Archive for June, 2009

Wait Just a Minute – Plain Dealer – What’s Going On Here?

June 27, 2009…  The Plain Dealer, hot and heavy on corruption, today buries the fact that a man the paper says could replace Jimmy Dimora has been indicted on bribery charges and theft-in-office, has relatives in political jobs, and has business relations he won’t talk about.

Isn’t that a recipe for a continuation of what we’ve been seeing the FBI spend countless our tax dollars trying to unravel here? Isn’t that the fodder of headline after headline on the Plain Dealer’s front page?

The potential replacement for Dimora as Cuyahoga County Democratic Party head may be, according to the Plain Dealer, Thomas Day Jr., clerk of courts in Bedford.

Yes, the charges of bribery and theft-in-office against Day were dismissed by Judge John Angellota. But that doesn’t hold much water with me. A grand jury found cause but a judge didn’t agree.

In addition, late in Mark Gillispie’s otherwise very comprehensive piece, we’re told that Day has ownership interests in a printing company and a consulting firm with with County Prosecutor Bill Mason, Victory Communications Inc., which does work on political campaigns.

County Prosecutor Mason also conveniently refused to talk about these matters.

And the PD allowed him to remain silent.

You may have notice that in the blazing corruption exposes in Cuyahoga County, the County Prosecutor – Bill “I’m Power Hungry” Mason – hasn’t indicted anyone. Under his nose but no smell of corruption.

Apparently, the County Prosecutor’s office finds everybody holding office in Cuyahoga County is Snow White clean.

The PD has been on a rampage – rightly so – about cozy deals among County officeholders. Yet, in this piece, all the signs of the same pattern of political dealing are buried in a long article. Why?

“Friends of William D. Mason, the county prosecutor’s campaign organization, paid Cleveland-based Qwestcom Graphics $141,000 last year. The county party spent $105,000 with Qwestcom in 2008,” the PD reports.

But what I’d call serious news is buried on the run-over page 33 paragraphs and 36 inches of type into the story. How many people read that far? Few, I’d say.

The burial in the context of such heavy coverage of County corruption is inexplicable to me.

“Day,” the PD reports, “declined to discuss his ownership stake in Qwestcom or in Victory Communication Inc., the company he incorporated in 2002 and owns with Mason.”

Well, that’s convenient. Why won’t they talk about it?

Here the PD seems to give a boost to Day’s ascendency but lets him plead the Fifth Amendment? Again why?

I would have thought the lead of this kind of story would go something like this:

Democrats may choose a new party chairman who has been indicted on bribery and theft charges and has business connections with County Prosecutor Bill Mason. He also has a load of relatives in County jobs, just the problem that has been discovered in Plain Dealer exposes in recent days.

The big question is my mind is why Gillispie wrote the piece as he did and whether he was instructed to bury his lead way down in an unusually long story.

Maybe the paper’s Reader Representative Ted Diadiun will let us know the inside scoop on this.

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How Hypocritical Can Sam Miller Get Before We Laugh Him Out of Town?

June 26, 2009… Hypocrisy – thy name is Sam Miller.

Forest City Enterprises Co-chairman and Treasurer Sam Miller says he’s willing to donate to the Cleveland libraries if budget cuts are made by the State of Ohio. Sam says that he will donate to keep libraries in poor areas open if the cuts are made.

Generous Sam.

He made that statement to The Plain Dealer as reported in its piece on protests against state budget cuts at the downtown public library.

The Plain Dealer the same day also reported on its front page about citizens attempting to lower their property taxes by lowering the value of the property as homes lose value.

Lowering the value of property hurts schools and libraries. It also takes from Cuyahoga County and the City of Cleveland by lowering revenue from property taxes.

Guess who is a champion of seeking (and getting) property tax reductions?

Well, of course, Sam Miller.

In other words, Sam takes dollars away from libraries and schools but in a pinch he’s willing to donate. Pennies, that is.

City libraries get 7.96 percent of collected property taxes. Cleveland schools get 55.13 of property taxes.

So every time Sam gets a reduction in taxes, revenues fall by those above percentages for the libraries and schools.

Does he really care?

No, he doesn’t. Sam has been a major downtown property owner who consistently applied to lower the taxable value of his properties. That’s good ole Sam. Not so generous.

Back in 1994 – and other times through the years – I’ve written that Forest City Enterprises – of which Sam is a top executive and shareholder – has sought large decreases in property taxes.

I reported tax reductions given for Tower City in 1990, 1991, 1992 and 1993. Tower City is owned by Forest City.

They were hefty reductions, too.

In 1990, tax reductions awarded to Sam and his boys were as follows: Reductions in 1990 of 21 percent; in 1991 of 20 percent, 1993 of 17.3 percent; 1993 of 12.4 percent. It’s a wonder they paid any taxes.

The reductions in value for those years totaled $160 million. Assessed value would be 35 percent of market value. The money value of the taxes was $56 million, 35 percent of $160 million. I guess Sam could have been a bit generous but he wasn’t.

Indeed, the Cleveland Teachers Union at the time asked Tower City, Gateway, National City Bank and Dick Jacobs at Key Center to forgo their tax abatements for one year because of the funding crisis of that time. One year!

Neither Sam nor any of the others found a charitable bone for the Cleveland schools. The answer was “NO.” Generosity can go just so far. And that ain’t very far for these guys.

At the time, of course, our civic cheerleaders were pounding home the message that downtown Cleveland was booming. Comeback City, they claimed.

The only boom – aside from publicly funded and non-taxed private ventures as Gateway – was the noise out of Sam’s office asking for tax reductions.

Generous Sam. He knows how to do PR and the PD knows how to report it without context. Context isn’t taught at the PD.

At the time Sam was asking for these reductions, the PD reported some balderdash under this headline: “Tower City Could Add Two Anchors to Complex.” The paper quoted Al Ratner, Forest City chairman, saying that “… he hopes to add two department stores to the Tower City Complex soon.” Yeah, empty ones. Such amusing claims of progress. And at the same time asking for tax reductions because business was bad.

I’ll say one thing about Sam and the Ratners. They sure know how to juggle.

The Pee Dee added that Ratner said, “Gateway has been a very big impetus for this project.”

Should we all laugh loudly now?

Miller at the time said the real estate industry in Cleveland was “well on its way back to once again becoming the darling of the investment community.”

My response at the time was: “Ho, ho, ho.” It hasn’t changed.

Miller and the Ratners also arm-twisted City Council (not hard) to give a tax abatement of 100 percent for 20 years for the Ritz-Carlton Hotel at Tower City. The hotel had already been planned but they saw that Council gave Dick Jacobs a $120-million tax abatement for the Society Center (now Key) and Marriott Hotel.

So they wanted to escape paying property taxes, too. Generosity? No. Rapacity? Yes.

It’s a game these guys play. Let’s shift our taxes to others. It adds to our profits.

I wonder how much a role tax abatement for housing downtown has played in the foreclosure issue as the city’s neighborhoods empty out. Those with more money, however, can get new housing without having to pay taxes. The revenue resources of the city decline.

Years ago Robert Reich, then Secretary of Labor, said, “Bidding wars that are initiated and conducted by companies, or joined in by states or localities, can have a pernicious effect with regard to undermining the abilities of states and locales to use their resources to educate and develop the human capital of their workforces.”

He went on to say, “These tax abatement, these subsides, can be the most insidious form or corporate welfare… (that) put competitors at a competitive disadvantage if they do not get the same largess, because they rob local jurisdictions and states of the resources that they otherwise might have to invest in people, in infrastructure, and because they are often, in the classic sense of the term, zero-sum games in which jobs are simply moved from one place to another, and there is not a net improvement in job growth or the quality of jobs.”

He could make the speech in Cleveland and talk about Sam any day for the last 40 years or more.

The truth is Sam Miller isn’t a philanthropist. He’s a greedy businessman.

Sam, we don’t need your stinkin’ donations. Just pay your rightful taxes.

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