Friday, March 30, 2018

20TH IN SCPR HOF SERIES: OHIO/STARK CO TAXPAYERS OUGHT TO BE THANKING GOD FOR THE EXISTENCE OF THE STARK CO PORT AUTHORITY ?

UPDATED:  SATURDAY

NOTE:  Despite the positive outlook the SCPR has on the functioning in the interests of "taxpaying" Stark Countians on the part of the Stark Port Authority, The Report has learned since writing the original blog that the Authority had he opportunity before stadium construction began to require Welty Construction (the HOF-VP general contractor) to post a Performance Bond which, had the Port Authority done so, would have provided the financial resources needed to and specifically dedicated to pay unpaid contractor bills on the failure of the master developer and his HOF partner to have placed those funds with Welty.

While the SCPR still thinks positively of the Port Authority, its having "faith" in Lichter/Baker has proved unwarranted and is a "never again" lesson for Roger Mann et al.


Some journalists cover the serious side of public life.  Others cover  "splash and dash" stuff.

At about the same time Thursday morning, two Pro Football Hall of Fame matters were up for public discussion.

The Stark County Port Authority (located on 3rd Street, SE in Canton) held its regular monthly meeting at which its board discussed whether or not it should ultimately approve an $11 million Hall of Fame Village Project (HOF-VP) bond being contemplated by the Summit County Port Authority.

The Professional Pro Football Hall of Fame (HOF)  held a campaign-style rally at 2121 Halas Drive in an effort to convince the National Football League (NFL) to hold an almost meaningless last day of  the NFL's annual three day college draft in Canton at the HOF complex.

For The Stark County Political Report (SCPR, The Report) being a one per operation, attending meant choosing one or the other.

For The Canton Repository, with it bevy of reporters, it was a matter of sending someone some three or four blocks to the Port Authority's meeting location.

For the SCPR it was a "no brainer," the substantive over the propagandistic.

For The Rep it appears that the editors at 500 Market Avenue, South it meant keeping your billing as being "the official newspaper of the Professional Football Hall of Fame" in good standing.

It is hard to believe that Stark Countians will pay subscription money for this kind of coverage.

Even the photos The Rep published of yesterday's "pep rally" showed a zoomed in effect obviously to give the impression of a large crowd.

Had the SCPR been there, readers would have gotten both the close up and the zoomed out picture of those attending.

BUT FOR the SCPR, a highly significant discussion, word-for-word, on the $11 million proposal would be missing to the Stark County public as a resource in evaluating the viability and accountability of the HOF-VP.

Interesting, no?  A no-paid-subscription/no advertising blogger cares more about the serious over the silly.  Hmm?

There is an argument to be made that The Stark County Port Authority is the main and, perhaps, the only "effective" governmental scrutinizer of the HOF Village LLC's (a joint enterprise of master developer Stu Lichter 's Industrial Realty Group [IRG] and the National Football Museum Inc. [dba Pro Football Hall of Fame]) drive to get as many Ohio/Stark County taxpayer dollars into the "financially" poorly planned Profession Football Hall of Fame expansion project.


It seems to the SCPR that Canton's city government, the Canton City Schools, the state of Ohio has not done, is not doing adequate "due diligence" on the HOF-VP in protection of taxpayer interests.

It may be that there are a number of Kevin Fisher copy cats in the sense of being uncritical of the lack of adequate financial planning before the fact by Baker and his administrative support staff on the viability and public accountability for taxpayer dollars.

Compared to Fisher, the SCPR has done mountains more of analytical work on the viability of the HOF-VP.  But being the analytical lightweight he is proving to be, Fisher thinks that he is nonetheless qualified to render a credible opinion on the the HOF-VP mater.

If memory serves correctly, Fisher is a McKinley Bulldog over-the-top football enthusiast who likely glories in his beloved Bulldogs playing a few games a year in $150, $171 or, perhaps, in end $250 million "best in all of America" per David Baker football stadium.

Maybe just maybe Fisher as councilman voted for Canton government programs, projects and employment issues that at least partially put Canton in its present day financial bind?


Fisher as a former city councilman liked to portray himself a "the studious one"  who embraced "the people's interest" as a self-characterization.

But that was all lost on the SCPR when he teamed off with Frank Morris to undermine the effort to bring charter government to Canton government as seen above in a blog on the games Fisher played with other councilpersons.

There is nothing analytical about Kevin Fisher.  He is even as a relatively younger person seems quite adept at "old school politics."

Locally, only the Stark County commissioners through its economic development arm (i.e. the Stark County Port Authority) are protecting the taxpayers' interests.

In the runup to the HOF Village LLC's getting up to $100 million (the first tranche being about $39 million), HOF CEO/president C. David Baker was running around town telling anyone who would listen that the reason that mostly local contractors on the Tom Benson Stadium phase of Baker's phantasmagoric dream not getting paid $8 million, more or less, was the fault of the Stark County commissioners.

"Fake News!" Mr. Baker?

The truth of the matter?

The Stark County Port Authority (appointed by the commissioners) and the Canton City Schools Board of Education were the "due diligence" factors in holding off granting "certificates of estoppel" so that HOF Village LLC's prospective lender would close on the stop-gap (six to twelve month at a "interest" cost of some $2.5 to $5 million).

A source tells the SCPR thinks that the CCS got bamboozled by the HOF Village LLC folks in that when one analyzes the payments called for in the agreement between the two against charge backs by HOF Village LLC for facilities use et cetera, the schools will net a lot less than a superficial reading the the agreement might yield.

The SCPR hears no such criticism of the the Stark County Port Authority.

The entire Port Authority board meeting can be accessed in the Appendix section of this blog at the end.  The discussion on the HOF-VP matter picks up at about 6:40 on the video playback.

For those readers who do not want to wade through most of the 40 minute meeting, here are highlights edited out by the SCPR.

The overall take-away by The Report is a pronounced caution and a seeming emphasis on "no liability to the Port Authority" attitude on the part of Chairman  Roger Mann.  Readers need to keep in mind that the Port Authority board members are high quality financially attuned persons who are solidly conservative in fiscal approach.

None of them would ever, ever, ever embark on a HOF-VP-esque project without having crossed their "t's" and dotted their "i's" before going public.  Something, obviously, Baker and Lichter did not do.

In the first SCPR video excerpt Port Authority administrator Dan Talarcek introduces Don Hart of Stern Brothers as the Port Authority's bond analysis expert.

The POA consideration of this matter is a revisitation from 2017 not acted upon by the Authority of a prior consideration which is further evidence that the HOF Village folks have an awfully difficult time getting their "financial ducks 'all-lined-up-in-a-row.'"

In this initial video note that Hart focuses on "non-recourse" factor in the agreements entailed in the Stark Port Authority's participation in these matters.  At various times in the replay of the following video excerpts note the preoccupation with Port Authority financial vulnerability.

In this video segment, note Hart's "no risk whatsoever" assurances to Port Authority board members.



For those readers who want the details of the bond proposal, here it goes;



It was a tad disturbing to the SCPR that Hart, the expert, did not recall, presumably thoroughly examined the document that there is a prospective buyer of the $11 million bond.




Why would Cuyahoga River Capital, LLC be willing to provide $11 million much of which goes to Stu Lichter's benefit as reimbursement for advances made on the stadium.

Here is the answer.  It is high interest rate that the $11 million will bring.


Certainly beats this, no?


Let's see a maximum of  Port Authorities issued bonds at a maximum of 7.55% versus the Treasury at 2.975%.  Hmm?  Think the might be some concern that the HOF-VP might have to be scaled down considerably and a dip TIF revenues might jeopardize payoff of the bond?

Otherwise, in attending the Port Authority meeting of yesterday, the SCPR was well taken with the scope and depth of due diligence that the Authority is taking in considering whether or not the approve the issuance by an equivalent Summit County Port Authority entity of an $11 million bond.

Hart in the following SCPR video excerpt reassures PA board members that there are internal to the bond agreement "checks and balances" whereby there are protections against, in the words of PA chair Mann, a "misuse of bond proceeds."



Given the documented history of HOF Village LLC of not paying contractors for work done on the stadium project, here is Hart again reassuring Chairman Mann that he Port Authority has nothing to worry about.



Board member Brant Luther of the Stark County commissioners offices is seen in this video asking for an affirmation of his understanding of what the bond is all about.  Moreover, Luther's questions promotes a discussion of Stark County auditor Alan Harold's role in valuing he "subject to TIFF" property and the continue "approval" status role of Canton City schools.



The SCPR has heard concern from various Stark County political subdivision officials that Harold is so "gung-ho" HOF-VP that he may not have the capacity to perform his role objectively.

As said frequently by this blogger, if the HOF Village LLC folks want to jeopardize private sector money going into the HOF-VP, then, let them have at it.  These financiers are big girls and boys and if they get burnt by the likes of a C. David Baker and his "everything's coming up roses, when, in reality, they aren't," then Godspeed to them.  It's their money.  Of course, if they want to "unduly" risk losing it, by all means.  Big gains, big loses is all part of speculating, no?

But when it comes to taxpayer provided money, such makes it whole different ball game.

A lesson the Lichter and Baker seem to be totally disregarding.

The private sector, especially on sport facility projects, lobby public officials to bring the taxpayers "kicking and screaming" into private projects with little if any accountability for how tax dollars are managed and put to effective use in terms of clear financial/economic benefits for everyday Stark Countians/Ohioans and Americans.

Some think that the likes of Stu Lichter largely owe their personal wealth to having successfully figured out the formula of how to get into the public piggy bank.  Many if not most public figures are no match to the likes of Lichter who has a skill of making them think that he is some kind of miracle worker in acquiring capital properties for next to nothing and then rehab them to the extent that public funding is available.

All one has to do is look no further than North Canton and it Hoover project.  Phase I and the availability of "public" money, no problem it gets completed.  In fact, Mayor Held says Phase I was a huge success.

Phase II and the drying of public money and/or alleged shifting around of public money to other Lichter or Lichter connected projects and the project gets stopped in its tracks.

From a New York Times piece of Wednesday:  (Republished in yesterday Plain Dealer but, of course, not a word of in The Rep).
Developers were supposed to complete the second, much larger, phase of the project -- which would include housing, restaurants and retail -- by the end of 2015, but it is nowhere near done. Held said the developers conducted "a lot of promotion of the project, but they would start, and stop, and start, and stop." He spent the end of 2017 imploring the developers to remove plywood from empty windows and put in glass, to make the site less of an eyesore, and to bring the buildings that had received work in compliance with building codes. 
The $50 million second phase was supposed to be funded, at least in part, with $36 million from a federal program.
CMB Infrastructure Investment Group, which invested $36 million in the project, filed a lawsuit against Maple Street Investors and Lichter in 2016, claiming they violated federal rules governing the funding.
According to the complaint, just two days after receiving the funds, Maple Street Investors "diverted at least $25,000,000 of the Loan proceeds." CMB argued the $25 million went to intermediaries and was eventually lent to IRG, to complete the development of a former Goodyear campus in nearby Akron, Ohio.
 
In court documents, Lichter's lawyers said $19.8 million of the money went to a company controlled solely by Lichter, and $16.2 million to a company controlled solely by Christopher Semarjian, one of his partners in the Hoover project. The lawyers could not provide a full accounting of the money because it was "commingled with unrelated funds," but they said in court documents the two companies have continued to repay Maple Street Investors, which Lichter said CMB's chief executive told him was allowed.
As Mayor David Held of North Canton has learned, he too, becomes the subject (as the Stark County commissioners in C. David Baker's accusation) of a Lichter telling all who will listen is that all Held has to do is call him.

What a "tragic" laugh.  Numerous North Canton officials have been in touch with Lichter.  All to no avail except getting windows replaced for plywood on the Main Street side of the Hoover building.

APPENDIX




Wednesday, March 28, 2018

19TH IN SCPR SERIES ON HOF-VP: CEO/PRESIDENT C. DAVID BAKER "FAILS TO DELIVER" AGAIN, AGAIN AND AGAIN?


UPDATE:  3;46 p.m.
(paragraphs 5 and 6)

LINK to New Times Article dated today.

Putting The Canton Repository to Shame!

APRIL, 2016

COUNCILMAN BILL SMUCKLER

TO

C. DAVID BAKER

"HOW'S THE FINANCING GOING?"


On Thursday, the National Football League's NFL Draft Days site selection committee will be in Canton to evaluate Canton as a candidate to possibly get Day 3 of the total three day annual NFL Draft that draws "die-hard" NFL fans.

It appears that if northeast Ohio gets a 2019 or 2020 date, the first two days will be in Cleveland NOT in Canton.

Until Monday, The Stark County Political Report never heard one word that if National Football League were to bring its annual draft of college players to Ohio, Canton would be the site.

And never, never, ever has there being a public discussion of only one day (the most insignificant:  being the third day) if at all would be the third day.

Accordingly, local businesses will benefit only marginally if Canton gets the third day of a three day event in which the selectees have a marginal opportunity to stick with NFL team.




And, here is the difference spelled out graphically by the publication Sports TV Ratings.


Even if the NFL does grant Canton a day in April of 2019 or 2020 The Stark County Political Report sees CEO/president of the Pro Football Hall of Fame (HOF, National Football Museum, Inc) as having failed to deliver on the hopes/expectations of locals when in 2014/2015 he began promoting his apparently phantasmagoric vision of an expanded HOF complex into a village.


When Baker began talking up the idea of the NFL bringing the draft to Canton, he was not qualifying the notion as being for anything less than the whole three day shebang being totally in Canton, Ohio.

Recently a Stark County political subdivision official described a C. David Baker (who earns at least $615,000 annually as CEO/president) as a man who was literally begging that the official smile on Baker's quest to get required by the-then prospective "bridge loan lender" of "up-to-$100 million" to approve a loan to get the HOF-VP out-of-hock (sorta inasmuch as the "up-to-$100 million has to be paid back within six months to a year [i.e. if the loan is in the form that bridge loans usually take on].

Sources in a position to know, say that the first tranche of the "up-to-$100 million" loan was in the amount of $39 million which is just enough to pay off contractors who have worked on the now estimated to be $171 million "best high school football stadium in all of America."


Originally, the stadium (formerly known as Fawcett Stadium; now Tom Benson Stadium after the recently deceased owner of the New Orleans Saints who donated $11 million, more or less) for Fawcett's rehab which Baker and his HOF-VP team initially set at $24 million, more or less.

The SCPR dug into this blog's vast archive of videos and found the following gem (see below) in which Baker answers Councilman Bill Smuckler's question:  How's the financing going?

Good! Baker said.

Remember, Canton has put $5,000,000 cash likely into the football stadium.

Little noticed at the time by any of us was Baker's glossing over "of course nobody is going to be financing the stadium" and then went on to say that the press box had to be torn down because in doing so the projects would cost $250,000 less and take 7 less weeks that rehabbing the existing structure.

According to Baker, to repeat,  a savings in money and time was to be had.

What a "tragic" laugh!

$171 million or perhaps $250 million later!

Remember the cancelled 2016 annual Canton-based first of the new season exhibition football game because of turf problems?  Before the debacle, Baker undoubtedly was telling public officials that everything was going well.


As if that wasn't enough of "what turned out to be inaccurate in his answer," Baker then goes on to assure the assembled councilpersons in his confab with him in April, 2016 that the 5 star hotel and Excellence Center would start construction in September, 2016.

Hmm?

Now (fast forward to 2018) we are being told that there is only a "not completely finished" football stadium and precious little else in capital facilities of any significance/description, BUT WORRY NOT, it will not factor into the decision of whether or not "the third day" of a three day event is coming to Canton.

What?  Does the NFL want to be embarrassed again?

Here it is a few days from April, 2018 and no hotel underway; no Excellence Center underway and projections that the stadium (that Baker says nobody will finance and was projected early on to cost $24 million) will end up costing $250 million.

The SCPR thinks the Stark County public ought to take anything Baker says with "the proverbial 'grain of salt.'"

Local government officials who have to work with Baker et al,  pretty much universally describe the experience as being "one big helter-skelter" (the SCPR's expression) operation.

President Trump might be more believable to some than David Baker, no?

Readers ought to be sure to view this video.



A rejection of Canton as either a 2018 or 2019 NFL Draft site would be an absolute devastation to not only Baker and his colleagues at 2121 Halas Drive but also to Canton City government which has $5 million cash in the project plus countless (combined) hours of:
  • the law department's time (and incidental administrative supplies expense—note:  the law department hired an extra attorney to keep up with HOF-VP work among other work),
  • the annexation department's time and administrative supplies expense,
  • the engineering department's time and administrative supplies expense, 
  • the Canton Police Department and the Canton Fire Department/EMS which is owed anywhere (unless paid out of the $39 million bridge loan money) a range of some $300,000 to $400,000, 
  • the engineering department in fronting $120,000 for specially designed street lighting in the area of the village and downtown Canton, and
  • the mayor (Thomas Bernabei) and his office's time and administrativesupplies expense
Of course, Canton government isn't the only local government entity to have expended non-cash taxpayer provided for assets (namely the salary and benefits of various county officials and the administrative supplies factor) towards implementing Baker's unrealistic dream.

And the foregoing is added too in cash dollars being set aside in the form of TDD dollars or redirected to Ohio and Stark County sales tax revenues exempted from taxation on HOF-VP contractor purchased materials through the Stark County Port Authority.

Is the HOF-VP a private sector project and therefore not accountable to the taxpaying public in terms of ultimate viability of the project and whether or not the project is being developed prudently and wisely?

If taxpayer dollars were not at risk, the SCPR wishes the HOF-VP "God's speed" in making the project A $1 billion, $2 billion or whatever project.

The SCPR is working tirelessly to get a handle on how much public money is going into this seeming boondoggle.  Of course, The Report is not getting much cooperation from HOF-VP connected persons and those who are "uncritically" allied with them.

It is interesting how America's wealthy always want to have their "private" projects have access to public funding, no?

The SCPR thinks that we Stark Countians are getting worked over big time by Baker and friends in their trying to milk public financing for every penny the project can manage to get its hands on as the overly ambitious project limps along in "live another day mode."

Nobody expects an outright rejection of at least the third day of of the three day event, but as we all know from our common human experience:  "anything is possible!"

Think C. David Baker is not begging NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and the selection site committee members for "at least one day, even if its the third and final day" of the NFL Draft in 2019 or 2020?

Of course, the HOF-VP will not be anywhere near its project ultimate cost of $1 billion plus cost (up from an estimated $448,000 million, more or less back in 2014/2015).

It is estimated that the site selection committee will be in Canton for about eight hours on Thursday.


The results from Thursday could well be "make or break" for Baker and his "joined-at-the-hip" master developer Stu Lichter in the HOF Village LLC (in multiple forms) enterprises.

It is reported that Baker is offering treats to members of the public who attend Thursday's event as thereby supporting his desperate attempt to salvage something, anything of the "pie in the sky" he was promoting two, three and four years ago.

What a incredible guy C. David Baker is, no?

And he makes at least $615,000 a year.

Where do I sign up?

Sunday, March 25, 2018

NORTH CANTON GOV'T: ABUNDANT WATER RESOURCE - A BLESSING OR A CURSE OR SOMETHING IN BETWEEN?

SEE MULTIPLE VIDEOS ON 03/21/2018 "WATER ISSUE" MEETING

UPDATE:  10:14 AM (DOUG LANE RESPONSE)


DOUG LANE RESPONSE TO BLOGGER COMMENTS ABOUT HIM



ORIGINAL BLOG

So what is North Canton's abundant, pristine water supply: (choose one)
  1. A Curse?
  2. A Blessing?
  3. Something In Between?
A blessing, a curse or something in between?

Hmm?

The Stark County Political Report (SCPR, The Report) opts for "3. Something In Between," at least initially.

A North Canton/mayor-council decision in the offing on whether or not a prospective buyer (OMNI)
of  a Jackson Township located property (Portage & Whipple) from North Canton developer Bob DeHoff  wanting North Canton water without annexing into North Canton can get North Canton's council and/or Mayor David Held approval will likely ultimately  "tell the tale" on the question of the city having high quality water for sale ends up being a blessing or a curse.

Here is the ordinance as proposed:


THE BACKGROUND OF THE WATER ACCESS DISPUTE

For a detailed understanding of the context of the "access to North Canton water" fight which erupted on the floor of North Canton Council on Wednesday night, readers of this blog should read a December 27, 2017 SCPR blog on the groundwork that has been carefully undertaken by a mysterious elected North Canton official apparently designed to help well known North Canton developer Bob DeHoff parlay access to North Canton water for a property sited in Jackson Township without the requiring of the property to be annexed into North Canton city limits.

Readers of this blog should opt to read the "in depth version" contained in the above-linked blog.

A shorter version of the "access" question goes like this:

Some apparently "unaccountable" (in terms of identity) official in North Canton government conjured  up the need in October, 2017 to form a solely administrative arm of North Canton government (Water Board) to determine applications for access for North Canton water and whether or not a concomitant factor (i.e. a discretionary requirement of annexation into North Canton) will be imposed.

SIDE NOTE:  A side note that is relevant is that North Canton civic activist Chuck Osborne has been in the thick of s sub-fight as to whether or it has been legal for the city to form a Water Board in the first place.  The Report has learned that he plans to file a lawsuit in the coming week to challenge the legality of the Water Board.
For purposes of the proposed DeHoff (WILLMOLL)/OMNI transaction, in that North Canton City Council itself has taken up the matter for decision —it likely makes the legality of the Water Board establishment irrelevant as to whether OMNI get North Canton water without annexation.

One more thing, there is some tussle over whether or not the ordinance authorizing city water without annexation should be tagged as "emergency" legislation.

If an enacted ordinance is not designated as an emergency but passes with a majority of council and survives a Mayor David Held veto, the ordinance is highly likely to be challenged by a Chuck Osborne referendum on the November ballot.

To top things off, the SCPR has learned that Osborne will not be working on a referendum alone, if matters come to that.  He will have heavy duty support from others with the names of whom would surprise readers of this blog.

Osborne is hopeful that the OMNI matter loses on a up or down vote so that a referendum would not be needed.


SIDENOTE:  Readers are reminded that Osborne in 2012 challenged North Canton City Council's action in approving health care insurance benefits for themselves only to be rejected overwhelmingly by North Canton voters some 78% to 22%. 
While the referendum was later declared by Judge John Haas of the Stark County Court of Common Pleas to be invalid under referendum standards contained in Ohio law, council members rescinded the authorizing legislation in light of the obvious voter rejection of council members getting such benefits.
Originally the OMNI proposal included a provision that would have enabled a subsequent owner of the subject property piggyback into continuing to have access to North Canton water without annexation.

Now, supposedly, a new owner would have to annex or lose water access.

The SCPR thinks Law Director Fox is selling North Canton council a boatload of untenable legal certainty.  Think about it.  Do readers really think that if during the 30 year OMNI term OMNI sells out that a successor wouldn't be in a terrific position to convince a court of "equity" that it would horribly "unfair" to cut off the property's water supply.  Especially so, given that the language of the proposed agreement does not have clear and explicit language in the NC/OMNI agreement specifically saying that there will be no water absent annexation that the contract provides for being a restrictive covenant in a deed from NC to OMNI.

Of course, Law Director Fox will likely be long gone if and when the matter becomes a down-the-road legal issue for future North Canton generations.

Along the lines of the Fox/council relationship, The Report hears that some council members (perhaps, a majority) think that all they need is a "easily attained to the needs of council Fox legal opinion" and then they will take their chances of a North Canton citizen filing a lawsuit challenging the Fox opinion.

The SCPR is told that Councilwoman Marcia Kiesling may have let it slip out that the main body of
council may have made a "violation of Ohio's Sunshine Law" decision to do the NC/OMNI deal.

Citizen Chuck Osborne's planned lawsuit challenging the legality of the formation of North Canton's Water Board could take on added significance.   If he does file, undoubtedly Osborne's legal counsel in depositions will want to explore the alleged violation in questioning council members "under oath."

If the water access measure gets enacted without an emergency tag on it, look again for Osborne to challenge the enactment with an invalidating referendum.

Wednesday night's (March 21, 2018) "special council" meeting (a highly unusual time/day of the week for a North Canton council meeting) produced an intense debate among council members, the mayor and council and members of the North Canton public.


If one is a pro-water-access-without-annexation advocate, how does such a person convince North Canton voters that it is a good thing for North Canton government financing for the city to pass up a potential of $100,000 annually (1.50% income tax rate on approximately 75 jobs), more or less, income-tax-into-the-general-fund for $10,000 annually, more or less, in utility charges to OMNI as city revenue enterprise fund restricted to spending for water operations, maintenance and capital facilities?

If it comes to a referendum, the SCPR is willing to say here and now that North Canton voters will reject the proposed OMNI project application for annex-free access to water along the super majority lines as the health care referendum of 2012.

Osborne tells the SCPR that formation of a Water Board (October, 2017) is "deja vu, all over again" as with North Canton's Housing Council.

North Canton's Housing Council Office headed up by an "appointed" Housing Officer, once had the authority to grant tax abatements on the decision of one person; namely, the non-elected, "appointed" Housing Officer without any knowledge or participation of the elected members (i.e. the mayor and council members) in the decision.

As pointed out in the referenced blog, guess who was the center of the controversy over whether or not it was legal for the Housing Officer in 2012 to have granted a 100% property tax abatement for a period of years for a apartment project knows as North Ridge Place, LLC?

SCPR readers are so, so, so smart!  Yes, the person is none other than Mister Robert DeHoff!!!

Only on action by Citizen activist Chuck Osborne (in bringing the abatement matter to light and keeping it in the limelight) did North Canton property tax recipients (in the main the North Canton City Schools) eventually get a recovery of 50% of the abatement.

If this blogger didn't know better (or do I?), Bob DeHoff and North Canton are synonymous somewhat like North Canton and Boss Hoover back in the heydey of The Hoover Company.

He seems to control a majority if not most of the North Canton City Council membership.

To the SCPR,  Councilpersons Mark Cerreta, Marcia Kiesling, Stephanie Werren and Dominic Fonte seem to be "in thrall" to DeHoff. 

Werren in particular should be ashamed of herself for what the SCPR thinks as being a councilperson  locking onto the DeHoff interests inasmuch she is the director of the Canton Regional Chamber of Commerce Leadership Stark County (which includes a program for schooling elected and aspiring to be elected Stark Countians) who, by her conduct on council, certainly cannot say that her model as a North Canton councilperson should be followed by aspirant Stark County political subdivision leaders.

Snow-Werren and her husband Canton Municipal Court judge Curtis Werren who the SCPR thinks never would have been heard of in Stark County subdivision political/government circles BUT FOR their coming from prominent Stark County based politically connected families.

There are bright spots in North Canton government these days.

However, there are definitely dark spots.

One of whom the SCPR thinks is Councilman at Large Mark Cerretta.

Watch/listen to this 2:20 video on Cerretta on the OMNI issue claiming everything was honky-dory on getting approval on OMNI until Monday night is more than a stretch.   Note the entire video of the debate on the water issue is embedded in the appendix to this blog.



Now, read this:

Chuck Osborne <cosborne@neo.rr.com>  Today at 1:30 AM
To:  Martin Olson
...
I have pasted below my description of the video of the December 21, 2017 Water Board meeting.

I am sending this to you to rebut Mark Cerreta’s statement that there has been no opposition to providing water to the DeHoff property and waiving annexation until last Wednesday’s Special Council meeting held on March 21, 2018.

Opposition was raised immediately upon hearing of the request at the Water Board meeting held on December 21, 2017. The meeting was held on a Thursday morning at 9:00 a.m., two days before the long Christmas Holiday weekend.

Mark Cerreta’s statement was patently untrue.  

Thank You,

Chuck Osborne

Pasted below is a link to a video of the North Canton Water Board Meeting held on Thursday morning, December 21, 2017.

LINK to the video.  (23:10 mark on video



The SCPR agrees with Osborne that Cerreta's claim of no opposition to the OMNI's attempt to "get water without annexing to North Canton" is untrue.

As pointed out as described in his email to The Report, Osborne offers (see his video) irrefutable proof that Cerreta's Wednesday assertion is untrue.  Newly elected Councilman Daryl Revoldt did oppose granting water to OMNI without much greater detail of the proposed transaction being revealed to, not the Water Board, but all of council for council to make the decision.

The Report that has learned that BUT FOR Mayor Held's pressure on Councilman Cerreta, the OMNI water access issue would not have made it to council.  Consequently, you would have a decision made by a likely 'illegally constituted" Water Board with "yes" for approval votes made by the likes of Held administration appointees Finance Director Laura Brown, Chief Administrator Mike Grimes and administrative official Pat DeOrio with Councilman Cerreta being the ONLY elected official voting on the matter and, of course, "yes."

It is a curious matter that all the voting members (Law Director Tim Fox recused himself after a "conflict in interest" factor was brought to his attention) of the Held administration voted in favor granting OMNI water access right "with the right to pass access rights on to a successor owner" in light of  Mayor David Held's assertion to the SCPR (in a conversation yesterday) that he has always opposed water access without annexation.

While Held says he encourages internal to his administration deliberation on various issues that come up in North Canton government, he expects and demands that once he has made a decision as the city chief executive that all of his appointees will fully and demonstrably support his decision.

There can be little doubt that the Water Board was somebody's (like the Housing Council) end run around democratic-republican elected official "accountability" for the actions processes.

The Housing Council and the Water Board offer compelling evidence that North Canton City Council has too many members who are willing to abrogate their duty to be front and center deciders-in-chief after open and accessible (not 9:00 a.m. in the morning as with the Water Board) and "opportunity to be heard" council meetings.

It seems that one cannot believe much of anybody from the president of the United States of America right down to a city councilperson these days in this country.

Shame on Councilman Cerreta!

During this past Wednesday's council meeting,  Doug Foltz, the dean of North Canton Council, admonished the deliberative body to be civil to one another. and rightfully so.  For the SCPR's part, the major offender  of incivility was Councilman Mark Cerreta.

Undoubtedly, Cerreta fancies himself as urbane and sophisticated.  His boorish behavior in the meeting of the 21st belies his being polished and diplomatic.

Newly elected Councilman Daryl Revoldt (a former council president and mayor of North Canton) is leading the charge to require OMNI to agree to an annexation to North Canton as a condition of the city approving the sale of water to the company.

Revoldt first challenged Cerreta at the December, 2017 Water Board meeting.  "Get the details of the proposed deal out, Revoldt says was his injunction to Cerreta at that meeting.

So how, Councilman Cerreta, is that a show of disrespect?  Cerreta as talked about what a terrific country we Americans live in.  And, of course, he is absolutely correct.  However, we are great not because we have "some know-it-all" who decrees on arbitrary standards what is good or not good for our communities, but because communities including our elected representative delve into the details of this or that issue and make a collective decision of what is best.

Here is SCPR video of Councilman Revoldt's back and forth with Councilman Fonte in which he underscores that he effectively quelches Cerreta's charge of disrespect which the SCPR thinks was aimed at Revoldt.



Revoldt and Mayor Held are allied on the annexation condition and the mayor says he will veto the proposed ordinance if it stays as it is.

Mayor Held, in the opinion of the SCPR, made Councilman Dominic Fonte (keep in mind he tabs himself as a "newbie') look foolish in a 10 minute back and forth between the two of them on the issue of water for OMNI without annexation.

Fonte's only argument was in allowing OMNI to open up adjacent to North Canton city limits without being in the city but nonetheless getting city water for 30 years creates a general vicinity energy that might one day produce neighboring to OMNI businesses which "might" want to annex to North Canton out of some sort of gratuitous civic affection for North Canton.

How ridiculous!

Held kept asking Why! Why! Why!, which and he wants to talk respect, motivated Cerreta to chime in using the expression "Why? Why! Why! in what the SCPR thinks was in a mocking manner.

The question "why" connotes an expectation of a reason or reasons.  Why should always be a pre-eminent Q&A exchange in any endeavor of life and most certainly when elected representatives in the current decision making will be affecting untold quality of life issues for future generations of North Cantonians.

For Cerreta to mock the mayor doing the intellectually proper thing to do is an absolute disgrace on Cerreta's part.  And he talks about respect?  And he settles on a arbitrary, capricious and whimsical standard of "business by business by business" decision.  To his credit, Held did not respond to Cerreta's mocking ways.

One thing that did not come up in Wednesday's discussion is the fact that North Canton's income tax is 1.50 which is probably one of if not the lowest in all of Ohio.  Moreover, OMNI's employees bear the brunt of the tax; not the corporation itself.

Another thing when it comes to fire, police and EMS services, Fonte, Cerreta and other councilpersons of their persuasion seem to think that if OMNI does not annex then if a need arises for North Canton police, fire and EMS services that North Canton will sit idly by and refuse to respond if called to the OMNI site.

Really?

Ever heard of "mutual aid?"

As the SCPR understands "mutual aid" it is the "holy grail" of emergency services and it is a non-starter to say/suggest:  "Oh, OMNI refused to annex to North Canton and therefore North Canton fire, police or EMS will not respond to OMNI's call for help."

The SCPR has always thought Cerreta was more reasoned than he showed on Wednesday night.  What a disappointment to hear him settle on an arbitrary/capricious standard which of course is a fertile field for politics to be at play in a large way.

The Held/Fonte/Cerreta video is a compelling video for those readers who care about the processes of government to watch. 

(NOTE: The Report has learned that Finance Director Brown was annoyed at Held's engagement of her in a rhetorical Q&A on whether or not enterprise water fund money could be used on North Canton's general fund functions (which they cannot.  Who is Laura Brown to get annoyed with the mayor of North Canton.  She serves at his pleasure.  The SCPR thinks it was a master ploy to make a powerful point.)



There is no doubt on the part of the SCPR that there will be a majority of North Canton council members to approve OMNI's application for North Canton water WITHOUT ANNEXATION.

Passage of the OMNI exception is likely to occur despite this 2011 ordinance.


In October, 2017 council amended the ordinance to make annexation "permissive" rather than "mandatory."

The ONLY question on this issue in terms of ultimate passage is whether or not Councilpersons Peters or Foltz (one or the other, perhaps both) peel off their fellows to make the majority decision vulnerable to almost certain Mayor David Held veto.

The financial stakes to North Canton government?

To repeat, about $100,000 in income tax revenue going to the General Fund versus some $10,000, more or less, going to the city enterprise "water" account which CANNOT be used for the city's general government functions (confirming:  see Held questioning of Finance Director Brown in Held video above) such as fire, police, roadway (construction/repair) and the like.

Though it appears that some North Canton councilpersons were "gung-ho" on passing Ordinance 19-2018 on Wednesday evening, there are those who think that foremost advocate Cerreta did not push on in the matter because he feared that he would only get five (5) votes, a number which would have made in likely that Mayor Held could sustain his promised veto.

In sum, the SCPR thinks that North Canton City Council's controlling majority (Cerreta, Kiesling, Werren and Fonte) are anti-democratic-republican in their "heart of hearts" and that North Canton government, consequently, will continue to fumble and bumble in the face of those who question their arbitrary ways.

Until North Canton's voters replace Cerreta, Kiesling, Werren and Fonte, North Canton will continue to take what could be blessings (e.g. the water asset) and turn them into curses

PUBLIC SPEAKS

Watch the following citizen responses (before Cerreta even made his assertion) about the "exclude the citizens" model of government demonstrated in this instance and pretty much historically by Councilpersons Cerreta, Kiesling, Werren and Fonte seemingly aided and abetted by Law Director Tim Fox.

First and compellingly Citizen Brandice Schnabel: (first name spelling correction)



Next

Citizen Melanie Roll:



Next, Citizen Chuck Osborne:



Next, Doug Lane:  North Canton economic development liaison ($15,000 annually paid by North Canton government) and is a NC Chamber of Commerce official.  Lane is also a former NC councilman.  A highly reliable source tells the SCPR that North Canton Chief Administrator Pat DeOrio asked Lane to come and present at Wednesday's meeting.

Though Mayor Held says DeOrio is with him in Held's opposition to granting OMNI "no annexation required" water access, the SCPR is skeptical that such is the case.  Some sources suspect that DeOrio's prior employment experience may have connected him with a long standing Jackson Township (the locale of the OMNI project) elected official and that DeOrio's, at least at the Water Board phase, pro-DeHoff/OMNI position might have been grounded in that connection.

Note:  Though Lane implicitly claims to have "no dog in this fight" the tenor of his comments clearly indicate a preference of not requiring OMNI annexation.  SCPR wonders whether or not as a Chamber official he has had dialogue with Bob DeHoff and is in reality advocating for the DeHoff/OMNI position.  The Report thinks that Lane has a huge conflict in interest and his viewpoint should be looked at in that light.

The SCPR video of the Lane "public speaks" comments and Q&A with Councilman Dominic Fonte:



APPENDIX

NORTH CANTON COUNCIL'S DEBATE ON OMNI WATER ACCESS WITHOUT ANNEXATION

A SCPR VIDEO PRESENTATION

FIRST UP:  LAW DIRECTOR FOX EXPLAINS CHANGES MADE IN ORDINANCE 19-2018



NEXT: COUNCIL/MAYOR HELD DEBATE THE MERITS/DEMERITS OF THE NORTH CANTON/OMNI WATER AGREEMENT (23:44)




Thursday, March 22, 2018

SCPR GENERAL ELECTION SERIES (VOL 4) DEMOCRATS HAVE "THE REAL DEAL" IN 7TH CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE KEN HARBAUGH?



On March 15th, Democratic 7th Congressional District candidate Ken Harbaugh came to Stark County (VFW Hall) to answer the questions of Stark Countians on what would be the sum and substance of his stand on the issues Congress deals with as they pertain to the interest of locals.

This blog is the second specifically on the Harbaugh campaign (LINK to the first which in the appendix has the "entire" video of the session).

This particular blog breaks down the full video into digestible segments (in terms of the time it takes to get the gist of Harbaugh's point of view) following a Q&A format outline.

Before getting the the first Q&A, The Stark County Political Report has an overall analysis of Harbaugh's campaign style and substance.

Candidate Ken Harbaugh appears to be "the real deal" in terms of being a candidate who endeavors to be a "Country Over Party" politician who is committed to being accessible to everyday people regardless of whether or not they likely vote for him and will seek to work with any congressperson (regardless of political party i.d. or political philosophy) in  order to enact programs, practices and policies that benefit a cross-section of citizens.

Harbaugh seemingly has positioned himself somewhere in between former 16th District (when the district included all of Stark) Republican congressman Ralph Regula (1973—2009) and Democrat John Boccieri (2009—2011) and certainly not an extreme partisan as the SCPR sees incumbent Republican Bob Gibbs as being.

Regula more than Boccieri was able to work across the aisle, but Boccieri, the SCPR thinks, was certainly better than Gibbs has proved to be.

The Report thinks that Harbaugh deserves consideration of Democrats, Republicans and independents but conditioned on voters' willingness to "hold his feet to the fire" (as he invited Town Hall attendees to do) on his theme of "Country Over Party."

Gibbs is in the view of the SCPR a "Party Over Country" guy.


Bob Gibbs (neither Harbaugh nor Gibbs has a serious primary election challenge) seems to the SCPR to be a man isolated from his constituents particularly Stark Countians witness his "by appointment only" office in the Stark County Office Building (110 Central Plaza) which seems to closed more than it is open.  Gibbs also has an office in Ashland.

By the way, Stark County is the largest population base in the 7th.

NOW TO KEN HARBAUGH'S TOWN HALL Q&A

QUESTION

HARBAUGH'S VIEW ON "THE TAX CUTS & JOBS ACT OF 2018" (3:02)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH'S PARTISANSHIP FACTOR (2:18)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

COMMON SENSE GUN REFORM (3:32)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

RE:  AVAILABILITY OF ASSAULT WEAPONS (1:41)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

RE:  DOES HARBAUGH SUPPORT STUDENT "RIGHT TO LIFE" MOVEMENT? (1:04)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

SHOULD EACH & EVERY SCHOOL HAVE AN "ARMED" POLICE OFFICER (1:44)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

FOLLOW UP ON HARBAUGH POSITION ON ASSAULT WEAPONS (7:44)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH'S THOUGHTS ON WOMEN'S HEALTHCARE (3:08)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION


HARBAUGH ON MENTAL HEALTH (2:55)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

SOURCES OF HARBAUGH CAMPAIGN FINANCES (2:44)


VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

WILL HARBAUGH END UP BEING LIKE MANY OTHER CONGRESSPERSONS:
"UNACCOUNTABLE?"  (2:28)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON SPIRALING COSTS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUGS (1:30)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

WILL HARBAUGH CONSIDER SUPPORTING A "SINGLE PAYER HEALTHCARE SYSTEM?" (2:43)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH'S THOUGHTS ON "MEDICARE FOR ALL?"

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON SOLVING THE CHILDHOOD HUNGER IN AMERICA PROBLEM
(4:50)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON THE ROLL BACK OF GOVT REGULATION IN TRUMP ADMINISTRATION
(3:44)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON NEED FOR CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM (2:30)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON PROPER DIVIDE BETWEEN PUBLIC/PRIVATE SECTORS (1:40)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH:  HIS YEARS IN MILITARY SERVICE AS PREPARATION TO BE CONGRESSMAN
(1:50)



QUESTION

DOES KEN HARBAUGH FAVOR PUBLIC FINANCING OF FEDERAL ELECTIONS? (1:38)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH SOLUTIONS TO HEROIN, OPIOID PROBLEMS?

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ADDRESSES:

CLOSING OF MASSILLON'S AFFINITY MEDICAL CENTER
BOB GIBBS ON THAT CLOSING & ON ACA & MEDICAID (1:29)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON "LGBT" RIGHTS (1:20)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH EXPANDS ON "COUNTRY OVER PARTY" CAMPAIGN THEME; ALSO ON ENERGY (3:03)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON UNFAIR COMPETITION FOR OHIO WORKERS FROM CHINA (1:35)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON CLAIMED SHORTAGE OF FEDERAL GOV'T RESOURCES FOR IMPORTANT NATIONAL SOCIAL SERVICES PROJECTS (3:53)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

WHAT CAN VOTERS WHO WANT TO HELP KEN HARBAUGH FOR OHIO 7TH DISTRICT CONGRESSMAN DO TO HELP CAMPAIGN? (2:05)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

RE: HARBAUGH HAVING A PRIMARY OPPONENT & AVAILABILITY OF HARBAUGH CAMPAIGN MATERIALS  (1:17)

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON VETERANS RIGHTS/BENEFITS

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON "RIGHT TO WORK" & COLLECTIVE BARGAINING 

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



QUESTION

HARBAUGH ON "FOR PROFIT" SCHOOLS & TOWN HALL WRAP UP

VIDEOTAPED ANSWER:



APPENDIX

For SCPR readers who want to view the entire, unedited Town Hall meeting, here is that video: