demolish existing historic structures and construct a new hotel, apartment complex, conference center, and parking garage. 

August 2019

Ordinance establishing the Aiken Municipal Development Commission (AMDC) passed by Aiken City Council and governed by South Carolina Community Development Law. Citizens told Commission will enable increased public input and participation in planning process. 

November 2019: 

Aiken City Council passes rezoning ordinance approving the Wyatts’ concept plan for the old hospital/County complex site. 

January 2020

January 12: WTC Attorney Ray Massey informs Aiken County officials they are withdrawing from the old hospital purchase contract.

May 2020

May 26, 2020 First meeting of the AMDC. Commissioners receive tutorials on the Freedom of Information Act, Ethics, and South Carolina Community Development Law. (In the next twenty four months the Commission, always meeting at 3:30 pm, would enter into closed executive sessions forty percent of their meeting time. During the Pascalis planning and negotiations this figure increased to more than sixty percent.) 

July 2020 

July 15: The Aiken Municipal Development Commission submits a “Redevelopment Plan for Downtown Aiken” to the City of Aiken. The plan does not include properties on Newberry Street currently inhabited by Newberry Hall and Warneke Cleaners. No public hearing is held by the Commission as required by community development law. 

August 2020

August 31. Attorney General Alan Wilson announces a $600 million dollar settlement to more than four years of litigation with the Department of Energy regarding storage of surplus nuclear weapons plutonium at the Savannah River Site. Wilson states that after attorney fees of $75 million, $525 million remains for the legislature to allocate. 

August 2020. Aiken City Council approves first reading of the downtown redevelopment plan. 

September 2020

September 14: Aiken City Council amends the AMDC ordinance, replacing three City Council members with three new voting members, and reclassifying council members as ex-officio. Chamber of Commerce President J. David Jameson, former city councilperson Philip Merry, and Second Baptist Church pastor Douglas Slaughter are added as voting commissioners. 

Second reading of minor redevelopment plan passes. 

September 2020 to December 2020: AMDC discusses plutonium funding lobbying efforts. A letter requesting $30 million for redevelopment purposes is sent to the legislative delegation and other officials. 

January 2021. 

January 4: WTC Investments, LLC dissolves. 

Unknown date in early 2021: WTC Investments, LLC signs contract to purchase Hotel Aiken, and the adjacent motel, 106 Laurens Street, the former Johnson Drug Store, and Warneke Cleaners from Shah Investments and other Shah family holdings. 

March 2021: 

March 15: Royal J. Robbins and Garnett Family Holdings sell 210 The Alley to Aiken Alley Holdings LLC for $2,025,000. Ray Massey is agent for Aiken Holdings LLC. (This property was adjacent to the original Project Pascalis footprint, but is now within it). 

March 18, 2021: AMDC first announces the existence of Project Pascalis. City of Aiken Development Director Tim O’Briant tells the Aiken Standard “Transparency is key” and promises more pubic information within a few months. (Although details are not released, even the initial plan was to demolish Hotel Aiken and surrounding properties and construct a new hotel, apartments, parking garage, and conference center complex similar to that originally proposed at 828 Richland Ave. E, the old hospital). 

O’Briant and Chair Keith Wood authorized by the Commission to execute an agreement with an unnamed, “experienced and well-capitalized” private developer that was “recruited and identified” by the AMDC. (public learns in 2022 that developer was Weldon Wyatt’s GAC LLC; and only in the November 4,  2021 meeting minutes is it revealed that WTC, Investments, LLC was involved with property purchases). 

April 2021

April 13: Aiken Standard reports AMDC meeting behind closed doors to discuss Project Pascalis, indicating it involves downtown properties. 

April 15: WTC Investments, LLC signs purchase and sale agreement with Newberry Hall property owner Myrtle Anderson to buy the property for $2 million. Modified lease agreement provides Newberry Hall business operators options to negotiate repurchase the new building, operate the new conference center, and receive compensation for lost income during construction stages. 

Vampire Penguin opens for business at 106 Laurens Street, while planning to demolish the building proceeds in secrecy. 

May 2021:  

May 5: WTC Investments, LLC re-registered to do business in South Carolina. Agent: Attorney Ray Massey. 

May ?? 2021. WTC Investments, LLC withdraws from its contracts to purchase downtown properties. The Chamber of Commerce takes “assignment” of the property contracts while the AMDC seeks funding to purchase them on behalf of the city. This all occurs behind closed doors. 

May  19, 2021. The AMDC sends solicitations for Requests for Proposals to continue the new hotel/apartments/garage/conference center project to select developers. In the solicitation, the AMDC offers to privatize a part of Newberry Street. (The entire solicitation remains secret to this day, withheld under a FOIA exemption by the City of Aiken, despite fact that FOIA clearly states the city “may” release the documents. The AMDC does not deny the solicitation is only for demolition, not renovation of Hotel Aiken and surrounding properties.) 

June 2021 

June 8: Longtime State Farm agent Joseph Harrison sells his office property at 121 Newberry Street SW—adjacent to Newberry Hall—to Aiken Alley Holdings LLC (Ray Massey, agent) for $675,000. 

July 2021: 

July 12, 2021. AMDC Chair Keith Wood sends letter requesting $10 million in city funds from Aiken City Council to purchase “Parkway area properties” between Morgan and Williamsburg Street. 

August 2021

August 25: City of Aiken approves $10 million in funding for the AMDC to purchase properties in the “Parkway District” bounded by Morgan Street, Hampton Avenue, Park Avenue, and Beaufort Street. Exact properties remain unspecified. 

September 2021

September 20, 2021: AMDC announces it will conduct a fact finding trip to review the redevelopment of downtown Florence. 

September , 2021: AMDC and several officials, joined by Attorney Ray Massey and representatives of Rainesco hold a “public meeting “ at a Florence restaurant. Meeting minutes are noticeably short. 

October 2021 

October , 2021. RPM Development Partners, LLC registers with the SC Secretary of State. Agent: Ray Massey. Key Players: Rainesco and Lat Purser (RPM likely to represent Raines, Purser, and Massey).  Story not reported. 

October , 2021: City of Aiken signs contract with Attorney Gary Pope for assistance with legal counsel. (This agreement cited in May 2021 as evidence of City Attorney Gary Smith’s “recusal” from all things Pascalis, but no such recusal is in document). 

November 2021

November 5: In an Aiken Standard article, Development Director O’Briant again emphasized the need for transparency, and stated the AMDC would soon have a website to share information. 

November 6: Project Pascalis is discussed at a Design Review Board meeting. Responding to a question about the future of Hotel Aiken, City Manager Stuart Bedenbaugh states a decision is still pending. 

November 9: AMDC announces the purchase of several downtown properties for a total of $9.5 million, including Newberry Hall and Warneke Cleaners. The information is shared on the AMDC’s website, aikenmdc.org

Aiken Standard fails to report involvement of the Chamber of Commerce. 

According to County Records and the AMDC report, the purchases were: 

106 Laurens St SW for $1 Million from Shah Enterprises. 

235 Richland Ave (Hotel Aiken) and 112 Bee Lane/219 Richland Ave (The motel portion of Hotel Aiken) for $4.25 million from Historic Hospitality LLC (which had “purchased” the hotel in 2017 from Shah Enterprises for $5). 

211 Richland Ave West, 203 Richland Ave West, and 113 Newberry Street (Warneke Cleaners) for $2.25 million from S & N Hospitality LLC (which had purchased the properties in 2018 for $ 1 million from Myrtle Anderson). 

111 Newberry Street (Newberry Hall) for $2 million from Myrtle Anderson. 

December 2021

December 3, 2021. RPM Development Partners announced as Project Pascalis developer. Purchase and Sale agreement made between RPM . Aiken Standard reports that AMDC owned properties scheduled to be “razed.” (Document released in April 2021 shows that one developer rejected in part for only offering $1 million for Hotel Aiken). 

December 13 and 20; 2021. AMDC advertises for Requests for Proposals for Project Pascalis, as required by community development law, but after choosing a developer. 

December 26-December 31: At the urging of the AMDC, Rainesco CEO Grey Raines hosts five private meetings organized by Aiken Chamber of Commerce President and AMDC Commissioner J. David Jameson. AMDC Director Tim O’Briant attends every meeting with Commissioner Jameston. (City of Aiken denies the meetings qualify under Open Meetings clause of FOIA). 

January 2022

January 4: : Rainesco engineers conduct structural assessment of Hotel Aiken, even though decision to demolish building was made behind closed doors in early 2021. 

January 22: Aiken Standard reports that “CTR, LLC, a group of local investors led by attorney Ray Massey, has offered $800,000” for two city-owned properties: the east half of the 214 Park Avenue municipal building and the parking lot across from the Hotel Aiken. Council meets in Executive Session to discuss the offer, no results are reported. Attorney Massey’s law partner, City Attorney Gary Smith, does not recuse himself from the proceedings. 

February 2022

Feburary 17: DRB tours Hotel Aiken during a “special work session.” 

March 2022

March 1: DRB approves demolition of Hotel Aiken and 106 Laurens Street by a vote of 6-1. Vice-Chair Lucy Knowles casts sole dissenting vote. (Councilperson Andrea Gregory withdraws support for Ms. Knowles within a month of the vote, and nominates non-resident Laura Blessing to the Board to replace Ms. Knowles at the end of her term). 

March 28: Ten months after AMDC offered part of Newberry Street to interested developers, Aiken City Council conducts first public hearing (reading) of ordinance to privatize  0.6 acres of Newberry Street, in exchange for 123 Newberry St. SW and parking area behind 210 The Alley. Council unanimously approves first reading of ordinance despite nearly 100 percent of comments being against the proposal.  City Attorney Gary Smith acts in usual parliamentarian role. 

April 2022

April 15: Aiken Standard reports unilateral AMDC decision to repurpose soon to be vacated 214 Park Avenue municipal building into the new conference center. Tim O’Briant credits DRB Chairman McDonald Law with the suggestion. (Mr. Law later denies this was an “ex-parte” communication that violates FOIA Open Meetings law). Aiken County Chair Gary Bunker expresses concern about stalled negotiations with city to utilize the building for office space for county judicial functions. 

April 20: AMDC holds first public meetings to discuss entirety of Project Pascalis. RPM Development Partners, LLC and City contractors devote 85% of the scheduled meeting time to presentations before accepting a single comment or question. Public comments at the first meeting is suspended after an hour due to “prior engagements” of Raines representatives. Two AMDC Commissioners, Keith Wood and Chris Verenes, speak in favor of the project without disclosing their affiliation. 

Attorney Gary Pope sits at a city meeting for the first time, in place of City Attorney Gary Smith. Mr. Pope offers the information that Mr. Smith called him at “an early point in the project” to recused himself; but provides no date. (No written recusal documentation is offered in response to subsequent FOIA requests). 

May 2022

May 9: Aiken City Council votes 6-1 on second reading 6-1 to approve Newberry StreetOrdinance, with councilperson Ed Woltz the lone dissenting vote. Among other falsehoods, Councilperson Kay Brohl supports her yes vote by describing The Alley as an unlively place prior to the city’s 2016 renovation. AMDC Commissioner Philip Merry speaks in favor of the proposal without revealing his affiliation. Attorney Gary Pope sits in place of City Attorney Gary Smith. 

May 10: Lawsuit filed by area resident and Aiken property owner Drew Johnson documenting conflict of interest violations by City Attorney Gary Smith due to the role of his law partner Ray Massey in Project Pascalis. (In subsequent response, defendants do not deny the allegations but call for dismissal on jurisdictional grounds). 

May 11, 2022: Formation of the Do It Right! Alliance is announced, with the goal of preserving historic properties and holding city officials accountable to the law. 

May 15: AMDC releases “Just the Facts…,” revealing its intent to resell city properties to developers at a discounted price. 

June 2022

June 7, 2022: Aiken Downtown Development Association sponsors public “design workshop” to solicit comments on modified design of Hotel Aiken facade. AMDC Director Tim O’Briant tells WJBF News in Augusta that appraisals were unnecessary because the property is like gold. 

June 21, 2022. Design Review Board holds “design workshop.” Attendees not told until beginning of the meeting of a no public comment policy. City officials summon a police offer 

June 24, 2022: City of Aiken posts 45 notices announcing DRB public hearing on proposed demolition of Newberry Hall, Warneke Cleaners, Motel portion of Hotel Aiken, Johnson Drug Store, Taj Aiken Restaurant, and adjacent businesses. 

June 27: Historical Aiken Foundation, which is identified as a key city partner in its strategic development plan, releases fact sheet documenting concerns that support its opposition to Project Pascalis.

Next: August to September, 2022.

Demolition is not part of the legally approved downtown redevelopment plan 

by Don Moniak

Dear Design Review Board and counsel:

Following is more commentary detailing violations of SC Community Development laws in regard to Project Pascalis. As I have written before, the DRB has an obligation to address evidence of wrongdoing as part of its review. Failure to do so makes Board members complicit in any crimes. 

This is not a typical DRB hearing. The applicant is not a developer or private property owner. The City of Aiken bought these properties and is funding much of the development. The AMDC intends to sell the properties at a loss. You simply cannot ignore these facts while claiming to be working for the public. 

Project Pascalis Reminder of the Day
By Don Moniak

CC: Aiken Design Review Board. 

             Warneke Cleaners and Newberry Hall are not Precursors to Blight

As previously reported, the City of Aiken approved a single downtown redevelopment plan (1) that complies with SC redevelopment law in September, 2020, six months before Project Pascalis was announced. 

The plan designated nine properties as part of a larger “conservation area,” which is defined in SC Community Development Law as “any improved area that is not yet a blighted area,” and meets a mere three out of fourteen criteria to be deemed “detrimental to the public safety, health, morals, or welfare and may become a blighted area.” So while it was a strange term for lawmakers to utilize,  “conservation area” functions as “precursor to blighted area” within the confines of this law. 

The fourteen criteria that can lead to “conservation area” designation are: “dilapidation; obsolescence; deterioration; illegal use of structures; presence of structures below minimum code standards; abandonment; excessive vacancies; overcrowding of structures and community facilities; lack of ventilation, light, or sanitary facilities; inadequate utilities; excessive land coverage; depreciation of physical maintenance; or lack of community planning, is detrimental to the public safety, health, morals, or welfare and may become a blighted area.” (2) 

The 2020 Redevelopment Plan cited five of the fourteen: “dilapidation, obsolescence, deterioration, presence of structures below minimum code standards, depreciation of physical maintenance.” Subsequently, the properties in the plan were designated for the following future uses: renovation of the hotel and mixed commercial.  There was no mention of five story residential and “demolition” is absent in the plan. 

Warneke Cleaners and Newberry Hall are also absent in the plan, and are not a part of the “conservation area.” How can these two long time, profitable businesses be described in any way as dilapidated, obsolete, or deteriorating? How many people attending Newberry Hall functions have described it as obsolete or dilapidated? Demolishing Newberry Hall and Warneke Cleaners is not essential to prevent blight because they do not even meet the definition of the precursor to blight. 

If a private developer that owned these properties was seeking to demolish these buildings, the case would be made that they have a right to do what they want with their land as long as they comply with the city’s planning and zoning laws. 

But a private developer does not own these properties, and this is not a free market project: 

—The City of Aiken’s Municipal Development Commission (AMDC) is the owner, the AMDC is chartered under the terms of Chapter 10 of South Carolina’s Community Development Law, and it is obligated to follow that law; and 

—RPM Development Partners, LLC is a contractor at this point, and its future as a property owner and developer is entirely dependent on tens of millions of dollars of public funds in financial assistance, and millions of dollars in subsidies in the form of discounted property sales. 

(1) https://aikenmdc.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/2020-08-10-redevelopment-plan-one.pdf

(2) https://www.scstatehouse.gov/code/t31c010.php

Reminder of the Day: Project Pascals is arguably proceeding in violation of South Carolina municipal redevelopment laws. 

Specifically, the AMDC: 

  1. Is basing the project on a redevelopment plan approved the year before the first project proposal, and does not include most of the project’s footprint; 
  2. Failed to hold a public hearing for that first and only redevelopment plan;
  3. Failed to issue a public advertisement for a Request for Proposals (RFP)
Background on Municipal Commissions and Redevelopment

By law, publicly financed economic redevelopment must adhere to Title 31 of the SC Code of Laws.  In regard to Project Pascalis, the most pertinent of these statutes are within Chapter 10, which define the criteria for creating municipal commissions like the AMDC and the rules they must follow. 

Under part 30 of this chapter, municipal commissions like the AMDC can be created by the governing body (City Council) if it finds:

(1) that a blighted area or conservation area exists in whole or in part in such municipality,

(2) that the redevelopment of such areas is necessary in the interest of the public health, safety, morals, or welfare of the residents of such municipality.

While the AMDC has broad powers to enact its charge, its “specific” powers defined in Part 90 are to:

 “make (i) plans for carrying out a program of voluntary repair and rehabilitation of buildings and improvements and (ii) plans for the enforcement of laws, codes, and regulations relating to the use of land and the use and occupancy of buildings and improvements, and to the compulsory repair, rehabilitation, demolition, or removal of buildings and improvements. The commission is further authorized to develop, test, and report methods and techniques, and carry out demonstrations and other activities, for the prevention and elimination of slums and urban blight.”

The One and Only Redevelopment Plan One for Downtown Aiken

The AMDC was created by ordinance in August 2019 by Aiken City Council, but did not meet until May 2020. One of its first orders of business was to review and adopt a Redevelopment Plan already in progress for downtown Aiken, one compliant with Part 100 that defined nine requirements (1) for a finished plan. This plan was described at the first meeting by Aiken Economic Development Director Tim O’Briant: 

We have engaged a firm out of Greenville, SC called Muldrow & Associates to do a very small redevelopment plan, essentially surrounding the Regions Bank Building which is now being retrofitted as the new City Hall. It includes the corner of Laurens and Richland. If this group has any thoughts about Hotel Aiken, it would be appropriate to have those discussions. Whether we come up with anything or not, we can’t really get into it if we don’t have a plan that encompasses that area. He noted that the former Regions Bank building is currently being redeveloped as the new City Hall. He said we would like to get input from the Commission on this as well.

From the very beginning, the AMDC was informed that any redevelopment plan must be specific; a plan must “encompass” the area proposed for redevelopment. The Muldrow plan does not address any redevelopment on Newberry Street (which is not a “blighted” area in any sense of the word) nor Park Avenue (also lacking any blight issues); it proposed no changes in street layouts, and it did not propose to relocate a single business. 

In reference to properties east of the Hotel, such as the historic former Johnson Drug Store building, the Muldrow plan specifically states “existing buildings to remain.” All other “redevelopment” is merely streetscape improvements. 

The AMDC adopted the Muldrow plan by a resolution a few months later, but never held its own public hearing as required by Part 100: 

d) The commission shall hold a public hearing prior to its final adoption of a redevelopment plan. Notice of such hearing shall be given fifteen days prior thereto in a newspaper of general circulation in the municipality.

This clause functions to avoid burying major projects within larger city business proceedings. But the AMDC took the latter approach by forwarding the plan to Aiken City Council, which shortly thereafter approved it following two “public hearings” held during normal City Council business.

There has been no update or amendments to the plan as required by law, and when asked for the Project Pascalis Redevelopment Plan required by SC 31-10-100, the AMDC provides only a link to the Muldrow prepared plan, titled “Redevelopment Plan for Downtown Aiken,” or “Redevelopment Plan One.”

The Wyatt Scheme Goes Awry

Even without any Plan Two, the AMDC proceeded to announce the existence of Project Pascalis less than eight months later. Although the AMDC kept the details secret, we now know the initial plan pursued by Weldon Wyatt’s GAC, LLC and facilitated by Wyatt and Attorney Ray Massey’s WTC Investments, LLC was to: 

  1. demolish everything on the south side of Richland Avenue between Laurens and  Newberry Streets
  2. demolish half of the west side of Newberry Street; 
  3. force eight businesses to relocate; and negotiate a deal with Newberry Hall to compensate the owners for lost business during construction and options to operate and purchase the new conference center building; 
  4. privatize part of Newberry St. 

The WTC plan involved purchasing the seven properties from two owners, with $7.5 million going to Neel Shah’s various LLCs holding six of the properties; and $2.0 million going to Myrtle Anderson for Newberry Hall. Wyatt pursued a private-public partnership with the AMDC and City of Aiken, then abruptly withdrew from the negotiations and the purchase and sale agreements in May 2021 just two months after the first announcement of Project Pascalis. The AMDC chose to not disclose this change in plans. 

The AMDC Secretly Pursues a New Developer

After Weldon Wyatt’s GAC, LLC withdrew from negotiations for a master agreement with the AMDC, the Chamber of Commerce stepped in and took “assignment” of the properties while the AMDC sought to procure funding to buy them outright. This process was kept secret until November 2021, and was never openly discussed or announced even then. 

Instead of formulating a new redevelopment plan, the AMDC instead sent out solicitations for Request for Proposals to select developers. The entire solicitation remains classified as “confidential” and exempt from FOIA by the City of Aiken, although the AMDC has released a summary document. 

However, under Part 110(c) of Title 31, the AMDC was obligated to advertise for bids: 

c) The commission shall, by public notice, published once a week for two consecutive weeks in a newspaper having general circulation in the municipality, invite proposals and shall make available all pertinent information to any persons interested in undertaking a purchase of property or the redevelopment of an area or any part thereof.

As reported previously, the AMDC did not advertise for bids until two weeks after announcing the selection of RPM Development Partners, LLC as the Project Pascalis developer, pending the successful negotiation of a master agreement. 

This was all kept secret through most of 2021, and the AMDC never sought to update its redevelopment plan as required by law. Even as late as November 4, 2021, City Manager Stuart Bedenbaugh denied there was any final plan to demolish the Hotel Aiken and chose not to divulge the original demolition plans, or the fact that the AMDC’s purchase and sale agreements only required inspection of two properties — Warneke Cleaners and Taj Aiken Restaurant. 

Board Member Knowles expressed appreciation for the update and inquired as to whether the plans intended to keep Hotel Aiken intact. Mr. Bedenbaugh stated it was too early in the process to know what potential developers may intend for the Hotel Aiken property.Design Review Board Special Workshop Meeting Minutes, November 4, 2021

To this day, Bedenbaugh refuses to release the full May 2021 solicitation letters and the body of the RFQ that would indicate the original intent of the AMDC. 

The Design Review Board meets in another special workshop tomorrow. The Board should be reminded they have no obligation to act on a proposal that is in clear violation of SC redevelopment law, and every right to demand full transparency from City officials. 

_______________

References

(1) The nine requirements for a finished redevelopment plan are defined in SC31-10-100(c):

c) The commission’s redevelopment plan shall include, without being limited to, the following:
(1) the boundaries of the redevelopment area, with a map showing the existing uses of the real property therein;
(2) a land use plan of the redevelopment area showing proposed uses following redevelopment;
(3) standards of population densities, land coverage, and building intensities in the proposed redevelopment;
(4) a preliminary site plan of the redevelopment area;
(5) a statement of the proposed changes, if any, in zoning ordinances or maps;
(6) a statement of any proposed changes in street layouts or street levels;
(7) a statement of the estimated cost and method of financing redevelopment under the redevelopment plan;
(8) a statement of such continuing controls as may be deemed necessary to effectuate the purposes of this chapter;
(9) a statement of a feasible method proposed for the relocation of the families displaced.

Letter to Aiken City Council: Public Meetings and Misinformation from the AMDC

Dear Aiken City Council, 

Yesterday the AMDC issued a list of “25 public meetings and hearings held on Project Pascalis over the last 24 months.” This assertion is false at worst and disingenuous at best, but that did not stop Aiken Economic Development Director Tim O’Briant from repeating this distorted reality to reporters. 

Here are just a few general ways in which this document is highly misleading: 

First, Project Pascalis was not publicly announced until March 18, 2021. Eight of the meetings occurred before this date. One of these merely involved a potential letter to the existing Hotel Aiken owners. Three others were workshops that discussed downtown development in general. 

Second, there were no conceptual designs for Project Pascalis available for public inspection prior to March 1, 2022. Sixteen of the meetings cited by the AMDC occurred prior to this time. Of the nine meetings that have occurred since the first drawings of Project Pascalis was revealed, two of them involved a narrow ordinance pertaining only to Newberry Street; and two were mere updates as part of larger meetings.  

The fact is City of Aiken agencies have held only two public meetings, both on April 20, 2022, during which the entirety of the Project Pascalis proposal was presented and discussed.  The Aiken Downtown Development Association held a public workshop on June 7th that did not include the entirety of the proposal. 

Most important is what meetings have not been held. As of May 9, Aiken City Council had not met as a group with the AMDC and its development team to review and discuss Project Pascalis. For a public body that intends to spend $20-25 million dollars of federal funds from the Plutonium Settlement on this project, this is a disturbing abdication of responsibilities. 

The City of Aiken has also not adopted a legally binding redevelopment plan nor held a public hearing to discuss one for Project Pascalis. The July 2020 “redevelopment plan” cited by the AMDC preceded Project Pascalis and bears no resemblance to it. It does not involve demolition, an apartment complex and garage at Newberry and Richland, a conference center on Park Avenue, or the forced relocation of eight to ten businesses. By law, that redevelopment plan must be amended or replaced, with subsequent public hearings on the updated product. 

https://aikenmdc.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/2020-08-10-redevelopment-plan-one.pdf?fbclid=IwAR1YEoBCy_H0swG4WB7kaeRtrumpUpKcyAiFPkJSDOFTT9OiriOxAkm4MDY

In fact, according to the minutes from May 16, 202 AMDC meeting, Tim O’Briant commented, quite appropriately: 

“If this group has any thoughts about Hotel Aiken, it would be appropriate to have those discussions. Whether we come up with anything or not, we can’t really get into it if we don’t have a plan that encompasses that area.” 

In other words, if part of the downtown was not in the redevelopment plan, it was not a part of the redevelopment plan. Newberry Street and the Park Avenue properties were not a part of the 2020 plan. (The AECOM plan is not a legally binding redevelopment plan, it is a well-written strategic guidance plan.) 

Mayor Osbon, City Council and the City Manager should request that this highly misleading document be removed from the AMDC website. It serves no purpose other than to further inflame public opinion. In this regard, the words of Robert Stack written in a letter to the editor a week ago are even more pertinent: 

““…the Four Way Test is Rotary’s unique approach and process to address conflicts, solve problems and make decisions to achieve desired outcomes and mutually beneficial solutions. That being said, the currently proposed Pascalis project has, to date, achieved the opposite effect by not being fair to all, creating bad will, stressing long-standing friendship and not being beneficial to all.”

The City of Aiken has done better than this and can do better than this. 

Thank You, 

Donald Moniak