Showing posts with label Dan Gilbert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dan Gilbert. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

CPT: Cuyahoga Politics Today: Jeff Johnson and Dan Gilbert

Jeff Johnson and Dan Gilbert: Peas in the same pod?

CLEVELAND — Roldo Bartimole, who even in his senior senior status remains by virtue of his long institutional memory and his ability to follow the money the scrivener scourge of the local ruling class, recently revisited some of Cleveland's sordid political history. It was an effort to provide context to Brent Larkin's weird column last week. Larkin expressed a false empathy for the struggles of Councilman Jeff Johnson to distance himself from his extortion conviction nearly 20 years ago. But halfway through the piece he abruptly switched to his true topic, a direct assault upon the SEIU and the Greater Cleveland Congregations.

SEIU and GCC just happen to be the leading voices in the ongoing struggle to achieve justice and equity for this city's poor and largely minority residents.

Nobody stands in opposition to the desires of our local oligarchy to recreate our shrunken city into a hip burg with cool eateries, a bustling downtown, a high tech vibe, an immigrant magnet, and world-class entertainment venues.

But some of us do look around and see people working two and three jobs trying to make ends meet, amidst Third World infant mortality, thousands of vacant and abandoned structures, a malnourished public transportation system, public schools under relentless attack from private profiteers, real job opportunities separated by insurmountable barriers to entry, and a police force infected with a rogue and reckless deadly virus that has been out of control for generations.

All that makes some of us wonder whether Clevelanders should pay to transform an arena far newer than just about all of our shelters.

We need to have real change in our community, not just the ‘transformation’ of a serviceable public building. When will we stop rearranging and painting the deck chairs and have a real conversation?

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A sit-down I had yesterday with an aspiring young office seeker has surprisingly led me to have some sympathy for Cavs' owner Dan Gilbert. With the light afforded by Roldo's column, I can now appreciate how Mr. Gilbert could have come to town and, after observing how the elites here operate, said to himself, “I can excel at this game.”

He was right! We soon gave him two casinos for life, in our hunger and low self-esteem excusing his promise to build a fabulous new casino on our crooked river.  We bestowed adulation upon him when he first dissed our home boy LeBron for taking his talents elsewhere and then later embraced the return of that enhanced talent in a way that further filled the Quicken coffers.

Given that sort of uncritical and generous treatment, along with the renewal of our regressive sin tax for his sports fraternity, why wouldn't he think that we would happily fork over another $282 million or so just to keep him around another seven years?

GCC and its burgeoning alliance are saying "Let's slow down. Let's be equitable. Let's talk about this."

Whoever advised Gilbert not to have that conversation should be put on irrevocable waivers.

Dan Gilbert has the clout to convene, directly or otherwise, the dialogue of community powers responsible for creating the ecology he so comfortably slid into. He cannot be pleased that GCC and others are raising a ruckus, but he would be wrong to blame them for giving voice to the voiceless. His upset should be directed to his peer group and their political intermediaries, who clearly were caught unawares that even gravy trains have cabooses.
 
Unless there is a community dialogue that can forge a new and true community partnership, proponents of the ‘Q Transformation’ will likely hear their plan end with a Referendum Serenade that is familiar to basketball fans everywhere: "Na Na Na Na, Na Na Na Na, Hey, Hey, Hey! Goo-ood Bye!”

Not the best theme song for the Rock and Roll Capital of the World!


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P. S. Tonight in Boston, game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals! GO CAVS!!!

Monday, May 01, 2017

Thinking Globally, Acting Locally: From Obama to the Q

Former community organizer offers cautionary tale on seduction by the elite

Just over a week ago, I spent a few hours, along with a couple of other reporters, listening to and asking questions of the leaders of Greater Cleveland Congregations, the largest and most prominent of the civic groups questioning the fairness, wisdom, and morality of the Cavaliers proposal to have the public fund a glittering expansion of Quicken Loans Arena at a projected cost of $282 million.

The diverse group included pastors of several inner-city black churches with both high and low profiles, the minister of a mainline Protestant suburban congregation, and two activist professionals from Greater Cleveland's Jewish community, still one of the nation's largest, best organized, and most influential. No Catholic or Muslim representative around the table, but Catholics for a Greater Cleveland and the Islamic Center of Cleveland are active GCC members.

GCC wanted to counter what they saw as the horse race coverage of the legislation and the occasional distortion of its position. Members emphasized GCC is a social change organization focused on specific actions in such areas as jobs, mental health, civic participation. They said their concerns over the Q deal were informed by a canvass of over 15,000 homes last fall that produced more than 5,000 discussions.

GCC position
GCC favors the creation of a community equity fund to address some of the city's systemic and structural inequities. They specifically disclaimed any interest in controlling the fund.

As we went around the table, the most resounding statement came from an African Methodist Episcopal clergywoman who is also a retired Cleveland public school teacher. She expressed her outrage over "this unjust deal. ... It's not about the Cavs. There are needs more important than the Q," she said, listing more jobs, better schools, greater police protection as priority community needs.

"People's voices should be heard,” the Glenville resident continued. “People in Cleveland deserve more than they're getting. We're not going to be silent anymore."

The Rev. Richard Gibson serves alongside Rabbi Robert Nosanchuk and the Rev. Jawanza Colvin as one of GCC's three co-leaders. Gibson, who pastors Elizabeth Baptist Church, spoke starkly about what he sees underlying the proposed deal. The onetime corporate lawyer said that public investment in sports venues was not rational. He said such deals reflect the inefficient function of the market here and suggested that waterfront development was only one of numerous ideas that made more sense from a development standpoint.

Gibson invoked a biblical perspective, arguing that our obsession with pro sports and its heroes was akin to idolatry. "We have elevated sports and sports teams over people."

Rev. Colvin, senior pastor of Olivet Institutional Baptist Church, echoed his colleague. "Our opposition to the deal is clear," he said. "Budgets are moral documents. 'Where your treasure is, there will be your hearts also.'"

Colvin dismissed arguments by the deal's proponents about the economic development benefits that would flow from the Q expansion, saying that trickle down theories were without merit. "We need strong community benefits agreements coming out of these investments," said Colvin.

As the conversation continued, reference was made to how public officials in other communities had successfully leveraged sports venue investment deals to negotiated positive outcomes for the larger community. Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, Baltimore and Atlanta were cited as examples. GCC members acknowledged that each deal is different but said community investment was a common thread. GCC lead organizer James Pearlstein said community investment relative to public investment in pro sports venues was "a conversation that should have happened 20 years ago."

GCC said it met with Cavs leaders and County Executive Armond Budish in private to express their concerns and to seek creation of a $160 million community equity fund. The fund would be used to create jobs, especially for formerly incarcerated people; for capital improvements in the most under developed neighborhoods; and to create east and west side mental health centers that, among other benefits, would reduce the strains on a county justice system that regularly stores an inmate population comprising 1/3 to 1/2 of people who don't belong there. Alternative treatment, they say, could save the public $5 million annually — citing Portland, San Antonio, and Chicago (each of which also has an NBA franchise).

When the meeting ended without progress, GCC delivered a letter to the Cavaliers. They say the Cavs have yet to reply to that letter, or to a second letter that was publicly delivered by a delegation that went to Quicken Loan headquarters in Detroit in late March.

Cavs Response
We spoke with a top Cavaliers official the day after meeting with the GCC team. We wanted to engage a discussion about GCC’s position, to talk about community benefits from the public’s perspective, to dig deeper into some of the assertions made by each side.

The conversation was cordial and extended almost ninety minutes. But the official did not want to speak for the record, and totally refused to entertain any question about GCC, even down to the date of the Cavs/Budish/GCC meeting, the contents of the letter delivered by GCC, or the team’s non-reply. He was expansive about the benefits of the deal, as touted on the “Q-Transformation”website. We had visited the site prior to our conversation, where we saw a strong argument that the Q is slipping further from world-class status, a fact that had not been on our radar. But we didn’t find anything on the site to convince us that our publicly owned facility was approaching functional obsolescence.

Among the claims of deal proponents that trouble us the most is the notion that the Cavs are paying “half the cost” of construction, or $70 million of the $140 million price tag before financing is factored in. The $70 million Cavs contribution is to be paid in the form of increased rent, largely related to the extension of the team’s lease from its present expiration date in 2027 until 2034, or another seven years. The lease extension may be a justification of sorts for the deal but it’s not like the team is paying $70 million for the construction plus rent.

When we asked how much the Cavs are paying in rent now, and would be paying in the future, on an annualized basis, we got some discourse about fluctuations and calculations that basically came across like verbal Three Card Monte.

The conversation ended on pleasantries, even as we sought once again to elicit comment about GCC. The Cavs executive team, we must admit, has a strong zone defense.

Politics as Usual
We have been struck in the discussion over the Q question by the unfortunate Cleveland tendency to personalize issues. Both sides have done this with respect to Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert, who also owns the less than prime online mortgage company Quicken Loans.

Mr. Gilbert is a phenomenally successful businessman, a multi-billionaire. He has been good for the city in several ways. Through his family of companies he has provided thousands of jobs and regularly contributes to various civic causes. Through the same channels, he also donates to a variety of Greater Cleveland nonprofit organizations. And we have it on good authority that without his finger on the scale, Ohio would not have received the most recent infusion of $192 million in federal funds — at least $37 million of which landed in Cuyahoga County — aimed at tearing down our excess of vacant and abandoned homes in our community. (We won't comment on the irony of what role his mortgage company might have played arole in creating some of those vacancies.)

We also take note that by all accounts Mr. Gilbert has been a leader in equal opportunity hiring. By so doing this newcomer has raised the bar to show some of our local leaders what can be done in the arena of equitable hiring and contracting. In this regard he deserves credit for performing instead of cheerleading.

Notwithstanding these feathers in his cap, it should not be forgotten that Mr. Gilbert's most prominent operation — the Cleveland Cavaliers — is a very private business worth a billion dollars. It is a business heavily subsidized by taxpayers. We provide the palace for his operation at a multi-million dollar cost to our municipal coffers and overburdened school system. No one documents the cost of this immense subsidization more accurately or faithfully than our favorite recorder of dastardly deeds, Roldo Bartimole. (Visit here for a sample of his numbers keeping.)

Mr. Gilbert was also given the perpetual right, constitutionally enshrined in state law, to a state monopoly on casino gambling in Cleveland and Cincinnati. In this town that came with certain promises about building a new casino that are likely to remain unfulfilled. Considering the unrequited gift, Mr. Gilbert will always be in our municipal debt as we see it.

Our attitude towards Dan Gilbert should be the same as W. E. B. DuBois' stance regarding Booker T. Washington. To paraphrase a clarion passage from Dr. DuBois in The Souls of Black Folk:

 “So long as [Mr. Gilbert does good], we must hold up his hands and strive with him, rejoicing in his honors and glorifying in the strength of this Joshua called of God and of man to lead the headless host. But so far as [Mr. Gilbert attempts to snooker us], — so long as he, or [our elected officials] does this, — we must unceasingly and firmly oppose them.” [1]

The Obama Connection
Barack Obama is a millionaire. Most of us, I suspect, regardless of our politics, don't think about his wealth. I have personally followed his career ever since I saw an obscure news item back in February 1990 about this guy with the
strange name being the first black person ever elected president of the Harvard Law Review. I read and identified with his marvelous reminiscence, Dreams From My Father when it was published in 1995.

Even after his dozen years of public service he still appears the same person I first encountered in that early memoir, which I learned today was an early and significant source of his wealth, which has become a topic of public debate since last week’s report that he was being paid $400,000 to speak at a Wall St. function.

We won't comment here beyond noting that since the pedestrian Gerald Ford began the practice, Jimmy Carter is the only ex-president not to have cashed in on his status in that manner.

An editorial in today’s New York Times leads with the following quote from Obama’s second book, The Audacity of Hope:
 

“I found myself spending time with people of means — law firm partners and investment bankers, hedge fund managers and venture capitalists,” Senator Barack Obama wrote in his book The Audacity of Hope.“As a rule, they were smart, interesting people. But they reflected, almost uniformly, the perspectives of their class: the top 1 percent or so of the income scale.” 
He wrote in 2006: “I know that as a consequence of my fund-raising I became more like the wealthy donors I met. I spent more and more of my time above the fray, outside the world of immediate hunger, disappointment, fear, irrationality, and frequent hardship of … the people that I’d entered public life to serve.”

Isn't that the crux of the disconnect we see playing out in the Q debate? Dan Gilbert's management team and uber-lawyer Fred Nance, who ostensibly negotiated this deal on behalf of the public, have no insight or connection to the community
Cleveland councilman Mike Polensek cries out to Cavaliers' brass [first row behind railing}: "You made us BEG!" City Council Meeting, April 24, 2017.
on whose behalf GCC is speaking. And most of the public officials from Budish and Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson on down through most members of the county and city councils, have traded in, on this issue at least, whatever notion of public service they may have entered office with. They are apparently more afraid of the downtown deep pockets who can fund their campaigns, or perhaps more ominously, that of an opponent, than they are responsive to the needs of their constituents who sent them downtown as their representatives.

This critique extends to the herd of black leaders — some with real followings, a few with imaginary organizations — who stood and spoke at last week’s disheartening spectacle on the steps of City Hall, with abundant joy about the largesse of the Cavaliers organization. The team offered the equivalent of a mess of pottage in exchange for what should be the birthright of Clevelanders to safe neighborhoods, decent schools, and reasonable life opportunities.

The silver lining in this episode awaits a successful referendum that would overturn the craven decision of elected officials and generate a healthy discussion of community benefits. 

We’d be “All In” for that!




[1] The Souls of Black Folk [1903], Chapter III, "Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others”, last paragraph.

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

The Q deal: "It Ain't Over 'til the Fat Lady Sings"


Proponents of the Q expansion deal may have been high-fiving themselves over the goal they scored last night by flipping Ward 14 councilman Brian Cummins but we think that’s just the end of the first quarter. Cummins’ about-face, which could not possibly have been about the trinkets and beads the Cavs offered [largely, refurbishing two or three dozen basketball courts at city recreation centers and high schools — does that mean varnish and buff?] and their cheerleaders raved about. The last minute maneuvering done to secure what may turn out to be a pivotal 12th vote in favor of the deal largely showed how weak County Executive Armond Budish and Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson have been in representing the public interest. Seldom have last-minute cosmetics been such obvious lipstick on this pig of a deal.

By our calculus, the second quarter starts tonight at Olivet Baptist Church where the Greater Cleveland Congregations will likely have a very large crowd for their strategy session on next steps. And it is pretty plain what the next step will be: an intense citywide petition drive to secure enough signatures from registered Cleveland voters to force a referendum on last night’s vote. (I wouldn’t be surprised if somebody’s choir was singing “Ain’t nobody gon’ turn me around” as part of the meeting.)

Our understanding is that Cleveland’s charter requires ten percent of the number of voters at the last general election to force the referendum, or about six thousand signatures. GCC and its allies, who include SEIU and the Cuyahoga County Progressive Caucus, should have no trouble getting twice that number in far less than the required 30 days. Councilmen and mayoral candidates Zack Reed and Jeff Johnson will no doubt be lending their support as well.

Call it halftime if enough valid signatures are submitted to force a vote of the people. The parties will switch sides, as it were, and the opponents of this deal [not a deal but this deal, as GCC likes to point out] would suddenly seem to have the home court advantage.

Assuming the corporate interests don’t find a way to tilt the court by resorting to the courts [this is where that 12th vote may play a role in arguments over whether “emergency legislation” of this nature is subject to referendum], the parties will fight to persuade the voters in a campaign that will be reminiscent of the Kucinich mayoral recall of 1978, decided in the mayor’s favor by something like, as I recall, a scant 238 votes.

To extend this metaphor a bit, if voters reject this deal, then the 4th Quarter would see some hard bargaining for the first time on this construction deal. But the playing surface would be enlarged, and new players would be recognized.

The Cavs would still get their expanded playhouse, but the price of the ticket will have been adjusted significantly.

At the end of the game, Dan Gilbert and his Greater Cleveland Partners may finally learn that you shouldn’t always play a Zero Sum Game with the public interest.


Now wouldn’t that be a Transformation worth celebrating by an entire region!!!!

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

REPORT: Q ‘Transformation’ deal facing strong headwinds in crunch time

If deal gets through city council, it will likely face referendum in an election year

The most intriguing year in local politics in a generation got even more interesting last night when Cleveland City Council president Kevin Kelley held up final passage of a bill that he and the Jackson administration want to pass as emergency legislation.
Last night Council meeting was to have been the third and final reading on the legislation to expand Quicken Loans Arena for a total public cost of $282 million. But Kelley postponed the vote with the thoroughly implausible explanation that some council members wanted more time to study the issue.
The controversial bill has already had more hearings than most city hall legislation gets. On April 4, Council’s six-member Development, Planning & Sustainability Committee, chaired by Ward 12’s Tony Brancatelli, found all but two of Council’s 17 members spending large parts of the day at the six-hour session.
The bill’s proponents assert that upgrading the publicly owned arena — they like to call it “Transforming the Q” — will enable Cleveland to keep pace in the escalating race among municipalities to retain or attract professional sports teams and various entertainment events. They claim that without the upgrades, the Cavaliers are likely to leave and bookings will wither, leaving the city with an expensive white elephant. The proposed deal extends the Cavs lease with the Q an additional seven years until 2034.
Six council members have announced opposition to the legislation: Zack Reed [Ward 2], T. J. Dow [7], Mike Polensek [8], Kevin Conwell [9], Jeff Johnson [10], and Brian Cummins [14]. Their “no” stance is supported by more organized civic outrage than any issue in recent memory, centered principally on two arguments: [1] the city has much greater needs than improving the arena, and [2] the deal is an inequitable transfer of wealth from poor, neglected neighborhoods and residents to downtown interests that are not only wealthy but already heavily subsidized.
Kelley’s delay in moving the bill final passage to final passage was not totally a surprise. Speculation was rife over the weekend that council leadership was seeking to inoculate the bill from a referendum challenge by securing twelve votes in its favor, meaning it would pass as “emergency legislation” by a 2/3 majority. While some doubt whether a 12-5 vote would achieve that aim — a court challenge by opponents would be all but certain — another reason for the delay may be closer to the truth: the measure may be more in danger of losing support than in gaining that crucial extra vote.
Indeed, the unpopularity of the measure among the electorate is widely acknowledged: the bill stinks to high heaven of privilege, greed, and disdain for neighborhood development. Arguments that speak to the Q’s value as an economic driver fall have little currency to an electorate that has been repeatedly sold the same trickle-down bill of goods even before the Gateway development that built the Indians a new ballpark and brought the Cavs downtown was first proposed in the early ‘90s.
While the Cavaliers and their emissaries have worked diligently behind the scenes to court wary members of both Cuyahoga County Council and Cleveland City Council, they have consistently refused even to acknowledge the concerns of the citizens groups that will likely drive the coming referendum effort. Instead, the team left it to county executive Armond Budish and the respective council presidents to carry their water. 
Budish was almost over the top in championing this deal, while county council president Dan Brady seemed to have his patience taxed by the organized opposition. Cleveland mayor Frank Jackson appeared at the December press conference announcing the deal and lent it his typical stylistically tepid support. Since then, however, he has been conspicuously absent from waving the flag publicly for the deal.
With good reason, no doubt. Jackson is running for an unprecedented fourth term this fall, and he will encounter the most intense opposition of his long political career. He’s been mayor for twelve years, long enough to have accumulated a long list of wounds and a resume with several major shortcomings that stand alongside a litany of accomplishments.
Budish and Brady managed to get the legislation past County Council by an 8-3 vote but Cleveland was always going to be a harder play. Its full time council people are collectively far more seasoned as a political body and they play a much harder brand of ball than their county counterparts. City council members are structurally much closer to the people — city wards average about 23,000 citizens, while county districts are each about four times that size. Moreover, city residents tend to be poorer and would be paying for this deal twice, as both city and county taxpayers].
Most importantly, however, getting this deal through city council would be a supreme challenge because every one of its members is on the ballot this year. Only two of them have not declared or signaled intent to run for re-election — Jeff Johnson is challenging Jackson’s reelection bid for mayor, and Zack Reed is widely expected to join that race as well.
The lobbying will no doubt intensify this week, but it is probably too late. Any council member who switches sides to support this bill would almost certainly be defeated this fall. And while Zack Reed told Scene magazine that Cavs owner Dan Gilbert lobbied him directly, there is no sign of any concession on the horizon that could lead to a compromise.

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