
BBA bestows its Heavy Lifting Award on Chief of Basic City Services Mike Brohel (in photo: Carlos Bueno, BBA chairman; Michelle Wu; Mike Brohel; Meg Mainzer-Cohen). Photo credit: Taylor Rossi.The Back Bay Association’s (BBA)’s plan to become a Business Improvement District (BID) is getting close to completion, according to data presented at the association’s annual meeting last Thursday.
BIDs
are special commercial areas in which property owners can organize and
fund their own neighborhood services on top of the baseline services
provided by the city. Those services generally include neighborhood
advertising, public safety improvements, beautification efforts and
special events. The BBA has been working to form a BID since 2023. “We
are close,” Mike Jammen, chair of the association’s BID committee, said
at the meeting. “We’re in the final stages of getting this done, and
hopefully when we talk about this next year, we will be there.”
To
form a BID, the association must get 60 percent of the 268 parcels in
its jurisdiction on board, as well as get 51 percent of the assessed
value in the neighborhood to commit to joining. Meg Mainzer-Cohen,
president of the association, said that for the second target, the group
was only considering businesses valued at above $4 million.
“Properties
valued at $4 million and below, they’ll benefit from [the BID], but
we’re not going to charge them for it,” Mainzer-Cohen said in a phone
call. “They won’t have to pay.”
The
Back Bay includes a number of major developers and insurance groups
that hit the $4 million target, and the association has already
convinced a number of them to verbally agree to join. According to
Jammen’s presentation, the BID committee has achieved 85 percent of its
assessed value goal, and 127 parcels have committed to join.
Mainzer-Cohen said that the next step was getting them to formally sign
appeals to be part of the BID.
“An
important thing to understand about BIDs is, you establish a boundary,
but you cannot gerrymander,” Meg Mainzer-Cohen, the president of the
BBA, said in a phone call. “So for instance, if the owner of the John
Hancock building didn't want to be part of the BID, we can’t have a BID
boundary that has a big hole in the middle like a donut. There’s a lot
of leg work here.”
Boston
Properties owns both the Hancock building and the Prudential Center,
the Back Bay’s two skyscrapers. Mainzer-Cohen said she would not speak
for how Boston Properties felt about joining a BID, but that other
conversations with big business players in the neighborhood had gone
well. Oxford Properties, the owner of 500 Boylston St., and the
insurance companies John Hancock and Liberty Mutual had all voiced
support, she said.
“We
are in conversations with Simon Properties,” Mainzer-Cohen said,
referring to the developer that owns Copley Place. “We’ve had really
good conversations with them, we’ve had very good meetings and it’s
under discussion.” For now, Mainzer-Cohen said, the BID’s boundaries
will match that of the current association, from just north of Newbury
Street down to parts of Columbus Avenue, and from Arlington Street to
Mass Ave. east to west. The association is, however, considering
excluding part of its current coverage from the BID.
“The
area of Dalton Street. and Belvidere Street [to Mass Ave.], we are
looking at whether to keep that in or out for a number of reasons,”
Mainzer-Cohen said. “Some of it has to do with the fact that there’s a
big Christian science plaza that’s already tended to, so it doesn’t need
a lot of help. There’s a lot of residential over there, and Berklee, so
that’s the question we’re back and forth about.”
The
association wants to become a BID because of the increased benefits and
partnership opportunities with the city. Its goals include better
marketing and advertising of the Back Bay as a neighborhood, improved
cleanliness, consistent beautification efforts like holiday lighting and
summertime planters, and more resources to help the homeless in the
neighborhood.