Ask yourself, if Republican
Debby Sutherland were running against Tim
Hagan would the Plain Dealer be endorsing
her?
I doubt it. Tim Hagan
does the bidding of every Establishment
desire. He’s the leader of taxing
Cuyahoga County residents for every
millionaire’s desire for government subsidy
of their businesses.
And he’s the darling of
The Plain Dealer editorial bosses,
particularly its
director
Brent Larkin. Larkin protects Hagan, a
hypocritical and arrogant politician. But a
politician that favors big business, as does
the PD.
The PD’s endorsement of
Sutherland over Peter Lawson Jones was
weakly demonstrated, racially tinged (I say
this because she choose to oppose Jones
rather than Hagan) and a hint of what the PD
will do in the Presidential election
endorsement.
Why Peter Lawson Jones has
taken to defending the deal for a new
medical mart and convention center, thus
putting himself in alignment with a sales
tax he voted against I can’t fathom.
(See below his sponsorship of a meeting
selling a new convention center.)
However, Jones can’t be
blamed for the sins of other Democratic
office-holders but that’s what the PD does
with its endorsement of Sutherland.
That’s unfair.
They blame Jones for voting
against the increased sales tax (a quarter
percent) while ignoring that the taxpayers
were bypassed and had no vote in the matter.
Southerland seems to be on
both sides of the issue, supporting the tax
yet criticizing aspects of the project.
If she would be a change as a Republican to
the business-favored Commission, I’d like to
know how. The PD doesn’t say in its
feeble endorsement.
The PD didn’t have the
foresight or courage to demand that the
financing of the med mart and convention
center be funded on a regional basis.
Although the PD at every turn supports what
it says is regionalism, it has stood by
without a word to suggest that Gateway
should have been funded regionally, that the
Browns stadium should have been funded
regionally and that the medical mart and
convention center should have been funded
regionally, if any of them publicly funded
at all.
The PD always favors giving
away tax funds as long as the money goes to
those who already have too much.
They forgot about regionalism
where regionalism would be most fair and
most obvious. I guess they want
regional cooperation on the easy stuff so
they avoid the more difficult.
What the Sutherland
endorsement also says to me is that the PD
will endorse John McCain in the Presidential
campaign over Barack Obama.
This, too, will be in direct
opposition to the economic interests of this
area and Ohio.
If the PD chooses the McCain
ticket the newspaper is sending tens of
millions of dollars in Federal monies to the
West. McCain is from Arizona and Palin
from Alaska. As we in the Midwest
suffer the consequences of lost industry
(much of it federally subsidized in some
way, the West (and South) siphon off federal
subsidies. Our industries suffer from
lack of federal, especially military,
contracts. The PD endorsement of
McCain would be a stab in the back of this
area.
The PD should not be allowed
to thumb its nose at this area’s interest
and not suffer economic consequences itself.
The PD does not serve a
Republican constituency. Most of its
subscribers are Democrats and they have a
right to demand it represent their interests
in its editorial policies and choices.
While I cannot defend Jimmy
Dimora and Frank Russo, their alleged crimes
are minor league in comparison to the
highway robbery of legal methods to favor
our wealthy businesses and developers.
The PD has essentially ignored the obvious
over many years.
I think we should send the PD
a message that their business is now in a
precarious position and they cannot afford
to thumb their nose at the majority of
ordinary Clevelanders and get away with it.
It Was a
Meaningless "Public Meeting"
You would have to describe last week’s first
public hearing on the medical mart &
convention center issue in Cleveland Heights
as at least amusing. It was hardly
productive. In fact, it was a failure.
People were angered by the
presentation.
The meeting, scheduled at 5
p.m., started nearly a half-hour late and
then after a nearly 10-minute introduction
by sponsor Commissioner Peter Lawson Jones,
the podium was passed to Squire Sanders &
Dempsey boss Fred Nance. He took
another 40 minutes of time talking about the
report. To no one’s surprise a Forest
City Enterprise plot on the Cuyahoga River
was selected as the best place to build the
convention center and Forest City’s Higbee’s
building the best place for the medical
mart.
The public, which came out on
a day after the holiday to an early evening
meeting, didn’t fare so well.
You can smile: the public was
told it had three minutes to speak, though
some were allowed to go beyond the time
limit.
There were references to the
convention site as “on a cliff,” which
probably irritated the Forest City executive
Alan Krulak, who monitored the meeting.
The “cliff” mentions weren’t meant to
ascribe a proper site for the convention
center.
Another response that brought
giggles from the small audience referenced
Nance’s law firm’s expectation of being
legal counsel for the $400 million plus bond
issue that would finance the $1 billion
project. Nance, who is guaranteed to
be paid $175,000 by the County, could expect
some fancy million-dollar fees as bond
counsel. No response from Nance.
Nance seemed mildly amused by the whole
thing.
It was refreshing to hear
Jones describe the project as a Billion
Dollar undertaking of “public investment”
but I wondered to him why then wasn’t it
presented to the public for a vote? I
also chastised government officials for not
following their pious pronouncements about
“Regionalism” by seeking regional financing.
This $1 billion project (it will be more)
will be, as Gateway was, financed solely by
Cuyahoga County residents. Browns
Stadium, the prize of Nance’s doing, is paid
for by Cleveland residents.
Make sure everyone knows that
the tax is now ahead of its projection of
$40 million a year. It’s for 20 years
which means more than $800 million.
Plus the County has pledged to pay MMPI,
operator of both facilities, $103 million
over 17 years.
As Nance prepared to give his
remarks, the audience found that the
electronic PowerPoint aspect of the
presentation wouldn’t work. This gave
for some more guffaws when one audience
member wondered aloud how much confidence
the public could have for a team that
couldn’t operate a DVD.
Nance said there would be a
$26 million or so shortage in County funds,
despite the quarter-percent sales tax
increase invoked by Commissioners Tim Hagan
and Jimmy Dimora. Audience members
noted that both Hagan and Dimora were
absent.
He said that could be made up
by an extra bed tax or by taking some of the
$8 million in bed taxes already going to
Positively Cleveland, a name that always has
to be explained as what was the Convention &
Visitors Bureau.
I wondered why Positively
Cleveland was being given $8 million a year
yet Nance moaned that the present Cleveland
Convention Center was operating at five to
six percent capacity. Wasn’t it
Positively Cleveland’s job to help fill the
center with visitors? What’s happening
to our $8 million a year? I know that
$303,000 of it each year goes to Dennis
Roche, its boss. That’s a lot of money
for failure.
Where the five or six percent
figure comes from also suggests more winging
it. When I asked someone knowledgeable
at the city about the percentages cited by
Nance the quick response was “What is that?”
The way the Convention Center
operates is by “event days” and they vary
from 400 events in a good year to 250 events
in a bad year. An event can mean every
hotel in downtown Cleveland operates at
capacity.
Who will pay for the
operation or destruction of the present
Convention Center? Councilman Brian
Cummins – one of the few Council members I’d
trust some these days – asked about that
little problem. He was rightly
concerned that the City of Cleveland would
be left holding the bag of a dependent and
empty convention center.
Councilman Joe Cimperman, a
corporate toady, seemed to think that such
matters could be solved by the
subsidy-seeking film industry.
Cleveland’s just the kind of replacement for
Hollywood.
Cimperman and Cummins
represent bright, young leadership in
Cleveland. But Cummins represents the
city residents' interests while Cimperman
concentrates on the interests of downtown
developers.
They were the only two
Cleveland council members to appear.
There was no real answer
about what tax would pay for a film
production center. Certainly the film
makers aren’t going to line up with their
dough, since they now seek large public
subsidies merely to film in Cleveland.
The meeting was really
worthless because the decision has been made
and it will take a lot more than a few
people griping about the tax, the terrible
(always) process and the lack of public
input.
Lawson Jones responded to my
remark (and writing similarly) that I wasn’t
impressed with the fact that he didn’t vote
for the tax as did his two colleagues –
Hagan and Dimora. Truth is they didn’t
need Peter’s vote. He claimed that was
an attack on his credibility. Sure and
it is, especially because he’s out there
selling the project now.
The only message would be to
dump Lawson Jones in November.
However, the Republican candidate is too
tied to the powers to be and similarly for
the medical mart and convention center, thus
for the tax.
Michael Benz of United Way
Services gave one of the most supportive
talks, urging that the project go ahead.
It might be ironic that the social service
funding agent of our area would be
supportive of taxes being spent for more
downtown interests. Jobs, of course,
are bases of the pleading. It
certainly is a bit ironic as Benz, a former
executive with a former business front
group, now the Greater Cleveland Partnership
– today’s agent of subsidizing the Moneyed –
has a pay package of $279,720. I guess
he can afford the quarter-percent extra
sales tax. By the way, that pay
package figure is two-years old... so he may
be in a bit better shape now.
As Dennis Kucinich told
Democrats at their recent convention, “Wake
up, people.”