What Happens Now that Huntington Has the Best Community Title?

Three years after developing an arduous redevelopment plan throughout the city, Huntington has been named America’s Best Community. The title, awarded last month comes with a $3 million grand prize.

Huntington was named America’s Best Community last month in Denver, Colorado. It was the culmination of a three-year process that inspired development of the Huntington Innovation Project. The plan outlines 4 projects that aim to revitalization communities and the improvement of broadband throughout Huntington.

But what happens now that the city has won the competition?

“Our goal was to use this money as leverage to move each project to the next phase, to identify within that project what is the next critical step,” Margaret Mary Layne said. “For example, do we want to apply for a $500,000 grant for whatever and we will use this money as match if we can’t raise the money through a philanthropic process.”

Margaret Mary Layne used to be the city manager. She now runs a consulting business. She volunteered during the competition, working as a liaison between the city and the non-profit Foundation for the Tri-State to help the city obtain the title. The foundation will hold award funds and oversee how that money is used. Mary Witten Wiseman is the director of the foundation. She said success breeds more success and she hopes this grant will be used to leverage a lot more community investment.

“People want to give more money there, because they give a little money and they see what that money has done,” Wiseman said. “So it’s a matter of funding someone that’s already successful and showing what can happen when someone who’s successful, who’s well organized can take the money that’s given and create something really good, then you have a story to tell,” Wiseman said.

Huntington is already collecting these stories. The city already won $150,000 in the preliminary rounds of the America’s Best Community contest and was able to turn that into almost $13 million through donations and grants. But there’s a lot more work to do.

Former city manager Margaret Mary Layne says the hope is that the title can turn 3 million into much more.

“The truth is the designation alone, a national designation is going to open up doors to foundations, national foundations, to federal dollars, to state dollars and individuals from this state and from this community that never would’ve been open before,” Layne said.

There are three big projects the city hopes to tackle with this latest round of competition awards. Renovating the Fairfield neighborhood is a priority, especially along 16th street from the interstate into the city. The goal there is to create a “Health Corridor” between Cabell Huntington Hospital and Marshall University – an extension of medical and university facilities stretching towards each other.

The city also wants to turn abandoned manufacturing sites in the Highlawn neighborhood back into commercial and manufacturing developments. Another priority is improving the Westmoreland neighborhood with a job incubator site at a facility called West Edge. The final piece is turning the city into a gigabit city, which means the deployment of high speed broadband connecting the different economic projects in the city. 

Each of the projects could take millions of dollars.

The West Edge incubator in the west end of Huntington teaches students wood working and how to install solar panels. The focus of West Edge is to provide alternate career opportunities for those who have been laid off or having trouble finding work.

Brandon Dennison is the Executive Director of the Coalfield Development Corporation which runs West Edge. He said the title of the Best Community will help take the old clothing factory to the next step.

“Now what’s going to happen because of the leveraging and I think because of future support that we can attract based on the ABC win, you know we’ve been doing this place on a shoestring, little bit, by little bit,” Dennison said. “And now I think we’ll have the resources to really take the grand visions we’ve had in our head and make them a tangible reality.”

Those grand visions include the development of more job incubator opportunities in addition to the woodworking workshop and solar training areas. And creating a space where members of the Westmoreland Neighborhood fellowship over music and arts.

Meanwhile over in the Highlawn Community, Executive Director for the Municipal Development Authority Tom Bell has already secured 600k in grants through the Environmental Protection Agency to help cleanup abandoned industrial sites. Discussions are underway with new developers with plans to bring manufacturing back to the area, as well as shopping centers and a possible baseball field. The contest funds will help leverage more grant money to speed up soil remediation.

“Timing is a very important thing, when people are ready to do go, you have to be ready for them,” Bell said. “You can’t say well now it’s going to be two more years before we’re ready, because they want to spend their money now when they’re in the mood, so you have to have these sites available.”

Huntington Mayor Steve Williams has a vision of what Huntington could become. He said it’s the potential here and the hope that helped secure winning the competition. Ultimately, he believes investing in these project will address some of the root causes of the drug and crime issues the city faces.  

“There are some folks that are content to sit up in the cheap seats and just talk about the problems, rather than rolling up their sleeves and getting in and actually working to resolves the problems,” Williams said. “A revitalization plan is intended to fix those things that are not functioning the way they should or are broken.”

Williams and his team hope winning America’s Best Community Competition is just the beginning of a reinvented, healthier Huntington.

The Best Community Competition was sponsored by Frontier, Dish Network, CoBank and the Weather Channel.

Huntington Wins America's Best Communities Competition

The city of Huntington is the first place winner of America’s Best Communities competition. The announcement came Wednesday night. Huntington officials in Denver, Colorado, received a $3 million award to be used on local revitalization efforts.

Huntington was one of the 8 finalists last April and has already received $100,000.

As part of Huntington’s entry into the competition, the city identified four areas of improvement within the community where prize money would be spent. All four are part of the Huntington Innovation Project. It includes working to turn around the old industrial sites in the Highlawn neighborhood; continuing development of a work incubator in the city’s west end at the West Edge factory; revitalization of the Fairfield neighborhood through a Health Innovation Corridor, and finally, the development of  broadband, or internet access, throughout the city.

The third place winner was Statesboro, Georgia which received $1 million: the second place winner was Lake Havasu City, Arizon which received $2 million.

The competition was sponsored by, Frontier Communications, DISH Network, CoBank and The Weather channel.

America's Best Community to be Announced Today

The city of Huntington will find out later today (Wednesday) if it’s one of the Best Communities in the country.

Last April, Huntington was announced as a finalist for the America’s Best Communities competition. The year-long event will wrap up Wednesday with the top 8 cities giving a final presentation in Denver, Colorado. The winner will be announced at 7:00 p.m. Wednesday night.

Community members gathered Monday evening in downtown Huntington to send off their city’s contest representatives. The first place winner in the competition will receive $3 million, 2nd place $2 million and 3rd place will receive $1 million. Huntington Mayor Steve Williams said win or lose the competition has been good for the community.

“On getting any project moving forward there is a level of inertia to get moving and now the value that we have is how the community has been involved in Highlawn, in Hal Greer in the Fairfield area and the West End,” Williams said. “The value to our city is that covers the entire city, east to west.”

As part of Huntington’s entry into the competition, the city had to identify areas in the community to improve if it won the prize money.  Huntington chose four different areas. All four are   part of the Huntington Innovation Project. It includes one, working to turn around the Highlawn neighborhood which deals with old industrial sites; two, the continuing development of a work incubator in the city’s west end at the West Edge factory; three, the revitalization of the Fairfield neighborhood through a Health Innovation Corridor, and finally, the development of broadband, or internet access, throughout the city.

Williams said Huntington has already won in many ways, but he says placing first, second, or third in the competition would be huge for the city.

“Each of these four projects that are being move forward at such a rapid pace because of this competition will change our city for the next 50 years, that’s when we win,” Williams said. “I would love for us to have the title of America’s Best Community, that would do so much for the psyche of our community.”

Any prize winnings from the America’s Best Communities competition will be used to further the four projects the city has highlighted.

Huntington Still Has Hope to be Named Best Community

As the city of Huntington finds its way out of a budget crisis that’s caused 24 positions to be cut in just the last week, there’s only a little over two months from finding out if the city will be named America’s Best Community.

In April, Huntington will find out if it’s one of the top three cities in a year-long contest, America’s Best Communities, sponsored by Frontier. The city has been competing against 7 other towns from around the country, and each community presented different projects that were tracked. Depending on that progress, Huntington could be picked as one of the best communities in the country. Third place receives $1 million, second place receives$2 million, and the community that’s picked as the winner takes home $3 million.

Huntington’s proposal, called the Huntington Innovation Project includes plans to jumpstart renovation in three neighborhoods. On the east end along the river, the city is working to turn around the Highlawn neighborhood which deals with old industrial sites. On the west end, the focus will be on the development of the West Edge factory — a work development incubator. The third neighborhood project involves the Fairfield neighborhood. The fourth piece to the city’s proposal is to develop a better broadband system. Huntington Mayor Steve Williams said he feels the contest has created the momentum he’d hoped for. 

“On getting any project moving forward there is a level of inertia to get moving forward and now the value we have is in getting the community involved, in Hal Greer in the Fairfield area and the West End.,” Williams said. “The value to our city is that it covers the entire city East to West.”

Each project has succeeded in finding federal and private funds that have served to get each project started, including the West Edge workforce development project in the West End of Huntington. It’s attracted over $2.5 million in grants for projects like solar training.

In the Fairfield area, the city hopes to create a Health Innovation Corridor. The plan is to bring together Cabell Huntington Hospital and Marshall University. Both entities bookend the neighborhood, which was once known for crime. It also impacts the Northcott Court housing projects that are in the process of being torn down. 

As Huntington tries to renovate and revamp the area, they’ve created the Fairfield Alliance, bringing together businesses and community members. That’s where Phoebe Patton Randolph comes in, she works at Edward Tucker Architects. The firm has helped instigate discussion on how the area can be changed.

“What is the nature of development along the corridor and how can we acknowledge that we’re taking a major thoroughfare into the city, that goes through this established, historic neighborhood in our city and rather than just bypassing that, how do we celebrate it and integrate it with the fabric of city,” Patton Randolph said.

Mayor Williams said he doesn’t think the city’s recent budget struggles should hurt the chances of winning the contest, because he said there are issues that cities all over the country have to deal with.

“When I graduated from high school I received from the church this little book, and one of the chapters in it was titled, all sunshine makes a dessert,” Williams said. “You’re going to have some rainy days, but those rainy days allow for the flowers and the trees to bloom. If you’re going to be America’s Best Community, you need to know how to take a hit and spin off it and continue on down the field.”

The winner will be announced April 19th. 

Huntington Mayor Provides Best Community Competition Update

Huntington Mayor Steve Williams provided the first of quarterly update on Huntington’s progress meeting its America’s Best Community Goals. 

Since Huntington was named one of the eight finalists in the America’s Best Community Competition in April, the city has carefully constructed an outline to begin meeting some of the goals they established for the competition. 

As part of the Huntington Innovation Project the city has established three teams.

  • Reader Team
  • Ambassador Team
  • Social Media Team.                                                                                                                                                

Huntington Mayor Steve Williams said the community has to buy-in to the plans for things to work properly. 
“What we’re doing necessarily requires input from every person in every neighborhood,” Williams said.  “And I need for them to be engaged.”

 The Reader Team will look over the other 7 finalists’ projects, the ambassador team will be spokesman for Huntington’s project, and the social media team will share updates online. The city has also established a link on its webpage devoted to the project. And t here will be social media challenges throughout the next year to drum up support.  

Huntington Mayor: Home Rule Key to America's Best Community Finalist Spot

The city of Huntington’s advancement to the finals of the America’s Best Communities competition presents a unique opportunity for a city striving to improve itself.

Huntington was selected by a panel of judges to be one of eight finalists in the national competition for America’s Best Community.

Huntington and Charleston were both semifinalists in the competition. Charleston wasn’t selected as a finalist, but Huntington Mayor Steve Williams said the key for both cities in his mind is the Home Rule Pilot Project. The project, which started in 2007 with four cities, and has expanded to other communities in the state, shifts power from the state to the local level.  

“The home rule pilot project does actually work,” Williams said. “Every community has its own unique needs. It shouldn’t be a cookie cutter, one size fits all, a decision is made in Charleston and now everyone has to put that square peg in a round hole.”

As one of the eight finalists for the America’s Best Community Project, the city received $100,000. Huntington’s proposal, called the Huntington Innovation Project – or HIP, outlines projects and ideas that will jumpstart the local economy. The top three communities that make the largest impact and show the greatest potential for sustaining revitalization will be the grand prize winners. The top community will receive $3 million, second place will earn $2 million and $1 million will go to third place. 

Credit Clark Davis
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West Edge in the West End of Huntington, part of the revitalization project.

Williams said Huntington’s plan is different than other communities, which concentrate their ideas on one, specific area. Huntington went all in on four different projects at once. 

“The decision that we made in Huntington, is that in order for us to transform our city, we absolutely don’t have time to wait to have each of these neighborhoods redeveloped,” Williams said.

Those projects include:

  1. The development of brownfields areas in the Highlawn nieghborhood. 
  2. Development of the West End of the city for commercialization. 
  3. Revitalization of Fairfield through the tearing down of the Northcott Court Housing projects. 
  4. Development of high-speed broadband throughout the city. 

Williams says the projects won’t be finished in 11 months, but the city has to show they’re making headway on making changes. 

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