The real estate developers.
It used to be that top executives of the big corporate
Fortune 500 companies and allied big law firm managers,
along with numerous front groups, pulled the strings and
directed what happened in Cleveland.
It seems with the disappearance of so many Cleveland
Fortune 500 corporations and control of other corporations
now in other cities, they play a less significant role in
public decision-making. They just don't have the
community interest or the need as they did in the past.
The paper adds up the patronage toll of the politicians
to let the public see its damage.
Yet, just as the County Democrats need a kick in the
ass, so do developers asking millions and millions of
dollars in public subsidies need a swift kick in
the ass. Their behavior is as outrageously
self-interested as the politicians.
However, the paper
regarding development projects ignores the story.
How could it escape noticing that the Wolstein project
has been racking up subsidy after subsidy? Why no
full, detailed documentation of what the public is
giving away?
One, the media generally
ignore the very substantial subsidies provided new
developments by limiting coverage to graphics and
articles of cheer leading.
Two, it fails to provide a realistic picture of how
little public financial return these projects will
provide, since the city allows taxes to be diverted
from the public treasury via years of tax incremental
financing and outright tax abatements. In the
former (TIF), propert
y
taxes are diverted from the public treasure to pay for
aspects of the private development; in the latter,
taxes are simply forgiven for long periods.
Three, it ignores the impact – financial and
otherwise – of subsidizing new development at the
expense of older developed areas.
This latter problem also meshes with our societal
predicament of dumping the old for the new. This is very
wasteful. It is environmentally stupid and damaging.
In the rush to gush about new developments, the paper
has forgotten its own “Quiet Crisis” assessment of the
city’s most dire needs.
Therefore, as the city authorizes subsidies for
luxury housing and luxury downtown hotels and retail,
the rest of the city rots in neglect.
Greater Cleveland Partnership’s boss Joe Roman
recently applauded “moving our downtown to the
lakefront.” Such a silly comment from a supposed
community “leader.” The fact that the GCP pays
this man $426,231 (2006 figure) in annual salary and
retirement benefits suggests why the inequality of our
society is ruining us.
Does the highly-subsidized Wolstein project and the
move of Ernst & Young to the lakefront suggest the major
coup that we are being fed?
The lakefront, after all, has been taken up by a
history of bad decisions made mostly in two decades.
I’m talking about building the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame,
the Browns Stadium and the Science Center at the
lakefront. These institutions eat up a large
portion of the downtown lakefront. The three of
them also depend upon public subsidies and pay no
property taxes.
Yet, not a single one of these recent lakefront
venues – none involving private investment by the way –
needed to be on the lakefront. They all could have
been located elsewhere... to better community advantage.
Now there is talk of Eaton Corp. possibly moving from
downtown to Chagrin Highlands. That is just the
kind of competition I warned about when the
Chagrin Highlands project was conceived and delivered by
former Council President George Forbes and then Mayor
George Voinovich to developer Dick Jacobs.
Cleveland downtown businesses would not resist the lure
of cheaper virgin land in the suburbs. So
Cleveland allowed the theft of tenants by opening land
outside its boundaries. Now it may watch as a
major office tenant escapes Cleveland.
So here’s what I’m saying. We need a just as
critical and discriminating examination of the private
interests as we do of the public interests. The
news media doesn’t seem capable of providing that
critique.
And while I’m at it, I’ll say something about the
person the PD has chosen to portray as leading the fight
for County reform.
Tim “Lazy Boy” Hagan.
Please, tell me they are not that stupid or bought
off over there at 180l Superior.
The PD articles put Hagan out front as a reformer.
His reform however is limited reform.
He’s for “reforming” numerous County offices – the
treasurer, auditor, recorder, clerk of courts, and other
elected County offices.
But he’s – NOT – for reforming the major problem.
The three-person County Commission “hot dog stand”
operation, the cause and center of much of our County’s
problems.
Why? Because he’s one of three commissioners.
His reform saves his job.
Hagan has always been a political phony, playing the
part of a man of the people while doing the opposite.
Back in the 1970s, Hagan was a proponent of the
recall of fellow Democrat Dennis Kucinich. Hagan
just couldn’t stand that Kucinich was being seen as a
progressive force.
In the fight between Kucinich and the Cleveland banks
effort to strangle the city and force it to sell its
municipal electric system, Hagan took the side of the
banks.
“Kucinich knows damn well he
can’t bully the banks into investing money with the
city. He apparently realizes the city faces the very
real possibility of default later this year and is
trying to set the banks up as his fall guy,” said
Hagan in September 1978.
In his February 1979 column, Peter Phipps, a Press
political writer, noted that Hagan was “out in the cold
on another issue – the sale of the Municipal Light
system.”
Phipps went on to note that Hagan, as party boss,
failed in his attempt to get other politicians to join
him in a push to sell the city’s electric system.
“By week’s end, Hagan was
forced to cancel plans to send out a sell Muny Light
letter to 10,000 party regulars,” Phipps wrote.
Hagan has always been this kind of politician, eager
to undercut fellow Democrats to his benefit. 
Put in his position by his marriage to
political-legal-business honcho James Carney (uncle
of downtown developer John Carney, a chip off the old
family block), Hagan became the County Democratic Party
Chairman.
By linking himself to the Kennedy family in the
1980s, Hagan became a national figure to reporters who
come to town thinking that they will get honest comment
from Hagan, their liberal hero. They lacked the
knowledge or instinct to recognize what they have is a
Joe Lieberman Democrat in Hagan (pictured kissing up to
convicted former Republican Gov. Bob Taft).
All along the PD has been a prime Hagan enabler.
You can give credit to PD editorial page director
Brent Larkin, Hagan’s protector at the paper for many
years.
The two have had a long friendly relationship with
the once powerful Democratic law firm – Climaco,
Seminatore, Leftkowitz & Garofoli – now broken by
internal dissension and death but the stink still
survives at least enough to
never trust either Hagan or Larkin, who remains
unfortunately the arbiter of political slant at the
morning newspaper.
We lack an honest appraisal of what is going on in
town and I don’t see any outlet that will fill that gap.