NOTE: we had hoped to offer a short video of Headen similar to the opportunity provided David Ali, but were thwarted by technical issues.
• • •
Miesha
Headen is both a policy wonk and a serious politician. She is an auditor, trained
to follow and account for the money. She likes to analyze an issue or problem,
formulate a plan to deal with it, implement the solution, and then reassess. This is a process she follows so invariably that it's become part of her character. Who she is is what she does. What she does is who she is. WYSIWYG. [1]
So my
first questions to her when we sat down over coffee recently were put
simultaneously: when did she decide to run for mayor of Richmond Heights, and
why. The first question gave her more pause, because she could not pinpoint a
defining moment. In struggling to answer the "when", out tumbled all the "whys".
The
Headens moved to Richmond Heights in 2002. They both had grown up locally in
stable households, gone away to school [Columbia for her; Williams College,
Penn Law, and London School of Economics for him] before returning home to
northeast Ohio and planting new roots.
Like
many professional couples, they were impressed by the city’s solid housing
stock, and an apparent safe, open and tranquil character that augured well for
starting and raising a family that now includes two boys, ages 9 and 6.
Over
time, as she was acquiring a master’s degree in finance from Ursuline College [with a concentration in
socially responsible leadership], Headen’s auditing eye began to detect some
red flags in her sleepy suburban community. These included a succession of
failed school levies [the number would grow to seven before one finally
passed]; a good old-boy network of long-term residents [albeit one with a few
women members, perhaps grand-mothered in]; questionable public finance
decisions, and changing city demographics to which elected officials and others
of influence seemed ignorant or indifferent, if not hostile. And all of this
seemed strangely blanketed in the community that comforted itself as being “The
City with the Forward Look”.
Off the sidelines and into the fray
Headen
decided in 2009 to become part of the solution. In straightforward fashion, she
ran for an at large seat on city council. She won [for how, see here]
and pretty quickly began to make waves that afflicted the comfort of the city’s
entrenched and shadowy governing circle. She started a blog, aptly named Absolutely At-Large, began digging
into the city’s finances and uncovering its loose and extravagant financial
practices.
Her
auditing skills paid off: she discovered that the city had not completed a bank
reconciliation of the city’s books in at least ten years. This led to the
state’s auditors coming in to examine the city’s books, and to the startling
discovery that the city’s finance director had made a double-booking error in
excess of a quarter-million dollars. [She later resigned under pressure.]
At
Headen’s insistence, the city now acknowledges on its website the nearly forty
land parcels the city has acquired under the Ursu administration. She is
especially upset with what she sees as Ursu’s pet project, the purchase and
maintenance of Greenwood Farms.
Headen’s
energy seems to have inspired a number of other Richmond Heights residents to
become more engaged in the civic process. A school board that housed a viper’s
nest of socially and financially irresponsible members has been largely swept
clean and replaced with a more thoughtful and less hysterical majority. And
city council itself is flexing, in both in membership and style, towards a new
openness. At a League of Women Voters candidate forum earlier this month, all
four council candidates, including the incumbent Donald O’Toole, affirmatively
responded to the idea of “streaming video of all public meetings so residents
could be better informed”.
Tension surfaces as allegations fly
Headen's insistence on financial responsibility and accountability, and transparency,
while producing results, have understandably not endeared her to all of her
colleagues in city government or her rivals in this year’s mayoral contest. It
is probably fair to say that she is the least favorite opponent of each of the
other three candidates. The mayor, whom she regularly challenges on policy
matters, has accused Headen of “smearing other candidates.”
Another
candidate, Dave Ali, grows almost apoplectic when discussing Headen, calling
her “racist” and saying, in reference to a June powwow of some black elected
officials, that she formed a group to “intimidate” him into dropping out of the
mayor’s race.
Headen
and others say that the meeting Ali cites was an exploratory meeting designed
to get to know Ali and assess his viability as a potential challenger to the
six-term incumbent.[2]
When it became apparent in their view in the first ten minutes of the meeting
that the scope of the job was not a fit for Ali’s skill set [i.e., he was in
their view, grossly unqualified to be mayor], they encouraged him to run for
city council. He refused and filed his mayoral petitions as soon as the law
allowed.
Speaking
of law, what really frosted Ali were Headen’s allegations that he and Ursu are
in cahoots over a potentially lucrative deal involving public land and public
grants. [You can read about this here,
here,
and here.]
Headen may have the last word on this however, as she posted this
response from the Ohio Ethics Commission on Monday. As of yesterday, the
State Auditor’s Special Audit Task Force had forwarded Headen’s complaint about
the land deal to both the State Auditor’s Northeast audit region and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation for further consideration.
Headen looks ahead
Personal
questions and conflict of interest allegations tend to overshadow the question
of what Headen would do as mayor, and the questions posed at the beginning of
our conversation. She says that she’s running to continue to “change the
culture” of city government, to make it more accountable, transparent,
efficient and open. She wants to modernize the city’s commercial districts,
which she says are “crumbling”, and beef up enforcement of the city’s occupancy
codes to deal with absentee landlords of both commercial and residential
properties. She staunchly supports the reinstitution of various city services,
including such recreational facilities as the city swimming pool and ball
fields, which she notes are important to attracting home buying families.
Headen
said there is an “urgency for new leadership” to accomplish these goals and
others. It was only in mid-summer, after the meeting with Ali and her assessment
of the other candidates, that she decided, in consultation with many constituents,
that she was best equipped to address that urgency.
Headen
sees herself as qualified by profession, study, and strength of character to
help “lead Richmond Heights into the 21st century”. She promises to
recruit an “expert team” that includes many current Richmond Heights residents
and reflects more closely the diversity that already exists.
She
notes that in a city that is 57% female and that has become home to thousands
of new residents since 2000, all fifteen of Ursu’s appointments to the vital
governing boards — Planning, Civil Service, and Zoning and Appeals — are males
who have lived in Richmond Heights for decades.
Headen sees bright possibilities for her city. Ursu, she
says, “no longer sees a better world. … I want to make Richmond Heights a model
community. I would love to be the community that shows how to get
it right!”
[1]
What You See Is What You Get [“Wizzy-Wig”]
[2]
This meeting included four members of the Board of Education and councilman
Russell Johnson, in addition to Headen. Councilwoman Eloise Henry, who had
already declared that she was running against Ursu, was not invited and did not
attend. Although four school board members were in attendance, no sunshine laws
were violated because school business was not discussed, according to those
board members with whom we have spoken.
2 comments:
Your disclosure says it all. Thanks.
Not as much as your anonymity.
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