X number of miles of new sidewalks, bike lanes, and walking trails. The city needs better connections.

. . . Oklahoma City in midst of largest street repair initiative in history: https://kfor.com/2018/10/19/oklahoma...ve-in-history/

Money to renovate various parks around the city, and an endowment to keep them nice. This lets you put something in each area of the city.

The aquarium/natural history museum combo. You can look at fish and I can look at fossils.

Stage one of streetcar expansion. One line up to OCU, one down to Capitol Hill, and one to the HSC. We need to start hitting neighborhoods where people live.

A canal extension into the old co-op site, if the owners of the land produce a real workable plan for development that doesn't require massive public funds.

A bare-bones 20,000 seat soccer stadium that can be expanded as needed. If MLS starts looking like a possibility we can always look at that later.

We'll say five community mental health/treatment centers around the city, partnered with HOPE or some other organization to provide better access to care.

Money to purchase "architecturally significant" properties around the city and turn them into a community center or library branch, or something like that. Save the gold dome, the egg church, things like that.

You nailed it, hoya.

There are many ways you can improve OKC; there are many projects that could help improve our city including an 'endowment fund' say $200 million for upkeep of previous MAPS projects and funds to purchase historic architecturally significant properties.

Would like to add one more unpopular project to that list. A new State Fair Arena replacement. I know many posters are turned off to the fact that the State Fair Board Trust hasn't opened it books to the public. It's obvious that the SFB Trust doesn't have anything IMO worth examining. The current trade shows & events at State Fair Park has an estimated economic impact of $300 million according to Populous.

The new 5,500 seat minimum seating capacity arena could satisfy the needs of our current trade shows & events to keep them in OKC.