Have County Commissioners Tim Hagan and
Jimmy Dimora jeopardized the Cuyahoga County’s future financial
viability?
Two Commissioners – Tim Hagan and Jimmy
Dimora – in July raised the sales t
ax
a quarter-percent to 7.75 from 7.50%. It is the highest sales
tax assessed in Ohio. Peter Lawson Jones, the third
Commissioner, voted against the measure.
The increase – estimated to raise $42
million annually for 20 years – would be used to attract a
Medical Mart by insuring public funds for a new convention
center.
The County legally could raise the sales
tax another quarter percent without going to a citizen vote.
Moreover, it might have to do this. The County has other major
building projects on its agenda.
The County’s mid-2007 budget report
notes...
“Currently the County has a total of
$449.6 million of active capital projects and capital
improvement needs. This total estimate includes ongoing
various improvements as well as major projects such as the
Youth Intervention Center, Juvenile Court Complex and the
County Administration Building. The planned outlay for the
Exhibition (Convention) Center project is not included in
these numbers. The majority of the projects will be financed
with future general obligation bonds.”
On major construction projects as the
County Administration building and the juvenile court and jail
complex original estimates of cost are usually unreliable. Often
the estimates are way below the eventual cost. The Justice
Center, if memory serves me correctly, came in at double or more
the estimated cost. Of course, the same was true at Gateway.
The Convention Center, of course, is
supposed to be covered by the increased sales tax. It’s expected
to raise $42 million a year for 20 years. That’s $840 million
total for its cost. That suggests a figure double the expected
construction cost of the center.
There apparently is concern that the
County cannot meet these obligations.
The County would use its inside millage of
1.45 mills of the property tax for funding. Presently .74
of the 1.45 is used to pay debt. The rest, .71 mills, goes
for general fund purposes. Using more for debt would leave
less for general operations. The inside millage of 1.45
mills is set and does not increase.
Though the County has reduced employment
with its 2001 buyouts, the full-time employment has been
creeping back up yearly since 2004. By 2008, the County
will have jumped by 782 full-time employees over the number of
full-time employees in 2003.
I picked up chatter this week that “the
fourth floor” – meaning the County Commissioners and their staff
– now considers it possible that it will not be able to pursue
construction of the new County Administration building at East
9th and Euclid.
Added to all this is the foreclosure
problem and what it might mean to County revenues. The New
York Times Business page on Sunday zeroed in on Maple
Heights and Cuyahoga County in a foreclosure article. The
article, “Can the Mortgage Crisis Swallow a Town,” reports...
“In terms of the subprime mortgage
meltdown, Ohio has been among the hardest-hit states,
according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.”
It goes on: “In Cuyahoga County, which
includes Cleveland and its surrounding suburbs, roughly 30
percent of subprime mortgages are either delinquent or in
foreclosure,” says Jim Rokakis, the county treasurer.”
This situation merely adds to a
money-crunch with $800 million in the new tax over the next 20
years dedicated for the convention center.
The question does arise... How does
the County expect to pay off bonds indebtedness beyond the
convention center for the normal capital improvements and
juvenile facilities and a new administration building.
Commissioners Hagan and Dimora threw
caution to the wind in voting quickly for the tax and its use
for a convention center.
The collection of the quarter-percent tax
increase will go into the general fund of the County. The
Commissioners have said it will be dedicated to pay off bonds
for the convention center. However, by allocating it to
its general fund, a guarantee is absent.
They did this, according to a budget
official of the County, for two reasons.
One, it allowed for quick action. This suggests why there
are so few answers for the public about the Medical Mart and a
Convention Center site, its cost and needs. The cart is
before the horse, or in this case, maybe before the donkey.
Two, and most important, it dodged a vote
by the public. A vote would have been necessary if the
money were specifically allocated for the convention center.
The commissioners and staff, aided by the
consultation of two law firms – Squire, Sanders & Dempsey, and
Climaco, Leftkowitz & Peca – made the decision, according to the
County official. The two law firms have conflicts of
interest. Squire-Sanders’ regional managing partner Fred
Nance will head the all-important site selection committee.
The Greater Cleveland Partnership (GCP) named him to the task
last week.
The Climaco firm has a long-time political
association with Hagan. It raises questions of
self-interest, particularly with Nance taking a role in deciding
the site of the project.
However, another official has disputed the
County’s hiring of the two firms. County Administrator
Dennis Madden says that the County didn’t pay either law firm.
He said that GCP must have paid. However, GCP’s
representative says she has no knowledge that GCP paid.
More likely, the two firms gave advice with the expectation that
they would be chosen as bond counsels when the bonds were let.
That’s lucrative business for the law firms.
A County budget official said that the
bond-rating firms, which help determine the rate of interest the
County would pay on bonded indebtedness, were not consulted on
the raised tax for a convention center. Presently, the
County’s bond rating is fine.
This raises the question, however, whether
this quick action might not elevate questions in the minds of
bond raters as to the County’s future ability to pay off debt.
A rise in the interest rate would cost the County millions or
tens of millions of extra dollars for such heavy borrowing.
The evidence of the GCP’s heavy
involvement is troublesome.
The GCP and County have totally ignored
the long-standing Cleveland-Cuyahoga Convention Facilities
Authority (CFA), created by state legislation in 2004 that
allowed the County to establish the CFA to determine the need
and financing of a new convention center here.
“The CFA will work to retain and create
jobs, generate tax revenue and enhance the image of Cleveland
and Northeast Ohio by building and operating a competitive
convention center in downtown Cleveland,” says the CFA
website.
What’s the status of the CFA today? Good
question.
Only two of five members returned my phone
calls. One reported he has been replaced on the board. Chairman
Bill Reidy didn’t return a call.
The CFA was given some $400,000 a year by
the County before suspending its activity.
The CFA’s lack of success in spurring any
public interest in paying for a convention center apparently
panicked the city’s elite. It has been the corporate desire for
years for a publicly financed new convention center.
Another direction was needed with the
CFA’s failures.
The plan was then developed to invent the
need for a Medical Mart as a reason for building a costly new
Convention Center, which will more than likely become a big
loser and a drain on the County’s budget.
On this pretext, Commissioners Hagan and
Dimora voted for the tax increase.
I’ve mentioned before that the sales tax
represents the most regressive of taxes. The County budget
reports that in 2005 the property tax raised $313.9 million,
compared to $168.9 in sales tax revenue.
In the 2008 projected budget – the first
year reflecting the new sales tax revenue – County taxpayers
will pay property taxes of $347.9 million and the sales tax will
jump to $270.4 million. Thus, a greater proportion of the
County’s revenue will come from its most regressive sales tax.
With income inequality growing the sales tax represents even
more of a burden on lower income people.
The County is (more correctly, you and I
are) providing the funding, but the business community, fronted
by GCP, apparently will be calling the shots.
It’s called the Cleveland way of doing
business. You see what kind of economic shape it has
produced for Cleveland and the County. The city and county
decline has been devastating but the agenda of the city’s
corporate community remains, tossing hundreds of millions of
dollars into downtown ventures. The rest of the city and
now county can rot.
And believe me, the GCP and its sponsors
don’t give a cents worth of concern whether the County is
jeopardizing its financial status as long as it is doing GCP’s
corporate bidding.
And it is, big time.
What should be troubling taxpayers is
where the funds are going to come from in constructing the three
major projects – convention center, juvenile court
facilities and administration building on Euclid Ave. – and if
there will be any funding left over to operate the county.
The County’s 1.45 millage presently
provides $47.7 million in revenue. Some $24 million goes
to reduce debt and $22.8 million goes into the general fund.
As the debt goes up, funds will have to be
taken from operating revenue.
I’d be the last to say that the County
doesn’t have excess revenue slopping around in its pockets.
Last week the County gave $100,000 for two events to the Greater
Cleveland Sports Commission. The County Commission’s
spending this year is more than $134,000 over budget, primarily
for student and summer employment. Wonder how many where related
to some official?
Someone had better start reigning in our
free-spending County Commissioners Hagan and Dimora. Of
that, I am sure.
Corporate Journalism Thrives at PD
The Plain Dealer continues its brand of
corporatized journalism in failing to examine any critical
aspect of the Medical Mart-Convention Center issue.
The team of PD publisher Terry Egger and
editor Susan Goldberg continue to operate a disgustingly
corporate newspaper, failing to fairly report about the
community.
Typically, the PD reporting and
editorializing vigorously slanted in favor of what the two
Commissioners did. Little was said about the effort by
citizens to collect signatures to force a vote on the tax
increase. When it failed, it was top of the front-page
news. At that point, obviously, it reflected the Pee Dee’s
wishes.
Thwarting public citizenry seems an odd
position for a newspaper.
Theodore Dreiser reflected a long-standing
low opinion of the press, saying...
“The American press, with a very few
exceptions is a kept press. Kept by the big corporations the
way a whore is kept by a rich man.”
To those who ride over the public in order
to serve powerful interests, John Kenneth Galbraith said...
“The deepest instinct of the affluent,
whether in America, Germany or Argentina, is to believe that
what’s good for them is what’s good for the country.”
What people yearn for, I believe, is a
countervailing power against this influence by the rich to help
provide balance.
Redressing these inequalities should be
one of the functions of a free press.
You could never give passing marks to the
PD on that score.
Reducing Cleveland City Council
If the Council President wants to reduce
Council himself then you know there’s somebody out there that
should be doing it the right way. A Council reduction by
Council represents a defensive move, not reform.
I’ve gone back and forth on the number of
Council members there should be. You can argue either way: that
more members means less ability for corporate or other interests
to buy off the Council OR fewer Council members means less cost
and a lot less arguing.
I guess today as I write I think Council
should be reduced to 11. That’s a good number. Not
too small for a sharply shrinking city and not too many so that
you cannot remember names.
It might lift the stature of the members,
too.
One thing I’d like to see, however, is
downtown cut into about three or four wards. This would reduce
the power of the downtown representative.
Right now, downtown Councilman Joe
Cimperman, a bright but flawed individual, is a mouthpiece for
the GCP and its members, the city’s top corporate and legal
leaders. Joe’s for them, right or wrong.
Fewer members also might attract a better
class of people since it will offer a more prominent position
and allow some young people with smarts to see a future in
higher office by making a name for him or herself in that
position.
I’ve always thought if you had more
Council members, there might likely be two or three more
activist types who would want to make a name for them.
What has happened, however, is that too many Council members
have been able to hide in the pack.
Time to thin the crop.