Report is a good foundation; now build the bridge
The Boardwalk Subcommittee’s final report deserves credit. While the subcommittee did not provide the level of public engagement it originally promised, the report itself rests on a solid factual foundation—business inventories, hotel and occupancy data, parking and beach tag revenue, comparison communities, and stakeholder input. That's the kind of groundwork that should inform any zoning decision, and the Subcommittee should be thanked for doing this work.
North Star for subcommittee should be a better boardwalk
Many of us who care about the future of Ocean City are looking forward to the final report from the Boardwalk Subcommittee, which was charged with evaluating the future of the boardwalk, including the former Wonderland Pier site, and developing recommendations to guide its long-term success. When the report is released, we hope it reflects the principles previously suggested by Ocean City 2050: that any zoning changes are tied directly to meaningful public benefits; that the future of the Wonderland property receives careful and deliberate consideration; and that the subcommittee presents unified recommendations that move us beyond division and toward a shared vision for Ocean City’s future.
Recommendations for boardwalk need four key elements
It has been some time since the public received an update from the Boardwalk Subcommittee that was formed last year to help chart a path forward for the Ocean City Boardwalk. Councilman and Subcommittee Chairman Dave Winslow promised a robust process and significant public engagement for what is one of the most important planning efforts of our city, its character, and its economic future.
Citizens groups are not going away after the election
Wonderland was not the only issue on voters’ minds. The public conversation — particularly on social media, which has effectively become the city’s primary communication channel — reflected growing concerns about the overall direction of Ocean City: overdevelopment, parking, congestion and the city’s rising debt burden.
Letter to the editor: Hold the line at 600 Boardwalk
As debate continues over zoning and redevelopment around the future of 600 Boardwalk, a straightforward compromise has emerged that deserves serious consideration: split the parcel.
“Another Vote Needed on Former Wonderland Site, Ocean City Councilman Says”
Councilman Jody Levchuk said the city should reconsider approving the former amusement park property as an area in need of rehabilitation.
“The tale of two Ocean Cities: What scale and connection to environment reveal about urban planning”
Urban planning expert Edward T. McMahon once said, “Growth is inevitable and desirable, but destruction of community character is not. The question is not whether your part of the world is going to change. The question is how.”