I can't read the article but I was interviewed for it a few days back. LA Fitness, 7-11's, etc. expansion plans have nothing to do with Jacksonville charging or not charging a mobility fee, concurrency or whatever. In fact, that LA Fitness deal was locked up before the moratorium even went into place. That shopping center (The Fountains) was also under development before the mobility plan was approved. Switching from the old concurrency system to the mobility fee actually saved Sleiman over $600k. Now he's simply pocketing the extra cash since this deal was based on there being a market for LA Fitness in this region.
The Fountains site planIn addition, that particular project is a big suburban box with a huge surface parking lot in front of it. The mobility fee's credit adjustment system is something that would have even further reduced the cost of this particular LA Fitness. However, to trigger those credit adjustments, the site's design would need to be more multimodal friendly, which would reduce the amount of auto trips Sleiman's development would put on the surrounding infrastructure network, which is one of the major goals of the mobility plan/fee.