Bill Call wrote:Droit du seigneur
Bill
I am not sure "Right of The Lord" would be the correct way to put this, I would say it's the dream of a few. It is something I warned every Lakewood mayor about from Tom George to Mayor Summers. The "project" would be referred to as "Greater University Circle Development" and it is a long involved story that I have laid out here before. My knowledge comes from the fact that the driving force in GUCD is the Cleveland Foundation that hired my company AGS Software, Inc. to start a newspaper that would help define the project and the new branding. Basically, Hough, Glenville, Buckeye, Fairfax, Little Italy, East Cleveland into a new community known as Greater University Circle.
What was strange at the time was that University Circle proper was the island. Run by Chris Ronayne, director of University Circle Inc., the Cleveland Foundation found that area to be a little tough as Ronayne is a master of attracting development dollars and has some pretty strong ties to the institutions in the University Circle area, which, as you have so often pointed out is also funded by all of us, the state, the county and University Hospital, Case Western Reserve, and the Cleveland Clinic.
This is where it gets interesting, because as the Cleveland Foundation and one of their big funders the Cleveland Clinic are looking to turn the entire area into the GUC community, so that doctors and health care providers can live in what are now some of the roughest neighborhoods in town, they are attempting to downplay the Circle while gentrifying the entire 3.5 square mile area from Lake Erie, down Martin Luther King Boulevard, and into Little Italy which is the new home of some of the movers and shakers in the Cleveland Foundation.
This is not "Right of the Lord" but social engineering on the highest of high levels. Once again as pointed out in "Slaughter of Cities," developers depend on buying property at the lowest of levels, and turning them around for the highest of profits. In an area like Cleveland, they can buy for pennies on the dollars, but the city of Cleveland, which has become desperate, throws in abatements, loans, grants etc. to give developers a massive bang for the buck to allow it to happen.
Make no mistake it is a war, and when you see names like The Cleveland Foundation appear, you can bet they also appear as part of the puzzle, and have their part in playing "The Lord." While many gleefully squeal at The Cleveland Foundation (CF) money coming in to LakewoodAlive, the Beck and I guess one could say AGS, Inc. to name but three, you can also bet they are there to understand the community and where we fit in their larger picture. So after sitting in countless meetings, and walking the "Greater University Circle" neighborhoods I have a pretty good feel for where it all fits together and how.
Right now billions are being pumped into the poorest neighborhoods which are being redeveloped with brand new spanking homes, that will cost between $200,000 and $2 million dollars. While the message to all is, don't worry we are not running anyone out of the neighborhoods you grew up in-- loans will be available to all who can qualify. AND they will come with great tax-abatements, some for as many as 20 years, which means if you can qualify for a $2 million dollar home, with a 20-year tax abatement you basically just paid $50,000 and will make a fortune upon selling. It also means that as many as 65,000 financially challenged families will be pushed into the inner ring suburbs which are being prepared for their "exodus" with neighborhoods redesigned with homes they can afford and programs from NHS, Habitat for Humanity, etc.
Of course this will create a massive burden on communities like Euclid, Garfield Heights, Parma, and Lakewood as their/our community becomes richer in commercial economic development and much weaker in residential stability and or growth. Which is why I was sounding the warning bell seven years ago.
Of course my attitude did draw a little heat from The Cleveland Foundation and the Cleveland CDCs which are all heavily funded by the largest funding group of their kind in the USA, and maybe the world. It manifested itself in the CF no longer wanting anyone in the neighborhood having a voice in their local media project, and
instead only piping in the words that were provided or approved through the Foundation. As we believe in amplifying the voices of RESIDENTS and businesses, we left the project, and it morphed from the Greater University Circle Observer into (taking a page from author wordsmith Frank Luntz) the "Greater University Neighborhood Voice."
While the title makes everyone feel fuzzy and friendly, the fact is the neighborhood has lost their voice-- to be more accurate, the different neighborhoods have lost their different voices (Little Italy, Hough, Glenville etc, all different neighborhoods) and soon will lose their homes and their identities. As with many of the current trends, the way you do it is by killing the voice of the people by putting fuzzy-named media projects controlled by "gatekeepers" to spoon feed you "news" that makes you smile and keeps your mind off of the truth and reality of where you are going.
While many think I have been obsessed with this for far too long, the war is on, and Lakewood and individual citizens are both the target, and very soon the dumping ground, as the "Lord" works to devalue our property and prepares us for redevelopment in 20 or so years down the road, if the entire region hasn't become a ghost town by then. After all, these are the people that have controlled and bankrolled the "Cleveland Renaissance" that saw Cleveland go from a population high of 914,808 to the current level of less than 375,000. It is one of the very real things that brought Ken Warren and I together in the earliest days of our friendship and this project. The only way to buck the trend is by giving the people their voices, and a place to discuss what is happening in their city, county, state and country. The fourth estate gatekeepers are bought and sold, but while the people might be fooled one-on-one, with collective unedited voices, we at least stand a chance. This is also why the original, the real Visionary Alignment for Lakewood, was created around a 50-year plan to keep Lakewood the best and most significantly different city in the region.
Let's be honest, if the region is in decline and any area is growing it is at the expense of the other communities.
What worries me, as a resident of Lakewood, is are we going to buck the trend and keep our city whole, or are we going to give into those playing monopoly with our lives with just as much concern for our actual lives as you would have for the game piece on your board at home?
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