The Arizona Preservation Foundation agrees with the position of Preserve Phoenix that revoking the conservation easement on this 1920 building listed on the city, state, and national registers of historic places would "undermine the objective of the easement, effectively turning the mechanism of the City's bond funding program into an interest-free loan that could get repaid any time a property owner wanted to demolish a historic structure."
The Arizona Preservation Foundation agrees with the position of Preserve Phoenix that revoking the conservation easement on this 1920 building listed on the city, state, and national registers of historic places would "undermine the objective of the easement, effectively turning the mechanism of the City's bond funding program into an interest-free loan that could get repaid any time a property owner wanted to demolish a historic structure."