Cleveland City
Councilwoman Fannie Lewis didn’t have
a degree from Harvard University but
her common sense wisdom could often
exceed the judgments of the Ivy League
learned.
I can’t count the hours
I spent with Fannie at committee and
Council meetings over 20 or more
years. I do know she took up a
lot more of my time than I wanted.
She could go on and on and on.
Yet there were times
during those long disputations when
Fannie – that’s what most people
called her – would zero-in, smack on
the problem everyone else was dancing
around.
The last time I saw
Fannie Lewis was at a hearing more
than two years ago. I wrote...
“Fannie often displays the wisdom of
a hard life lived.”
And she did live a
hard, but productive life. At
that time I wrote...
“I approached her as
we both waited for an elevator. Age
has caught up on her. I’m not sure
she recognized me at first. She is
bent by time but
that’s physically. I believe she
still could win re-election in Ward
7
even
if she had passed. (And whoever runs
to replace her better wish there
isn’t another woman with the name
Fannie Lewis.)
“I told her that I
wished I had kept a record of her
truisms through the many, many years
I’ve observed her at City Hall. She
simply smiled.
“She had spoken
another gem that afternoon.
“Fannie told the
standard lineup of suits at the
table when millions of dollars were
being discussed (for the Wolstein
Flats project),
“’A hammer hurts
whether it hits you in the hand or
the head.’
“The context was
about the power and damage of
eminent domain.”
Fannie could be a tiger
and she could be a gracious comforter.
She knew when to be one of the other.
I always said you
needed a visa to get into her Hough
7th ward. She controlled it that
tightly and not always graciously.
She didn’t appreciate competition.
During one long
six-hour discussion, as Council
leadership tried to give Gateway boss
Tom Chema political cover, Fannie
summed up what they were trying to
hide with disgust...
“Stevie Wonder can see what’s goin’
here,” she said.
At another long meeting
about two parking garages the city
eventually built for Gateway, Lewis
had trouble with the demeanor of then
Council President Jay
Westbrook and Finance Chairman Jim
Rokakis. They gave little time
and
much disgust to the few
public protesters who wanted to speak
against the proposal. I wrote
that Westbrook “gave Lewis a look of
condescension, asking her if she had
finished in such a manner that the
question took the tone of a put-down.”
Lewis was having none
of it...
“Quit
being facetious with me,” she told
Westbrook and then “caught him where
it hurt, his past.” Westbrook
had been a radical when he entered
Council. “You and I came into
this Council screaming about the
same things (corporate rip-offs of
public money).” Then she had a
warning, “Don’t play me cheap.”
At the same meeting,
Lewis predicted what would and did
happen with the
garages built for Gateway – huge
losses for the city in the millions of
dollars
each year.
Lewis, brought up on
farm land, summed up the eight pieces
of legislation used to complete the
parking deal...
“This
ties up the city like you tie up a
hog.”
Fannie Lewis was a
Cleveland original and a treasure,
especially for Cleveland's poor.