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I think Jim
Rokakis should run for Mayor of
Cleveland.
He
believes he can't win. So why run, he
reasons? That's not a good enough
excuse for not running.
Winning
isn't necessarily the essence of running; the process
of running for
the office could, in and of itself, be its
real
meaning.
Cuyahoga
County Treasurer Rokakis, who I'll
admit has become a personal friend,
offers intelligence and ability that has been
lacking at City Hall for the past
four years and a human quality that has been
missing for generation or more
at 601 Lakeside Avenue.
Clevelanders
at least deserve to hear what Rokakis believes
should be done to improve the city.
Rokakis - known as Jim or Jimmy by friends -
will be cheating himself by
forgoing the challenge. A mayoral race
will test him and,
I believe, open other political
possibilities for him that would remain closed
without this
challenge.
He's
a product of Cleveland who has succeeded
wherever he has gone. He
was a good ward Councilman and now he is an
excellent County Treasurer.
He hasn't simply sat back, collected taxes,
and run a patronage office, as is typical in
county government.
Instead, Rokakis has looked around and found
ways to improve the office,
come up with solutions - what an important
word today's world - to
problems. He's inaugurated new policies.
The County has enjoyed better investment of
its money. In
addition to the Heritage
Home Loan Program, he started the Housing
Enhancement Loan Program
to help more than 30 inner suburbs
(including Lakewood) with more than
$30 million for reinvestment at 3% below going
interest rates. He is now pursuing tax
revenue from the non-profit, but profitable
Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals to
help Cleveland and its schools with new
revenue by dealing with them to make payments
in lieu of taxes on their County
properties. That could produce tens of
millions in new revenues with the Cleveland
schools a chief beneficiary.
What might he do as Mayor? I don't know
and I don't think he knows exactly.
However, he's an innovator and he's not afraid
to hire intelligent people instead of
political hacks who are loyal but possess few
other qualities.
What he does as a candidate would enrich the
next mayoral election. I would count on
a different discussion than we usually
experience. I believe he can educate the
public, even if losing. Cleveland needs
that challenge right now. He will force
candidates running against him to work and
think
harder to keep up.
I certainly won't agree with everything
Rokakis proposes. He'd likely be more
interested in economic development by the city
than I would. I believe the
city doesn't have the
capacity or expertise to be heavily involved
in business development. I particularly
oppose indiscriminate subsidies to private
interests through tax abatements and other
forms of gratuities. My belief is that
government should concentrate on traditional
government functions, from keeping a city
clean to making it safe, providing parks,
recreation and good schools. By
diverting attention from conventional, but
crucial, governmental activity, the city
diverts itself from the street scale services
needed to make the city livable.
While I see Rokakis as more aware of what
needs to be done, he has acted as callously as
other politicians have. The best
illustration was a Council hearing on
Gateway's desire for tax exemption. I
draw from an article I wrote for the Cleveland
Edition headlined, "A Disgraceful
Six-Hour Meeting," to reveal Rokakis at
his worst. The meeting involved whether
Gateway would receive Council's blessing for
tax abatement.
Rokakis, point man for Council President Jay
Westbrook at the time, allowed Gateway
representatives to drone their position for
hours, while the few public protesters were
made to wait. All the
"experts" were allowed as much time
as they wanted.
At about 8 p.m., Rokakis finally called upon
those who opposed an abatement of taxes to
speak. The media and most Council
members had left. As I wrote:
Members
of the public were hurried, talked to
condescendingly and patronizingly by
Westbrook. Rokakis and Westbrook
couldn't resist showing their distaste for
one young West Side man who both knew
personally. He had taken the afternoon
off work to attend, only to be treated
shabbily and condescendingly by the two
Council leaders. Councilwoman Fannie Lewis
cautioned against such treatment, which she
called "sneering."
Lewis
rebuked the pair, later saying of the support
for Gateway's desire (although it had promised
Council earlier it would not seek
abatement): "Stevie Wonder can see
what's going on here."
Rokakis came into office in 1977, at 21 years
of age. He was the youngest Councilman
ever, winning his seat when he was still an
Oberlin student. He had started to run
against a popular Councilman. On the
filing-day two things happened, Rokakis said...
"Elvis Presley died and Ted Sliwa decided
not to run."
For Rokakis, Cleveland has a strong
pull. He didn't want to move to Rocky
River, as he did to get his children in better
schools. Now he's moving back to
Cleveland as his children have grown.
Rokakis served - as did many Council members
of that time - under the yoke of George
Forbes' tightfisted hold on the Council
body. That dictatorial leadership
stunted a whole generation of public
officials, a legacy the city still
suffers. Even so, Rokakis was a problem
solver. His legislation created the
Housing Court. He pushed a strong
anti-smoking ordinance despite opposition from
Forbes and Mayor George Voinovich.
Rokakis fought Forbes with humor. It's a
quality that comes easily, sometimes too
easily, for him. His quick mouth often
requires him to backtrack. In a 1988
profile of him in the Edition, he told
me:
I
love humor. If you aren't willing to laugh
at yourself... to reduce that which
associates with the absurd in this job, you
get sick... I see the pressure in
Council. It makes people sick.
I've always had the ability to laugh at
myself on the job, and more and more, I've
been writing humorous letters to unfair
critics.
Humor
is "therapy," for him, said a
brother.
He used humor to keep Forbes off
balance. When George's brother Zeke was
defeated for Clerk of Courts it reflected on
George's power. In a public reaction,
Rokakis quipped to the Plain Dealer,
"He ain't heavy, he's my brother,"
of Forbes' loss.
Forbes later called him into his office and
told him that his quip had hurt.
"Oh, George, you know me. I
couldn't help myself. I just couldn't
resist," Rokakis responded. Forbes,
Rokakis laughed, thanked him for this
"apology."
Another time, Rokakis got caught spreading
rumors that Forbes was getting $1 million to
help former Cleveland Electric Illuminating
company take over the city's municipal light
system. Forbes called him in to admonish
him for spreading false information.
Rokakis contritely apologized, and then, with
typical sharp tongue, Rokakis asked Forbes,
"What did you get?" Telling
the story, Rokakis admits he was wrong, allows
a few seconds to
pass and asks me, "Probably too low,
huh?"
Rokakis wants to run. The polls tell him
he can't win. He wants to run in
part
because he sees being mayor as proof of his
intelligence and ability in contrast to others
who have
achieved the office. I recently asked
him about his personal desire to be mayor and tried
to describe the
nature of the desire in a word. He
offered the proper word,
"validation."
Rokakis, I think, believes he would be the
right person to lead Cleveland now but he
fears that the journey will be trying and the
result not triumphant.
Run, Jimmy, run. What else do you have
to do as you reach your 50th year?
You'll be better and we'll be better for the
effort.
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