Mayor Singer suggested on May 23 that a nonprofit foundation could steer centennial legacy projects that would outlast one‑time events, and several councilmembers endorsed the idea as a way to harness private philanthropy and community partnerships for a larger, long‑term celebration.
Councilmembers proposed ideas ranging from iconic public art and an interstate welcome monument to a commemorative centerpiece downtown. Multiple council members urged staff to design a program that blends temporary centennial events with long‑lasting, place‑making investments.
On a related quality‑of‑life item, Lindsay Noraca, sustainability manager, updated the council on the city's application for the Blue Flag beach award—an international recognition for safety, environmental education and water quality. "We are in the process of applying now... it is about a year‑long process," Noraca said, adding that the city anticipates award consideration in May 2025 and expects the recognition would align with centennial activities.
Council moved the Blue Flag process to operations, and members expressed support for staff to continue centennial planning with an emphasis on private and philanthropic engagement and long‑term legacy projects.
What’s next: staff will continue the Blue Flag application work (water sampling, education, signage) and will return with centennial programming plans and options for philanthropic and private partnership via a nonprofit vehicle if council wants to pursue that structure.