PEORIA MAGAZINE March 2022
grocery stores and six or seven gas stations, if you can believe that,” said Denman. Delavan’s downtown may not be subdued for long, said Morgan Elser, a sculptor who maintains a studio on Locust Street. “My husband and I have lived in Delavan for 21 years. It’s a charming place to live. We think Delavan could be a baby Galena,” she said, referring to the popular tourism destination in northwest Illinois known for its business district of well-preserved 19th century buildings. While she’s seen Delavan through a lot of changes, Denman said she wouldn’t live anywhere else. Since her husband and business partner died last year, she divides her time between the newspaper and the town museum across the street. The concept is still brewing, but Denman is thinking “about amuseum for small-town newspapers. We still have some of the old (printing) equipment. The way newspapers are
in Delavan for generations, brought the cannabis concept to town. Now the general manager of the Revolution site, he’s looking for plenty of activity in 2022. “We’ve got another 75,000 square foot building planned for cannabis production, along with a two-story office building at the site,” he said. Plant employment stands at 166 but should top 200 when expansion plans are completed this spring, said Diekhoff. That makes the cannabis plant the town’s biggest employer, larger than the local school district. Revolution also purchased the vacatedHarvest Café and threeother buildings in the downtown, making use of the finished apartments that Mathers had installed. “Our goal is to get the restaurant up and operational. Initially, we were going to lease the space to an outside firm but we decided to operate it ourselves,” said Diekhoff. He and Skinner said citizen support for the cannabis facility and the Tax Increment Financing (TIF) District that was established for that purpose has been notable. “The community was excited to begin with and is still excited,” said Skinner. Indeed, while many other small towns struggle financially, Delavan receives about $300,000 a year from Revolution through the TIF – split between the city and the school district, which gets 25 percent of it – which “puts us in a position to offer incentives to (other) businesses,” said the mayor. “Revenue can be used to pay for infrastructure inside the TIF boundaries such as new water lines, sanitary sewer lines and roadway improvements,” said City Administrator Matt Fick. Beyond that, TIF money can be used for redevelopment incentives to assist developers with the costs of stabilizing old, historic buildings, as well as reimbursing developers for land or building acquisition costs. Delavan has 16 years remaining on the TIF. The plant’s expansion also means
that Delavan’s TIF share will double, starting in 2024, said Fick, noting that the added revenue gives the city options and opportunities. The town pool needs to be rebuilt. A grocery store is needed to replace the one that burned down in 2014. Inaseparate,negotiatedagreement, Revolution’s monthly sales can trigger a payment to the city amounting to $100,000 per year, which goes into Delavan’s general fund and supports basic city services, said Fick. The two-block stretch of Locust Street in Delavan’s downtown is on the National Register of Historic Places, which also makes the town unique, said Sheila Montney, managing partner of Win Together LLC, a consulting firm that’s been conducting surveys in town on future development. Montney said her efforts, being provided pro bono, are designed to link the views of residents and business owners with city officials. The group will report its findings to
“MY HUSBAND AND I HAVE LIVED IN DELAVAN FOR 21 YEARS. IT’S A CHARMING PLACE TO LIVE. WE THINK DELAVAN COULD BE A BABY GALENA.”
DELAVAN SCULPTOR MORGAN ELSER
the Delavan City Council this spring, she said. Sandy Denman, 81, has been reporting her findings to readers of the Delavan Times, the weekly paper she’s edited since 1998. Denman maintains a family tradition, as both her grandfather andmother previously served as the paper’s editors. A lifelong Delavan resident, she recalls a time when Delavan’s downtown scene was dynamic. “In the 1950s when I was in high school, you couldn’t walk on the sidewalks, it was so crowded on a Saturday night,” she said. “Wehadclothingstores, restaurants, a hardware store. We had everything right here. There were probably five
dying out, our kids won’t even know what a paper is,” she said. They will if they come to Delavan, where Denman plans to continue publishing until at least 2024 – when the paper celebrates its 150th anniversary – and where past and present have come to terms in trying to ensure there’s a lot of life left in this 185-year-old community.
Steve Tarter is a Peoria Magazine contributor who was born in England, raised in Boston, moved to Peoria to attend Bradley University and decided to stay. He has spent a career in journalism and public relations.
64 MARCH 2022 PEORIA MAGAZINE
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