Posts Tagged Zach Reed
Stink, Stink, Stink from Cleveland City Hall
Posted by Roldo Bartimole in Economic Development, Politicians on May 18, 2010
May 18, 2010… I covered Cleveland City Hall for decades and I don’t remember two important City Council votes in close time proximity ever not carrying more than a two-thirds majority.
You might have dissenters but usually they remain a small minority.
The large vote against should be a signal to take another good look.
This seems a strong rebuke to City Hall leadership. It means almost a majority of the Council couldn’t swallow this deal.
You usually don’t find the kind of opposition that these measures have been gaining in Council. It is a warning sign that there is little confidence in Mayor Frank Jackson on some very important matters.
It also shows weak Council and Mayor leadership on such important deals when many – possibly one short of a turndown since a member was absent – Council members can’t swallow what’s put before them.
The two votes I’m talking about are first, legislation to spend $86 million to automate billing at the Cleveland water department and second, a deal to give a company from China a 10 year lock on the purchase of new-technology lighting (LED) for streets and other uses. And that’s without a competitive bid. The LED deal could involve the expenditure of tens of millions of dollars for new street and other public lighting. It’s no small matter.
Neither piece of legislation could get a two-thirds vote. With a two-thirds vote the legislation could take effect immediately with the mayor’s signature. Without such a vote the legislation must be addressed three times by Council.
Yesterday, the Finance Committee of Council alone– where all legislation must be heard – couldn’t come up with the needed votes despite a meeting that went on, I was told, from 2 p. m to 10:30 p. m. The measure still would have to go to a full Council meeting for a final vote.
This light bulb controversy at Cleveland city hall has a very distasteful smell. It smells of rank favoritism. Maybe worse. And the questions are not being adequately answered for the members seeking better information.
I just can’t see a 10-year contract being handled this way.
The legal pass given to this legislation by Law Director Robert Triozzi itself seems a decision based on following orders from above. It gives the answer the Mayor wants.
The basis is that only this company ALONE can fulfill the legislative requirements. That sounds so bullshit. Let’s be real about this.
I’m told by one Council member that the legislation by-passed other Council committees such as the Utilities, Economic Development and Legislation. In other words this had the stamp of a Rush Job. The membership of the Finance Committee typically has only the strongest supporters of the Council President, in this case, Marty Sweeney. Sweeney and Mayor Frank Jackson are politically allied. That they couldn’t put together enough votes for passage suggests caution.
The China deal supposedly will bring the Chinese company, Sunpu-Opto, to Cleveland with its U. S. headquarters and 350 jobs here including production facilities. The company world headquarters is in Ningbo, China and its web site only lists an email address for the U.S.
What makes this China deal smell is the suspension of the usual safeguard against deals that could be suspect or worse, All matters of $50,000 or more cost – no shabby figure – are to go out for public bid. In other words, you don’t go to a single supplier and make a deal. You offer the opportunity to as many as possible to fulfill the need. It’s called competition. It’s supposed to get you the best offer.
Another aspect that should (and has) raised some suspicion is the relationship of Peter Tien, a New Jersey businessman, who had a relationship with the City of Cleveland involving a trash-to-energy plant for Cleveland.
It appears that Tien will be a principal in Sunpu-Opto. How did that happen? And is it an obvious conflict of interest?
Mark Gillispie of The Plain Dealer reported that Tien would be a part owner of Sunpu-Opto.
Here’s what he wrote:
“Tien told council members May 3 that he had served as a ‘friend’ to the city and to Sunpu-Opto when he introduced city Public Power Commissioner Ivan Henderson to officials from the Chinese company last August. The introduction occurred while Henderson and Tien traveled to Japan and China to look at gasification plants that convert trash to energy.”
Gillispie also reported that veteran Councilman Jay Westbrook and usually an ally of Sweeney asked, “There is an expectation that they have clean hands in the advice they’re giving. If they have a business interest or friendship connection, that’s something that needs to be known fully up front.” Messages left with Tien on Friday were not returned, Gillispie wrote.
This doesn’t give me much confidence in the administration’s position. Further, I have little confidence in the Sweeney regime being forthright enough to demand answers. There are too many lazy Council members.
Westbrook voted against the legislation in Finance on Monday, as did Dona Brady, Zach Reed, Brian Cummins, T. J. Dow, Mike Polensek, Kevin Conwell and Jeff Johnson. That means eight of 19 voted against. Anthony Brancatelli was at a Leadership Cleveland meeting and didn’t vote.
Gillispie also put together an extensive and informative look at the deal in Monday’s newspaper. It can be found here:
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2010/05/cleveland_council_considers_co.html
The PD Editorial Board wasn’t buying it either. In an editorial it questioned the deal:
“But Jackson and his administration need to make a far better case than their proposed partner can actually do the job as touted, and that the deal is so different from all others than it warrants tossing aside City Hall’s standard bidding process – procedures that protect the city and its resident from nasty surprises.”
Unfortunately, the editorial’s tone wasn’t powerful enough. It should be calling for an investigation by the proper authorities. FBI maybe.
Brent Larkin also questioned Jackson’s decision on the no-bid contract here:
http://www.cleveland.com/opinion/index.ssf/2010/05/mayor_jacksons_critics_fear_ci.html
Larkin too goes at it a bit gingerly.
He seems to rely on Jackson’s emissaries.
Larkin gives too much credit to Jackson’s salesman Chris Warren. Warren, a former Mike White loyalist, Larkin says, “knows what he’s doing.” But that doesn’t mean at all that he’s doing what’s good for the city and not just his bosses. He’s been a loyal water-carried before.
In this case, competition is even of more importance because we have the General Electric Company, which has some 700 employees located here, and does similar work right in our backyard in East Cleveland’s Nela Park. GE had its lawyers at the Council meeting. A suit is likely if this goes through.
But it would be good if Council reconvened and knocked this deal down.
MMPI Playing with Cleveland, Cuyahoga County
Posted by Roldo Bartimole in Economic Development, Politicians on November 17, 2009
November 17, 2009… I talked with MMPI’s Mark Falanga after a three-hour Council briefing to ask a simple question. Did MMPI expect to build a private medical mart on public land at no cost?
MMPI’s Falanga told Council that among a number of possibilities examined, MMPI wanted to build its Medical Mart on the Mall area between City Hall and the County Courthouse overlooking Lake Erie. Well, who wouldn’t, especially for nothing.
Falanga kept saying that the County was paying the City of Cleveland $20 million, as if that answered my question. The $20 million was for convention center and public auditorium. The latter Falanga has tossed out as useless or worse.
The site originally expected to house MMPI’s Medical Mart was on private land that had to be purchased. MMPI failed to make a deal.
I asked Falanga that since MMPI was rejecting the purchase of private land at St. Clair and Ontario Avenues was he now proposing to build it on private government land, the Mall, at no cost. He told Council members that the owners wanted $24 million, a budget breaker, for the St. Clair site.
But he wouldn’t answer my question. He kept dodging it by referring to the $20 million deal between the county and city.
A cost for the city land hardly got mentioned by city officials.
Not until late in the three-hour meeting did a Council member address the question of payment for the site Falanga proposed for the Medical Mart. Zach Reed asked Falanga, “Are you going to pay for Mall D?” That’s what Falanga called the site where he wants to build. I’ve never heard of Mall D. It’s really Mall C and the overhang down toward the railroad tracks.
He told Reed that it was included, apparently referring to the $20 million price tag agreed to by the city and county. Reed, unfortunately, dropped it there.
Since he was expecting to pay $17 million – an estimate set by the Greater Cleveland Partnership – for the Ontario/St. Clair site, what was he going to pay for the city’s land, I continued to ask.
Falanga did the fandango.
Here he was bald-facedly expecting me to believe that he shouldn’t have to pay for a site overlooking the lake because he couldn’t – or wouldn’t – deal for a site overlooking St. Clair and the side of the Marriott hotel.
Falanga – who one Councilman credited with a good poker face – gave me the poker face. He said that the County was paying the city $20 million for the convention center, indicating that that covered the price where his business was going to go.
Apparently, that’s what MMPI has wiggled itself into and seems to be making progress convincing City Council and the Frank Jackson administration.
MMPI told Council that it couldn’t deal with land owners at St. Clair and Ontario. They were asking too high a price. These properties were needed to build the medical mart as part of the deal for a new convention center. Falanga said that the price of $17 million was too much. Two representatives of the owners at the meeting said after that MMPI had not negotiated with the owners. One said MMPI had made two telephone calls to his client. Another said MMPI offered $800,000 to one parcel owner and the owner countered with $6 million. But there was no dickering. No counter offer. They just walked away.
Council members were worried about the future use of Public Hall. Three, unfortunately, pressed County Administrator Jim McCafferty to press the County Commissioners to extend the sale tax increase voted to fund this project.
Council members Brian Cummins, Mike Polensek and Matt Zone asked that the quarter-percent sale tax increase be extended five more years beyond the 20 years the Commissioners voted. That would bring in more than $100 million. McCafferty said that the Commissioners had extended themselves as far as they would on the sales tax.
The idea that Cleveland would allow a private business to build a Medical Mart on public land at no cost and violate the Group Plan for government buildings going back to the start of the last Century attest to how corrupting and indifferent our governing bodies have become.
It’s likely unthinkable that any city administration would even consider allowing a private business to occupy that Mall space.
This is what Harper’s Weekly said of the Cleveland plan back in 1904:
“Probably no city in the country, outside the capital, has undertaken the systematic development of public architecture and parkage (parks) on so splendid a scale as has the city of Cleveland…. (The creation of the Group Plan Commission is) the most significant forward step in the matter of municipal art taken in America. It is comparable to the designs of Napoleon III, who remade Paris… or to the prescience of Jefferson, who called to the aid of the new government a distinguished architect in the laying out of the national capital on its present scale… Here is a city among the most radical in its democratic tendencies of any in the country courageously authorizing the expenditure of from ten to fifteen million in the development of an idea. It suggests a new conception of the municipality.”
And we’d ruin that for a so-called medical mart.