They have very little to be afraid of if their commitment is true, and if it’s not, we don’t want it. The commitment thing isn’t just a marketing stunt. It’s a viability survey. The data has to be good.
I guess I should add, on top of the process for forgiving commitments under unavoidable mitigating circumstances, there should be a process for deciding whether the city met its part of the bargain. If the facilities are not what was promised, fines must be reduced or erased.
They have very little to be afraid of if their commitment is true, and if it’s not, we don’t want it. The commitment thing isn’t just a marketing stunt. It’s a viability survey. The data has to be good.
I guess I should add, on top of the process for forgiving commitments under unavoidable mitigating circumstances, there should be a process for deciding whether the city met its part of the bargain. If the facilities are not what was promised, fines must be reduced or erased.