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Tag: Kerry McCormack

  • Kerry McCormack Stepping Down Early from Council, Names Lauren Welch as Successor – Cleveland Scene

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    With 112 days left in his last term on Cleveland City Council, Kerry McCormack has called it quits.

    On Thursday, McCormack, who’s represented Ward 3 for the past decade and earlier this year announced that he would not be seeking re-election, said that he was stepping down from his seat a tad early, just months before Council’s refresh in January. He will nominate Lauren Welch, a communications strategist for Say Yes! Cleveland and an RTA board member, to finish his term. (Council has historically approved whoever a departing councilperson nominates.)

    McCormack told Scene the reasons behind his premature departure after a decade in the politics was twofold: to start a new job and allow a buffer period before Cleveland’s new ward maps go into effect.

    “I’m taking one quick step back to allow the community to have an open conversation about the new councilperson who will start in January,” McCormack said in a phone call. And for “the folks in the majority of Ward 3 to have a conversation with these candidates.”

    Ward 3 will pretty much become Ward 7, boundaries that encompass Tremont, Ohio City, The Flats, the North Coast and Burke Lakefront Airport. It holds some of the most exciting development prospects, including Irishtown Bend Park and the big-picture plans for the lakefront.

    Welch, McCormack said, is a natural choice to segue from old to new.

    She grew up in Ohio City, campaigned for President Obama, was a Ward 15 precinct leader, is on three boards of trustees and works days as a communications strategist for Say Yes! Cleveland, a nonprofit that gives CMSD kids a leg up applying for college. She also founded her own marketing firm, Laurel Cadence, in 2019.

    Welch was ecstatic when McCormack offered her a chance to succeed him. As she saw it, the opportunity is yet another way she’s being “called to serve” the public.

    Even if that means a little challenge.

    “I think that anytime you take on a leadership position in this capacity, one that has to do with raising the profile, the visibility, the livelihood and the safety of residents, it’s going to be challenging work,” Welch said in a call.

    But, she added, “I’m already working on those things on a regular basis already.”

    McCormack will depart from the gig on October 3, which means Welch, the first Black woman leader of Ward 3, will serve for about three months on council before either Austin Davis or Mohammad Faraj takes over in January. The two will square off in November’s general election after advancing in this week’s primary.

    As for McCormack, he will be working as a Cleveland-based public affairs leader for Flock Safety, a surveillance tech company headquartered in Atlanta.

    Ensuring that we continue to build safe and thriving neighborhoods remains my professional passion,” McCormack said in a statement. “I look forward to joining the team at Flock as they partner with thousands of communities and organizations across the country to achieve that goal.”

    Joining Council in 2016, McCormack championed bringing Cleveland further into the 21st century.

    He long advocated for a nonprofit leader of the West Side Market, urged the city open up more public access to Lake Erie and worked with Mayor Bibb to pass the city’s first Complete and Green Streets ordinance in 2023, which sets legal standards for bike lanes and tree lines on newly-built or repaved city streets.

    “It’s been a great 10 years—almost 10 years,” he said.

    “I think about advocacy and reproductive freedom. I think about getting folks through the pandemic. I think about, you know, rebuilding playgrounds and parks around the ward,I think about making our roads safer,” he said. “I mean, like, these are the things that I believe we’ve contributed to make sure that the city is in a better direction.”

    And as for getting out of politics altogether, he said, “I never wanted to overstay my welcome. I just thought it was a good time for me to move on.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Two Studies Lean Towards Recommendation for Cleveland to Close the Burke Lakefront Airport

    Two Studies Lean Towards Recommendation for Cleveland to Close the Burke Lakefront Airport

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    Aerial Agents

    Two studies detailing the pros and cons of closing Burke Lakefront were released on Monday.

    The 450 acres of land that have occupied a large swath of Downtown Cleveland’s lakefront have served several purposes for the past century.

    It’s been the host of the Cleveland Municipal Dump, a recipient of the city’s trash and scrap glass and metal. It’s been a Cold War-era Nike Missile site, where anti-aircraft missiles were tested during the 1950s and 1960s.

    And, since opened to the public in 1947, that land’s been occupied by its most noted tenant: the Burke Lakefront Airport, which has seen continuous declines in air traffic and increased calls for its closure in recent years.

    Mayor Justin Bibb’s administration just released two pivotal studies done for the city on Monday detailing the myriad pros and cons that would come if Burke was closed sometime in the next two decades. Though shuttering the small airstrip would likely cost the city tens of millions in what could be multi-year legal battle, the studies, which are years in the making, seem to present Burke being redeveloped as the better bet.

    Especially if, as goes many Clevelanders’ dreams for a neighborhood (or stadium, or Blossom 2.0) on Lake Erie, that development hits the near ideal: an annual economic benefit of $92 million, one of the reports suggested.

    The first study, entitled “Valuing Burke Lakefront Airport,” contends some $20 million more than planes still taking off and landing there.

    “The closure of Burke would permit investment that would ultimately have greater economic activity,” that report read, “than currently occurring at the airport.”

    Such a takeaway has been used by both City Council and the Mayor’s Office as a soft green light for a possible decision to come—to actually go ahead and tell the Federal Aviation Administration, who has the final say, that Burke’s days are numbered.

    And transforming it “into a space that better serves our community,” as Bibb wrote in a press release on Monday. These “findings have reinforced my long-held belief that closing Burke is both possible and economically advantageous for Cleveland.”

    The same goes for Ward 3 Councilman Kerry McCormack, who has long bemoaned the paltry portion of Lake Erie available as public land, and whose ward occupies Burke’s acreage.

    “While there is no doubt that much due diligence will be needed, I believe our residents deserve meaningful access to high quality public space on our lakeshore,” McCormack wrote. “Connecting all of our people to our most precious resources will always be the right thing to do.”

    Due diligence may be the lightest way of putting it.

    According to both reports, which stretch back to relationships with two separate consultants in 2022, shutting down Burke could entail everything from a mere piece of federal legislation in U.S. Congress to years of legal headaches and a noticeable dent in the city’s General Fund.

    Legally speaking, as per the rules of the FAA, the city would have to pay tens of millions in annual maintenance costs—runway repairs, to keeping plane firetrucks running—themselves, as money from the Feds would no longer be available. And, like with Chicago’s own (successful) attempt in 2003 to shut down Meigs Field Airport, a small pile of legal fees. ($500,000 in Chicago’s case.)

    But ending Burke’s service could mean greener pastures in the next few decades, especially in tandem with Bedrock’s $2 billion riverfront development, Bibb’s North Coast plan and the Metroparks’ CHEERS project just east of Burke. It’s such pastures—that is, converting Burke into a neighborhood or just park or some combination of the two—that the city could use to prove to the FAA closing the airport down is in the best interest of the city, the state and the country.

    click to enlarge One sure upset by the closing of Burke: no more Blue Angels on the lakefront. - Manny Wallace

    Manny Wallace

    One sure upset by the closing of Burke: no more Blue Angels on the lakefront.

    It could lead to a 170-acre public park—”among the largest urban parks in Cleveland”—to playing fields, an “indoor sports facility,” a boutique hotel, five to six restaurants and some 12,000 units of housing. That is, as the lore around Burke becomes reality, if developers can build atop years of accumulated river dredge and, in some spots, 30 feet of trash and sediment. (And deal with potential methane gas.)

    Yet, an attempt to expand Downtown rather than try and boost Burke—a failing airport that, one report finds, loses on average $1 million a year—wouldn’t make a gargantuan mark in the region’s private and medical air industry as some imagine. The roughly 37,000 Boeing 737s and Airbus 319 jets that carry organs destined for the Cleveland Clinic or visiting NBA players could be assumed by the six nearby airports, if, the report affirms, new hangar space was made available.

    “The proximity of other airports and the high percentage of non-airport related businesses at Burke,” one study explains, “are why there is relatively low true loss of economic activity.”

    Except for an unavoidable truism if Burke is shut down: the sure end of the Cleveland National Air Show and the Blue Angels’ weekend in September. Burke, both reports conclude, is just too ideal—in location and wiggle room—for the takeoff of those six Navy jets.

    Which make for a good metaphor for Bibb’s decision at hand: complicated.

    A list of pros and cons that “underscore the need for further detailed study and careful consideration of the site’s conditions,” one report concludes, “before any construction project is undertaken.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Cleveland to Close McCafferty Health Center in Ohio City, Redevelop Site for Affordable Housing

    Cleveland to Close McCafferty Health Center in Ohio City, Redevelop Site for Affordable Housing

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    Mark Oprea

    The city of Cleveland will be lining the McCafferty Center, a health clinic on Lorain Avenue, up for conversion into affordable housing in the next two years.

    Lorain Avenue has had its share of promise in the past year or so.

    In April, RTA announced funding for a bus rapid transit line study for the Ohio City/North Olmsted corridor.

    And last week a second update to the Lorain Midway, a two-mile cycle track that would extend from West 65th to the Hope Memorial Bridge, was unveiled to the public, plans lush with comfy tree lines and protected pathways. It would provide the street with a much-needed makeover, one that pairs nicely with zoning updates to emphasize transit-oriented development across the city.

    Plans that have now made their way to the McCafferty Center Building off West 42nd and Lorain, a clinic controlled by the Cleveland Department of Public Health. Instead of offering Covid shots and STI tests and other low-cost care, the almost two-acre site, the building on which is underutilized, will be soon lined up for the development of affordable housing.

    Which is okay with Department of Public Health chief Dave Margolius.

    While McCafferty has for years been a rock in the neighborhood for reproductive health services and vaccines, Margolius said he “also recognizes that housing has a tremendous impact on health.”

    “[We] are pleased be part of a process to create more opportunities for affordable housing,” he added in a press release, “in a neighborhood that needs it.”

    Ohio City’s Strategic Plan in 2019 suggested the neighborhood could use at least 600 more units of housing, “including the approval of” some 60 units of affordable housing. Most of the recent additions to that stock have covered more of the need for the former rather than the latter.

    Redoing, as the city says, a “largely-underutilized” block corner with a 53-year-old building that’s only a quarter occupied is a no-brainer route towards achieving those elusive affordable housing goals. For seniors. For those who can’t afford four-figure rents. For those who need to stay in the neighborhood. Ground floor uses could include spaces for non-profits and social service agencies.

    Adding affordable housing stock has Councilman Kerry McCormack’s intention for years: the chance to give older Clevelanders and lower-income folks a chance to stay in Ohio City as the neighborhood changes and property values climb.

    “As we move forward, I am excited about the future of this site continuing to serve a public purpose by providing affordable housing and social services to the neighborhood,” McCormack said via a press release. “I appreciate the hard work of city staff and look forward to future community engagement to ensure this is the best project possible.” (He did respond to a call Wednesday.)

    click to enlarge McCafferty's new future pairs nicely with the street's probable conversion into the Lorain Midway. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    McCafferty’s new future pairs nicely with the street’s probable conversion into the Lorain Midway.

    A mentality that denizens  of Ohio City might agree with.

    Though there’s some neighborhood hesitation with the Lorain Midway—namely due to its threat to on-street parking spaces—and concerns about development in general, McCormack’s call for public input, even just for one building, should help avoid neighbors at loggerheads. And it may help align the councilman’s own push for suitable housing for seniors.

    And just simply allow for a new building in general, one that will better match the future of the street.

    “It’s pretty dingy and dated inside. I mean, they’ll have to tear it down ’cause the condition of the building is not great,” Whitney Anderson, 37, who owns a home across the street from McCafferty, told Scene. “And so, I mean, I imagine it would be more expensive to try and rehab into housing.”

    Not, Anderson clarified, another Welleon. “With so much market rate housing being built in the area, I think having the balance is really essential.”

    As for McCafferty’s asset to the less fortunate, the future is a little more nebulous. Margolius told Scene that CDPH has “some leads” as for a new West Side location, but hasn’t signed anything. Because a developer wouldn’t be lined up for another year or so, Margolius said “we have a little time to find the perfect fit.”

    Just as it would for patients themselves.

    “I’m not sure what I’d do, not sure what I’d do,” Don, a cancer patient in his sixties in a multicolor leg cast, told Scene sitting in a wheelchair on the corner of 42nd and Lorain.

    Though Don said he’s only been to McCafferty for healthcare “a few times” in the past three years, he said the move further west, even just a few blocks, prove a hurdle. Especially when, as a homeless man, he relies on hygiene materials from the shelter across the street.

    “Is it close by?” he asked. “If not, we’ll see.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Annual Pedestrian and Bicycle Crash Report Questions Effectiveness of Cleveland’s Vision Zero Program

    Annual Pedestrian and Bicycle Crash Report Questions Effectiveness of Cleveland’s Vision Zero Program

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    Bike Cleveland

    A buffered bike lane on Detroit Avenue.

    There was 75-year-old Mike hit while walking a crosswalk on West 14th St. There was 15-year-old Sariya hit near East 105th by a driver with a suspended license.

    And there was the driver in a stolen Jeep trying to escape police on Lee Road, one who crashed into the front of the Keratin Barber College. Four people were injured.

    “Oh, the car went through the entire front door,” Tracy, a Keratin employee, said, recounting that day last March to Scene. “I watched the whole thing. The car came right down the street and right into our business.”

    Last year, 550 Clevelanders were hit by bars while cycling or walking around the city, Bike Cleveland found, according to a report released Tuesday. Nine of those involved in accidents died, a relative unchanged statistic since Vision Zero, Cleveland’s attempt to eliminate fatal pedestrian and biking accidents by 2032, was implemented two years ago. (In 2023, there were 10 deaths.)

    The report, which Bike Cleveland compiled using 911 calls and data culled from the Ohio Department of Public Safety, details a city still reaching for safe infrastructure.

    The numbers are likely obvious to routine navigators of Cleveland’s hardscape. Most of 2023’s accidents occurred in dense areas with wide streets, where drivers have ample room to change lanes and flout speed limits. About a third of all accidents occurred downtown, or on the city’s inner West or East sides. (Seventy-nine of these involved children.)

    At least as far as we know.

    Jenna Thomas, the data analyst at Bike Cleveland who helped produce the bulk of the report, said that many accidents with pedestrians and cyclists often go unreported, either due to hit-and-runs or police skepticism. That, and the city of Cleveland, she said, submits actual crash reports, called OH-1s, about “45 to 60 days after crashes occur.”

    Other Ohio cities like Cincinnati, Columbus and Toledo, she said, send those reports “within one to five days on average.”

    “And Vision Zero relies on those reports,” Thomas said in a phone call. “I mean, we don’t really have good data. Like, in 2023, about half of all crashes, I think, don’t ever get reported.”

    Like 40 other U.S. cities, Cleveland dove into Vision Zero, a safer-streets initiative first adopted in Sweden in 1997, as a focused way to best spend dollars on buffered bike lanes, speed bumps and other traffic calming and safety efforts.

    And, save for ten speed tables, roundabouts and some walker-friendly signals, most of Vision Zero’s progress since 2022 has been policy-oriented, with Cleveland’s Complete & Green Streets law last summer doing most of the guiding. As did $3 million in American Rescue Plan Act money put aside for street reshaping: into narrowing roads, building better walk signaling.

    “All this takes time,” Thomas said. “But we’re certainly anxious to see more things installed.”

    In 2020, eight years after installing its own Vision Zero policy, Chicago’s traffic fatality rates pretty much matched those in 2012.  From 2015, when Los Angeles implemented its own, to 2018, pedestrian fatalities increased by 75 percent. The only major applause heard might be in San Francisco, where crashes “decreased significantly” in 2019 and 2020, after two years of policy changes. (Mind you, in a city where 40 percent of its commuters use public transit.)

    “Claiming that no price can be placed on human life is a noble approach,” Jay Derr, a transportation policy advisor at the Reason Foundation, wrote, “but one that is unrealistic in a world where policymakers have limited resources to solve problems.”

    But don’t tell that to Ward 3 Councilman Kerry McCormack. The writer of the Complete & Green Streets legislation in 2022, McCormack believes that Cleveland will see a decline in such accidents soon after construction is cleared—like the $30 million Lorain Midway, or the supposed four to five buffered bike lanes, he said, that could pop up downtown this summer.

    “And you don’t even have to have the data,” he said. “People are out of control in their cars, they’re out of control. Your signs can be great. Marks on the road. But we still need real road infrasture to force drivers to pay attention.”

    As for that infrastucture, McCormack and Thomas turn to the suggestions from Vision Zero: to new pedestrian wait isalnds, to raising crosswalks and adding curb extensions to high risk blocks. Or, as the report says, matching “evolving national standards for street design.”

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    Mark Oprea

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