File #: RS2023-156   
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 12/12/2023 In control: Metropolitan Council
On agenda: 12/19/2023 Final action: 12/19/2023
Title: A resolution recognizing the importance of access to the Cumberland River for Nashville residents, small businesses, and visitors.
Sponsors: Jacob Kupin, Clay Capp, Erin Evans, Terry Vo, Jason Spain, Bob Nash, Jennifer Webb, Jeff Gregg, Kyonzte Toombs, Quin Evans-Segall
title
A resolution recognizing the importance of access to the Cumberland River for Nashville residents, small businesses, and visitors.

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WHEREAS, the Cumberland River has always been an important asset to Nashville and Davidson County as a source for water, transportation, resource, natural beauty, hydrological performance, as well as for commercial, industrial, and recreational purposes; and

WHEREAS, Fort Nashborough, the predecessor to the City of Nashville, was founded on the banks of the Cumberland River in 1780; and

WHEREAS, the Cumberland River has also been a historically critical part of how downtown has developed over time. The city wharf was located on the western side of the Cumberland River and the street now known as First Avenue was known as "Water Street", evidencing the importance of the river to Nashville's development; and

WHEREAS, the Cumberland River is a municipal waterway, which is a public asset for all of Nashville and should be accessible by all Nashvillians; and

WHEREAS, a municipal waterway like the Cumberland River can also be used as transit, both public and private; and

WHEREAS, over time, many plans for the use of the Cumberland River have been started but have not come to fruition. In 2006, the Metropolitan Department of Parks and Recreation released the Riverfront Park Plan but this plan was never adopted; and

WHEREAS, today, the Cumberland River is difficult to access and underutilized by the public from the Downtown Riverfront; and

WHEREAS, on October 6, 2022, the Planning Commission adopted the Imagine East Bank Vision Plan which highlights the Cumberland River as Nashville's most significant natural resource, sets a goal of improving river access, connecting the riverfront, providing a great riverfront park, and activating the river, and seeks to optimize stormwater management and riparian management; and

WHEREAS, during the East Bank planning process, community feedback noted that the east bank of the C...

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