This archive article is selected from The Cleveland Pages, the city's only weekly independent journal of politics and opinion on the Internet. Find out all about the Cleveland Pages here, or check out the current issue.
The Free Times, in an article no longer online, called Cleveland Pages "Spicily independent... in the best tradition of citizen-journalist."
The Cleveland Pages is a somewhat-weekly commentary on what's new and why it's all happening in Cleveland and Cuyahoga County. If what you read here is upsetting, you might prefer this simple-minded happy-talk instead.
Bookmark the Cleveland Pages at http://re.cleveland.oh.us. Bookmark this issue at http://re.cleveland.oh.us/archives/20030417.html.
A Cleveland Pages archive search will be available soon... Meanwhile, skip to the flat-file archive list! And read an overview of who's putting this thing out and what it's about.
I plan to vote against the upcoming Health and Human Services levy, Issue 15. I know, I know, it's a liberal heresy, but listen. This is an outstanding opportunity for voters to take advantage of a hostage situation, force some fiscal discipline on the county, and support our unions at the same time. Let's not pass it up.
County Commissioners have decided to put off talk of a new convention center site, and the corresponding ballot issue, until after the HHS levy is passed. Their reasoning? It's hard enough to pass one money issue in a tough economy, so two at once would appear to be impossible. This is especially so considering the difficulty in explaining the convention center issue in the first place--as Plain Dealer architecture critic Steven Litt wrote this Monday. Citizens haven't had the "why" part of this project explained yet, so we're not too keen on dealing with questions like "where?" and "how much?"
(Alert readers will recall that this is how the mandarins flipped the Browns Stadium issue. Will it be on the lakefront? Will it be farther south into downtown? Will "we" place it near Gateway? Questions like "Do we really need to put nine figures into a place that will get used eight times a year?" were ignored by politicians and media. It was terrible. Coincidentally, the Browns stadium was finished, although we never found out exactly how much it cost ("In excess of $290 million" according to the Browns organization), just about in time for the Plain Dealer's new editor, Doug Clifton, to take charge.)
In effect, local politicans are holding the convention center project hostage. I say what the hell, kill the hostage. This would be a bad thing?
Let's do this. Hold up passage of the HHS issue until November. That will cool convention center fever until next May. By that time, we can always hope, the thrill of that shiny new idea will have faded. It will surely be replaced by some other poorly-justified dream of grandeur, but at least we'll have saved half a billion dollars or more on this one.
Or... the private parties who so dearly want this thing can find a way to fund it themselves. If it's worth half a billion dollars, it's worth waiting for.
Now besides that, the new levy is a 60% increase over the property tax from the existing HHS levy. They want to increase taxes in a recession? I love services for hungry children and people in recovery from addiction too, but can't we prioritize a little here? How's that little $8 million a year Gateway habit working out for the commissioners so far? Maybe they could have scaled back on last year's retirement bonuses?
Also remember that taxpayers in the Cleveland school district recently took on a half-billion-dollar bond issue. A majority of county voters may live in the suburbs now, but those of us inside the city limits are still recovering from that adjustment.
Finally, let's talk about the unions. SEIU District 1199 has come out, surprisingly I think, against Issue 15. SEIU's spokesman, heard on WCPN this morning, cited the refusal of HHS-funded institutions such as MetroHealth to promise not to interfere with labor organizing efforts. Long story short, do we really want to increase funding to institutions who won't respect basic labor rights? Again, just a tug on that funding chain will remind those civic leaders who's boss.
You don't have to cut them off. Just let MetroHealth wait for their money, let their administrators sweat a little. Make the commissioners jump through hoops to keep vital services going, and maybe they'll think twice about funding glitter we don't need and can't afford.
We have to do it. Defeating Issue 15 isn't just good fiscal discipline, it's also the right thing to do for children, the elderly, and the mentally ill. Think of the children, and vote no.
This document's template was last modified on Wednesday, 09-Nov-2005 18:51:58 EST. There is a new Cleveland Pages more or less every weekend. The entire Cleveland Pages website is © 1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003 by Mark W. Schumann, all rights reserved. Copyrights belonging to others on individual items are noted. Nobody else would take the credit or blame for these opinions anyway.
Go to the front page
Last validated 17 April 2003:
The W3C validator verifies that documents on this site conform to the Strict HTML 4.01 specification, which is a step towards consistency, accessibility, and interoperability.
Bobby checks for opportunities to improve access for users regardless of disabilities or special needs.