Barnstable County Report
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The twists and turns of life on Main Street
Success: It all depends on where you look

Once-tailored canvas awnings are now tattered and unsightly. Photos by Peter Kenney.
by Peter Kenney
For all the crowing by Hyannis people about the success of their Growth Incentive Zone in downtown Hyannis there has been nothing said about the empty storefronts and other buildings in Hyannis. One entire commercial block on Main Street, directly across from the Cape Cod Times offices is empty except for the second floor offices rented by the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound. A former art gallery at the corner of Main Street and Ocean Street, supposedly to be replaced by new mixed-use development, is temporarily barricaded behind a chain-link fence. The once-tailored canvas awnings above its doors and windows are tattered reminders of how slowly Hyannis is progressing.
Hyannis: Four projects and all is well?
But we still hear from Hyannis only about how successful their GIZ has been with the four major projects that have been started since its passage last year. For some reason we hear nothing about an entire commercial block being vacant, or the closed restaurant and empty 26,000-square-foot office building on South Street, or any of the other vacancies on and near Main Street. The drug houses and war-torn neighborhoods near Hyannis receive occasional publicity, but all is well because there are four new buildings on Main Street. Empty buildings on Route 132 are discussed, but they remain empty and the much-awaited Access Hyannis transportation plan is still not complete. Of course, it will merely replace a similar effort finished ten years ago that led to absolutely nothing being done about the snarl of traffic that plagues Hyannis.
Yarmouth: All we want is a little respect
Folks in Yarmouth have never appreciated the snide remarks made about Route 28 in their town by the likes of the Cape Cod Times and Elliot Carr. Last year Carr was at a meeting in Yarmouth to discuss economic development and -- with a grand wave of his arm toward Route 28 -- said, “Well, I guess that is what we are here to discuss.” He was referring to the forlorn appearance of the once-bustling commercial and motel stretch of Route 28 as it crossed from Barnstable through Yarmouth to the Bass River. In fact, Yarmouth, too, has recently gained approval for a Growth Incentive Zone (GIZ) extending for the entire length of Route 28. Its intent is to enable owners of motel properties to refurbish their outdated buildings and mix the uses they make of them to promote new residential development as well as new commercial space.
Chatham: Is the model showing her age?
Perhaps it is worth noting that our local economy might need some inspection and repair, After all, empty buildings say a lot about the health of a community’s economy. Three stores on Chatham’s Main Street are in the process of closing at this moment. And, Main Street in Chatham has long been regarded as a model of a successful small-town main street.
Dennis: Leave it to the locals
The Town of Dennis recently voted at its special town meeting to restrict franchise retailers in their town. Maybe they feel that a job is not meaningful unless provided by a locally owned business. They must be right...look at the booming business hub known as Dennisport.
Plan B: Banish the experts
With the millions of dollars Cape Cod residents pour into town, regional and state planning agencies annually, and with the pomp and circumstance that we have come to expect from the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce, one has to wonder who is actually minding the stores?
Perhaps a new plan is in order: banish the experts from Cape Cod and let businesses develop and prosper as they choose.
2 comments
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Nothing.
We have had no heat, lights, or water for almost four days.
And next summer, when tourists and residents are criminally harassed by the Potter's House (aka, Victory Chapel) (see the DOJ, FBI, re their BS) ANYWHERE on CC, never mind Main Street, Hyannis, they are going down.
It is called criminal harassment, a form of terrorism.
And we have had enough.
Fatwah right back at'em.
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About This Blog
Barnstable County Report is a blog written and edited by Cape Cod Today blogger & TV personality Peter Kenney whose television show, Gadfly blog and WampaGate blog are well known. He writes here about issues affecting the whole county, issues which seem to be left out of the ever-shrinking "old media." His previous columns and stories are archived here. Peter invites information and will treat it "off the record" if asked. Emal him here.
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