Posts Tagged police
Casinos Invite ‘Corrosive Influences” says Columbus Dispatch
Posted by Roldo Bartimole in Economic Development, Media on September 27, 2009
September 27, 2009… As The Plain Dealer propagandizes for the Casino industry, the Columbus Dispatch editorially says, “No Thanks!”
At the same time, the Pee Dee has a cartoon front-page heralding a poll saying Ohioans want the casinos.
The Dispatch said that casinos COST a community $3 for every $1 of benefit.
In a Sunday editorial the Columbus Dispatch reminded voters that allowing casinos into their communities invites “corrosive influences.”
The Dispatch noted that casinos would pour money into buying the allegiance of state lawmakers with campaign contributions.
The paper also cites the fact that the Ohio Fraternal Order of Police, which is backing Issue 3, has been promised 2 percent of receipts by the casinos for “police training,” suggesting a payoff.
The paper also has reported that the casinos have promised annual contributions to Experience Columbus – the city’s convention bureau.
Experience Columbus has endorsed the casinos.
The suggestion is that the city’s convention center has been bought off by the casino, which will have a monopoly in Columbus as it would in Cleveland if Issue 3 passes.
In Cleveland, Positively Cleveland – this city’s convention bureau – has endorsed casinos.
Could Cleveland and Cuyahoga County use more “corrosive influences” in this political life? I don’t think so.
Here’s a link to the Dispatch’s editorial: http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/editorials/stories/2009/09/27/nothanx.ART_ART_09-27-09_G4_BPF68HU.html?sid=101
Vote NO and protect your pocketbook and that of Cleveland.
Who Let the Vultures In? Woof, Woof
Posted by Roldo Bartimole in Economic Development, Media on August 20, 2009
Here’s how honest Jeff Jacobs is.
Back in the late 1980s when his dad, Dick Jacobs, was taking millions in subsidies thanks to George and George, I learned that Jeff wanted to take over Lakeview Terrace, a public housing project overlooking Lake Erie and the Cuyahoga River. It fit his Flats plans.
I called one of his aides, James Rusnov, and asked about Jacobs’s interest in the property to expand his Flats developments. Yes, I was told.
A minute later I called Jeff Jacobs. Ah, he denied it.
“We’re neighbors,” Jacobs, the vulture, said coyly.
Nothing’s going on “officially or unofficially,” said Jacobs. A lie.
Lakeview Terrace is a low income housing project was once called “one of the best public housing projects in the country” and “a milestone in American architecture.” Probably not anymore. But strategically located and “notable” for its adaptation of site, according to Eric Johannesen’s “Cleveland architecture – 1876-1976.”
It sits on a sloping area between Lake Erie and the Detroit-Superior bridge to downtown.
It was, as I reported, a stone’s throw from the Flats where Jeff Jacobs had been developing nightclubs and planned a hotel (familiar?) and other recreational facilities (familiar?)
As I said then, “It’s prime land and sitting on it are poor people. What a shame.”
But what can one expect from the grasping DNA of the Jacobses.
As I wrote back in 1988, Jacobs likely believed he had a “leg up” on the deal. He had friends in convention places.
“The law firm of Jim Carney, named by Forbes to the Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA), represents daddy Jacobs in legal matters pertaining to the Galleria. CMHA controls Lakeview. And when the city leased two prime lots downtown to Daddy Jacobs, he then chose System Parking to operate the lots for parking with Systems represented by Forbes’s law firm on some matters. Carney and Forbes also are business partners,” I wrote in Point of View, my newsletter. It’s Vol. 20, No. 11 at the library if you want the whole disgusting article.
See how the links go. “Friends” in corruption of public decisions.
There’s so much to say.
Of course, the plan suggests that the Jacobs’ casino (let’s not be coy about in whose interest it is) will be on property proposed for the Med Mart & Convention Center.
That means on public land.
Already it has been scheduled for tax exemption. What, ask a Jacobs to pay property taxes? Are you mad?
The Plain Dealer quotes Jacobs as this humorous guy thinking about the city and its people. Honesty in the Pee Dee would be like sinfulness in heaven.
Here’s the Pee Dee: “’A dollar-a-year gaming czar. How’s that?’ a laughing Jacobs asked, adding that he could personally introduce local leaders to gambling company executive who would love an opportunity to develop an Ohio casino with little nearby competition.”
And, “I have no economic agenda here.”
“I have an interest in continuing what I have been doing for downtown Cleveland for 25 years and that is to help make it a better place,” the Pee Dee quotes Jacobs saying. Oh, my. Isn’t that wonderful.
They write it straight-faced. Such naiveté. Or is it just inbred dishonesty, no longer even intentional.
The Pee Dee uses a rendering sent out by Jacobs in a press release. Of course, it looks wonderful. Economic development reaches out from the page.
And the Pee Dee conveniently places another piece of propaganda announcing the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Association endorsement favoring a change the Ohio Constitution to allow casinos. It is placed right next to the Jacobs’ rendering of a hotel and casino. Helpful, no?
How compliant of the Pee Dee. Little news but lots of propaganda. Free!
Well, Mayor Frank Jackson, did you know that when you sold the old Convention Center property and opened up the Mall for a pittance that you were also giving over property for a casino and hotel, all on public property, all tax free?
Either the Pee Dee knew what it was doing or you were too dumb to protect the citizens of Cleveland. Editors, where are your ethics? Why not some critical comments?
We can also thank the contemptible Tim Hagan. One sees his hand in this move with his slimy workings for MMPI, the Chicago firm of his Kennedy family, now in charge of the development of the Medical Mart.
Medical Mart? Or Casino Mart?
Maybe there will be a floor at the Med Mart for the treatment of the gamblers gone mad. That might be at least amusing to taxpayers now shelling out a $1 billion or more for the project via the 40 year sales tax increase given us by Hagan and Jimmy Dimora.
There will be more as this debacle blooms.