sun and news 4-24-21

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The Sun and News


Your Hometown Newspaper Serving Middleville and Caledonia Areas


No. 17/April 24, 2021 Published by J-Ad Graphics, Inc. • 1351 N. M-43 Highway, Hastings, MI 49058 143rd year


Gaines Twp. planners approve hotel at M-6/Kalamazoo Ave. interchange
Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
A new hotel will soon be
built near the interchange of
M-6 and Kalamazoo Avenue.
The Gaines Township
Planning Commission
Thursday approved plans for
a four-story Staybridge
Suites hotel at 1439 and

1469 Eastport Drive in The
Crossings mixed-use devel-
opment just northwest of the
interchange. The new hotel
will be north of the
Celebration Cinema South
theater.
The planning commission
had approved similar plans
for the hotel in October 2019,

but the COVID-19 pandemic
put those plans on hold,
commission Chairwoman
Connie Giarmo said.
“The approval to do this
project expired without the
developer being able to get
the project moving,” Giarmo
said.
The planning commission

needed to approve a major
amendment to the planned
unit development for The
Crossings, to allow for the
hotel. The property had earli-
er been approved as over-
flow parking for Celebration
Cinema, but the property
was seldom used by movie-
goers, Community

Development Director Dan
Wells said.
The 26,650-square-foot
Staybridge Suites hotel will
have 124 rooms and a meet-
ing room that can hold 90
people for conferences. The
parking lot will have 155
spaces, three more than
required by the township,
Wells said.
“Nothing in the project
has changed from what we
had last time, other than Dan
brought up a couple of addi-
tional requests for us, to add
some lighting and a better
walking path, so we accom-
modated that,” said Dennis
Brovont, president of Pel
Construction, which will
build the hotel.
Commissioners agreed to
go along with a request from
the developer to allow two
90-square-foot wall signs on
the hotel, one facing
Kalamazoo Avenue and the
other facing M-6. The town-
ship ordinance generally

allows one wall sign with a
maximum of 100 square feet
in the general commercial
zoned district, but no objec-
tions were raised to allowing
two signs.
Commissioners also
agreed to a 52-foot-height
for the building. The town-
ship has a 35-foot height
limit in the general commer-
cial zoned district, Wells
said.
Other conditions commis-
sioners placed on the devel-
opment included realigning
the lane striping for the
southern driveway to
Eastport Drive to be perpen-
dicular to the centerline of
the street and that trees in the
parkway south of the proper-
ty be trimmed to a height of
10 feet to improve vision for
pedestrians and drivers.
No timetable has been set
for groundbreaking, but the
new hotel should be open in
2022, Brovont said.

IN THIS ISSUE...



  • Retroactive raise, lump-sum approved
    for Caledonia village employees

  • Caledonia Twp. seeks grant to
    expand Two Rivers Greenspace

  • Charlie Pullen memorial service
    set for next Saturday

  • School record two-mile helps Scots
    score conference victory


Caledonia schools project $2 million deficit for 2021-22 school year


Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
Caledonia Community
Schools are forecasting a
shortfall of a little more than
$2 million in the projected
budget for the 2021-
school year.
Finance Director Sara
DeVries gave her estimation
of the district’s finances for
the fiscal year, which starts
July 1, during Monday’s
school board meeting at
Duncan Lake Middle
School’s performing arts
center.
DeVries’ projection is
based in part on the district
regaining some of the 152
students it lost between the
fall 2019 and fall 2020
enrollment counts.
“We’re estimating about a
third of our students will
come back. That’s about 50
students,” she said.
After three consecutive
years of enrollment exceed-
ing 5,000 students,
Caledonia’s enrollment in
fall 2020 fell to 4,907.
In addition to the project-
ed enrollment increase,


DeVries is anticipating an
$82 per-pupil increase in the
state’s foundation grant for
each district, as proposed by
Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in
her budget plan. Per-pupil
enrollment funding accounts
for about 70 percent of the
district’s revenues, she said.
The budget projection
does not include any staffing
reductions for next school
year, although cuts are possi-
ble in the 2022-23 school
year based on current fund-
ing projections, DeVries
said.
The Caledonia district is
projected to end the current
fiscal year with about a
$700,000 shortfall. However,
it’s been using a “super
blend” formula from the

state that factors in enroll-
ment figures from the 2019-
20 school year and the 2020-
21 school year in determin-
ing how much revenue it
receives.
“When we’re looking to
budget for next fiscal year,
right now, the super blend is
not in effect,” DeVries said.
Revenues for the current
fiscal year are $58.8 million,
and expenditures are expect-
ed to end the fiscal year at
$59.5 million, according to
DeVries’ presentation to the
board.
The district is projected to
receive about $1.8 million in
federal stimulus funding for
the next fiscal year, but there
are limits as to how that
money can be spent, DeVries

said.
“With those dollars, it is
very specific on what they
can be used on, and it’s all
related around the pandem-
ic,” DeVries said.
“They include our virtual
learning – the content, the
management system, the
teachers, the Chromebooks,
the hotspots – those things
that are involved in virtual
learning.”
In addition, the stimulus
funds can be used for mental
health support and staffing,
nurses and building health
paraprofessionals, profes-
sional development, extend-
ed learning services such as
summer school and credit
recovery, funding a dean to
check on school truancy
issues, improvement to the
ventilation system in build-
ings and the purchase of per-
sonal protection equipment,
DeVries said.
“We are still being cau-
tiously optimistic. This is the
best information we have
today,” DeVries said. “Will
they do something with the
super blend? Possibly,

because this is impacting dis-
tricts across the state ...
We’ll continue to monitor
these things and make adjust-
ments as needed.”
In other business Monday,
the school board approved:


  • The purchase of 1,000 11
    EE G8 Chromebooks, along
    with a Google Management
    license for the laptops, at a
    cost not to exceed $241,650.

  • Awarding the contract for
    a new district server and
    storage area network to
    Sentinel Technologies, which
    submitted a bid of $131,623.
    -Awarding a contract for
    low-voltage cabling and a
    new public address system at
    Caledonia Elementary to
    Town & Country Electric,
    which submitted a bid of
    $66,115.
    -The purchase of a new
    video scoreboard for the
    Scotland Yard soccer and
    lacrosse field from
    Daktronics for $62,490. The
    district hopes to offset some
    of the cost of the scoreboard
    by selling advertising,
    according to a memo from
    Athletic Director Fred


Townsend.
-Awarding contracts for
paving projects in the district
this summer, to Superior
Asphalt for $1.97 million
and Structure TEC for
$174,568. Projects include
paving and restoration work
at the north parking lot at
Caledonia High School, the
parking lots at Emmons Lake
Elementary School and the
bus drop-off area at
Caledonia Elementary
School.
-The purchase of a 77-pas-
senger ThomasBuilt school
bus from Hoekstra Sales, of
Grand Rapids, for $95,676.
The bus had been scheduled
for purchase last year but
was put on hold because of
financial uncertainty tied to
the pandemic.
-The purchase of a 2022
Chevrolet maintenance and
plow truck from Todd
Wenzel Chevrolet, of
Hudsonville, for $41,279.
The new truck will allow the
district to phase out a 2008
model truck from the mainte-
nance fleet.

Caledonia, Gaines growth outpaces


county, equalization report shows
Greg Chandler
Staff Writer
Economic growth along
the M-6 corridor continues to
spark an increase in property
values in Caledonia and
Gaines townships that is out-
pacing the rest of Kent
County.
According to the county’s
equalization report for 2021,
which was approved
Thursday by the Kent County
Board of Commissioners,
state equalized values in
Caledonia Township rose
8.36 percent from a year ago,
putting the township over the
$1 billion mark in total prop-
erty value.
That increase was the sec-
ond-highest among the 21
townships in Kent County
and fourth-highest of any
municipality in the county,
trailing only the city of
Wyoming (9.87 percent), the
city of Lowell (9.12 percent)
and Spencer Township (8.
percent).
Meanwhile, Gaines

Township saw a 7.48 percent
rise in state equalized values,
putting the township at more
than $1.26 billion in total
property value.
By comparison, Kent
County as a whole saw a
6.85 percent SEV increase
for the year, translating into
nearly $2.2 billion in addi-
tional property value, boost-
ing the county’s total value to
nearly $34.1 trillion. It was
the 10th consecutive year of
increased property values in
the county after five straight
yearly declines during the
recession of the late 2000s
and early 2010s.
Caledonia Township’s
growth included an 11.
percent in the value of com-
mercial properties, the only
county municipality to see a
double-digit increase in that
sector, according to the
report.
“The trends that are hap-
pening in Caledonia are the
ones that are happening
across that entire [M-6] cor-

ridor,” County Equalization
Director Matt Woolford said
in a telephone interview
shortly after Thursday’s
county board meeting.
“Obviously, we’ve been in
a pandemic, so within the
commercial class, we’re see-
ing a tale of two kinds of
trends. One is those commer-
cial-related things that are
close to highways, that are in
support of distribution, cer-
tain restaurants with high
drive-in capacity, specialized
retail – some of those things
have been doing quite well.
Some of the other areas that
are more directly related to
the pandemic – hospitality,
for example, overall retail –
it seems we lost a lot of foot
traffic. Those properties have
not been utilized as much.”
Commercial activity in
Gaines Township wasn’t
quite as robust as its neigh-
bor to the east, but still came
in with a 5.2 percent SEV
increase in that sector. In the
residential sector, Caledonia

saw a 6.07 percent increase
in property values, while
Gaines checked in at 5.
percent, according to the
report.
Residential property value
increases are seen as helping
drive growth in other sectors,
Woolford said.
“West Michigan and the
Grand Rapids metropolitan
area are a growing region,
and as the residential proper-
ties are appreciating, more
people are coming into the
area, companies and the
industrial sector continue to
do well, the commercial class
is going to grow along with
the rest of those growth
trends,” he said.
Residential makes up 77.
percent of Caledonia
Township’s total SEV – more
than $784 billion in property
value. In Gaines Township,
residential comprises 72.
percent of the township’s
total SEV, adding up to more

“We are still being cautiously optimistic. This is the best
information we have today. Will they do something with
the super blend? Possibly, because this is impacting
districts across the state ... We’ll continue to monitor
these things and make adjustments as needed.”
Sara DeVries, Caledonia Community Schools
Finance Director

See GROWTH, page 3

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