This, I hope, will be the last piece I will write in Cleveland.
Why?
You can’t keep telling people the situation is very bad and something has
to be done about it.
But the steamroller keeps rolling.
The words don’t seem to influence anyone’s thought about the city and its predicament.
You may ask, What’s its predicament?
If you have to boil it down I’d say a very (too) successful business/civic community.
It just rolls over the rest of us.
Yet gives us the privilege of paying for their successful desires.
It struck me once again last week when the Regional Transit Authority decided to dump the Waterfront Line.
Does anyone remember why we have a rapid transit line, specially to go to the lakefront?
Well, I tell you why. Dick Pogue and others like him wanted it.
It would make this city hip, or something like that.
But they also wanted a delivery system.
So people should be delivered near its doorstep.
The Cleveland Browns likely had some interest too.
But RTA couldn’t build it quickly enough (I’ll stop asking why) because it take a lot of time and effort to get the federal government convinced all the rules have been followed, so then it could fork over its 80 percent of the cost. Environmental rules would have to be addressed.
Jones-Day’s Dick Pogue, a prime mover and original board member, couldn’t wait until the feds gave a “go” sign. So RTA, and the Cleveland public, had to pay the full freight. Five other Jones-Day lawyers were involved in pushing for the Rock Hall. Many of the early meetings were at the firm’s headquarters, across from City Hall. All cozy.
To this day, Jones-Day, if you Google it, leads its web site with a photo of the Rock Hall dominating the Cleveland skyline.
At the first City Council meeting on Rock Hall legislation there was not a person from the public. But the legal community was there. The Port Authority, which issued some bonds, had two expensive lawyers in attendance. Tony Garofoli of Climaco, Seminatore, Leftkowitz & Garofoli sat there as did Jack Dowd of Squire, Sanders and Dempsey. Three bond firm reps also sat in.
You can bet none represented the paying public. Indeed, Tim Offtermatt, who has been a finance guy in all the sports facilities, the convention center, left the Gateway board of director to shift to vice president of finance. In a recent year he was paid $203,000 plus a $30,000 ‘bonus’ and $13,000 in retirement compensation.
It’s just so hard to do good. But seems easy to do well.
The cost of the Waterfront Line hit $69 million. All local money.
And the line travels to the $93-million Rock & Roll Hall of Fame (RRHF). Also pretty much all cost is paid with local tax money. And most tax money, since it involved property taxes diverted from Terminal Tower, is stolen from the Cleveland schools (just like the three sports fields).
The price tab rose from the original cost. Therefore, the diverted property tax funds are taken for 25 years, or four more than originally planned.
Bed taxes from the County and a cut on city admission taxes filled out the payments.
But who cares that much about Cleveland kids? Not Gates Mill lawyers.
But it was all part of the establishment scheme to make Cleveland a hot visitors spot, along with three new sports facilities. Millions of dollars upon millions of dollars.
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Click on the image above to download the entire issue of Point Of Viəw.
Nothing to investigate. Nothing here, move on. The blind Plain Dealer cannot see. Maybe doesn’t want to see.
It was often so easy for me.
Because if you aren’t looking at something critically, you won’t find it.
When you look critically, you sometimes get to peek inside.
But what about the Browns? Aren’t they important?
You could almost see the movers and shakers lining up to take a bite of the dough to be spent.
Cong. Mary Rose Oakar got in early and you had to wonder why. In a telephone call to a leader of the Rock Hall, she showed interest in who was getting architectural business there. She had two in mind.
Here is one of the Rock Hall promoters bemoaning himself the political machinations involving the forming of the Rock Hall here.
William Hulett, the Rock Hall chair and president of Stouffer’s Inns, found the political maneuvering much too much, reacting to Oakar’s questions.
…at no time, to my knowledge, has anyone suggested who the associate architect should be. Mary Rose (Oakar), on the other hand is very insistent and direct in that she feels this whole process is flawed, that someone other than I.M. Pei’s office is making the selection, that people who did early work on this process, such as Richard Fleishman’s firm and Paul Voinovich, who she mentioned in particular, were being pushed aside….She’s unwilling to listen to anything but her own opinions on the subject.
You wonder what the public’s perception would be if this appeared in the Plain Dealer, not Point Of Viəw.
Hulett was beside himself. The poor man.
I have no idea how this unnecessary mess is going to be straightened out, but I would suggest that the Cleveland board look around for another chairman as I do not really need or appreciate this crap.
This quagmire is apparently no place for an honest man.
shocking!
Click on the image below to download the entire issue of Point Of Viəw.
Click on the image above to download the entire issue of Point Of Viəw.
Mayor White, of course, took significant interest in the board make-up.
He took a seat on the construction committee. A strategic move.
In a memo to White, economic development chair Joe Marinucci wrote,
You made some comments and suggestions on the group’s makeup.” Subsequently, he wrote, the list was altered.
“How do you feel about the list of potential additions?” asks Marinucci.
Another Rock Hall official writes to White, “How do you feel about the potential additions… I think we need more minority members…. Please give me suggestions as to who you believe should be added to the group or removed….”
I also noted that politicians also enjoy the ability to rub shoulders with celebrities. Marinucci again with a note to White and an attached Vanity Fair article on Jann Werner, a New York Rock board member: “I thought you’d like to see this article.”
Marinucci and company devoted a good amount of city work time to the project.
“We estimate that over 170 person hours were expended by city staff,” writes Marinucci. It included work from the economic development office, law, finance, and other city hall workers.
That’s the way it works when no one is watching,
It has become the standard procedure here in Cleveland.
And it isn’t working.
Wait until the various grimy hands get into the deal that Jimmy and Dee Haslam have hatched downtown for a costly platform to be built to the lakefront.
With Steve Litt telling Cleveland how wonderful it all is.
***
I have read hundreds of books, academic articles, magazine accounts, and newspaper exposes on the power structures of cities around this country and I’ve never found anyone who told it any better, and with such punch, than Roldo Bartimole. l think that he has taught all of us more about Cleveland than any of the books on Cleveland and he has done so in a way that is understandable and useful as well….
Time has proven him right in his earlier assessments again and again. The pundits and the mass media have been proven wrong in their constant claims of new evidence of optimism. Let’s us hope they finally wise up and start listening to Roldo for a better sense of the future.
—G. William Domhoff, Professor of Psychology & Sociology, U of California, Santa Cruz and batboy, Cleveland Indians, 1951-1952.
James Aronson, a New York journalist and a founder of the National Guardian, called Roldo Bartimole’s Point Of Viəw, “perhaps the sharpest critique of the media—and the city it serves—being published anywhere,” in his 1972 book, Deadline for the Media. In 1991, Roldo was awarded the Joe Callaway Award for Civic Courage by the Shafeek Nader Trust.