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  • Former Cuyahoga County Employee to Plead Guilty to Wire Fraud Charges

    Former Cuyahoga County Employee to Plead Guilty to Wire Fraud Charges

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    Tim Evanson

    The federal courthouse in Downtown Cleveland.

    Curtis McEwen, an IT professional facing federal wire fraud charges, is set to take a plea deal in court, filings this week show.

    In charges filed last month, the DOJ alleged the now former IT director for the Cuyahoga County Board of Developmental Disabilities manufactured false expense reports and employee invoices to redirect millions to his own pockets at Saber Healthcare, where he worked for nearly two decades before being fired in March 2023.

    He was hired months after by Cuyahoga County, which has previously said background checks and employer reference calls revealed no reasons to be concerned. He was asked to resign the day charges were filed and did so.

    Court documents released on Tuesday show that McEwen agreed to a plea deal to two counts and was released under an unsecured bond of $20,000. On release, he had to surrender his passport, get a mental health evaluation and is barred from obtaining any new lines of credit.

    According to the July indictment, from 2014 to 2023, McEwen allegedly “falsely represented” on expense reports that he had paid contracted companies for “IT-related products and services.” He then, the Feds say, created imitation invoices to “substantiate his payments.”

    McEwen allegedly siphoned $80,006 to $182,808 for each monthly invoice, and rerouted that money intended for third party companies into his own assets, which grew to include a mansion, a $11,000 2017 BMW R Nine T motorcycle,  a $15,000 2020 Ducati Diavel 1260 bike, a Rolex Submariner, a $44,000 Ressense Antwerp watch, a $10,000 Luminor Panerai Automatic Power Reserve watch and more.

    McEwen’s allegedly long stint of wire fraud at Saber didn’t apparently extend to his IT work at the county.

    “As a public entity,” a spokesperson told Scene in July, “we have many safeguards in place to ensure fiscal responsibility. We have reviewed all relevant records and are confident that our safeguards worked.”

    McEwen should be sentenced in federal court sometime this fall.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • As Cleveland Makes Stadium Pitch, Optimism in Brook Park After Meetings With Haslam Reps for New Dome

    As Cleveland Makes Stadium Pitch, Optimism in Brook Park After Meetings With Haslam Reps for New Dome

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    Erik Drost

    Cleveland Browns Stadium might be vacant come 2029, an attendee of a meeting between Brook Park and the Browns on Wednesday told Scene.

    The day before Mayor Justin Bibb publicly released Cleveland’s latest proposal to the Browns for renovating the existing stadium on the lakefront—a contribution of $461 million to the $1-billion-plus project—and asked the Haslams to respond by Aug. 12, the team welcomed officials from Brook Park for a series of meetings at Browns headquarters in Berea.

    Starting at one o’clock in the afternoon on Wednesday, roughly a dozen officials from the suburb convened in a series of small groups in a conference room at 76 Lou Groza Blvd., itching to entertain the Haslam Sports Group’s plans for the future of Cleveland Browns Stadium a few miles south of Cleveland.

    By 4 p.m. that day, many had walked away with an answer crystal clear from their point of view: The Haslams are all but likely to pursue that 176 acres of land in Brook Park and a new dome over renovating the current stadium on the lakefront.

    “I think they have big plans,” a source familiar with the Wednesday meetings told Scene.

    “If you put a gun to my head? Yeah, they’re going to Brook Park,” they added. “Do I still think that legally or financially it could still be held up? Yeah, I do. I do.”

    The meeting, which the source said was conducted with representatives from the Haslam Sports Group, marks a plot point in one of the meatiest Cleveland sports sagas since Art Modell infamously moved the Browns to Baltimore.

    Since February, when news broke of Browns owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam’s planned purchase of a massive plot of land in Brook Park, the team has kept mum their intentions for what happens after the lease at Cleveland Browns Stadium’s lease ends in 2028. 

    But just days after Jimmy and Dee Haslam told the assembled Browns press squad in West Virginia that there was no hard deadline to make a decision, Bibb ended the city’s public silence and gave them one.

    “The Browns have been an essential fixture on our lakefront for decades. But our first priority is always our residents,” Bibb said in a statement, arguing it’s better financial sense to renovate the stadium than open public coffers to build a $2-billion dome in Brook Park. “Having the Browns play here is integral to our city’s identity and community spirit. This initiative must go beyond the Browns and be about what’s best for downtown, the neighborhoods, the suburbs, and the region.”

    “The stadium is more than just a venue. It’s tailgating in the Muni Lot. It’s celebrating on West 6th,” he said, adding what might be an unconvincing note selling the lakefront stadium over a dome: “It’s Lake Effect snow drifting over the field—toe-warmers and three sweaters on the bone-rattling wind-chill days off the lake.”

    Of the public release and deadline, Bibb’s Chief of Staff Bradford Davy told reporters it was simply time, after more than a year of negotiations, to get an answer.

    “It’s the result of 18 months of conversations. We’ve talked about every deal point that exists in that lease,” Davy told Signal Cleveland. “The only thing left to do is transmit those deal terms in a formal document and that’s what we did.”

    “We’ve gotten to a point where we’ve really exhausted a lot of the deal points,” he told Cleveland.com. “We’re at a place now where we need to be asking questions about what the future of the lakefront looks like, and to answer that question, we need to know whether or not the Browns will call it home.”

    The Haslams Sports Group, in a statement from Chief Operating Officer David Jenkins, responded that day: “We appreciate the latest proposal from Mayor Bibb and his administration and will be following up with the City of Cleveland to better understand the details while we are still reviewing it.

    “We are working diligently to comprehensively examine all options to identify the best path for not only our fans, but also Greater Cleveland and Northeast Ohio,” he added. “Our region deserves to be thought of as evolving, forward-thinking, and innovative, so we need to think boldly and creatively in the process.”

    All of which seems to have taken front row at Wednesday’s meeting at 76 Lou Groza Blvd.

    While Bibb offered the Browns exclusive use of the Willard parking garage and Muni Lot on game and event days, and while he said he’d welcome the Haslams for discussions on participating in the city’s plans to develop the land around the stadium, what the billionaires have in mind for a possible Brook Park complex seems far more lucrative and dramatic in comparison.

    A Haslams Sports Group rep admitted as much on Wednesday to some Brook Park officials, noting the limitations of the current stadium site, issues with parking, and saying it simply doesn’t match up with what the Haslams ultimately want to do, the source said.

    In other words, what’s possible in Brook Park.

    Some initial renderings of those plans, portions of which have been leaked and others of which have been shared in off-the-record presentations with reporters from various Cleveland media outlets, show what the Haslams have in store beyond the dome, and the splashy events and concerts they would expect to draw thanks to a roof.

    For the Brook Park coalition, which included Mayor Edward Orcutt, the Haslams Group played a flashy minutes-long flyover video.

    “Think Disneyland,” the source said.

    Imagine a Crocker Park-style shopping and entertainment center. Luxury condos.

    “The Box,” as Haslam’s team dubbed it. Everything self-contained. Everything, including parking, in the team’s control.

    Brook Park can’t put the financial backing toward a stadium that Cleveland can, of course, meaning the question of how it all gets paid for remains open.

    “Those kinds of things are being worked out behind the scenes,” Mayor Ed Orcutt told Fox 8 earlier this week. “I’m going to be very limited in what I can say with information on that.”

    The state would likely play a major role; Cuyahoga County, which is going to shoulder a massive financial burden with the upcoming jail and courthouse projects, has remained on the sidelines of the current talks.

    “We are hopeful that the city of Cleveland and the Browns come to a resolution. We have not been a party to their negotiations,” a county spokesperson said in a statement Thursday.

    Given Bibb’s public release of the city’s proposal and new deadline for the Haslams to respond, it appears the City of Cleveland won’t go quietly. City Council is likely to raise a fuss, especially after passing an ordinance confirming their intentions to utilize Ohio’s “Art Modell law,” which theoretically makes it harder for teams to leave cities. (It’s yet to be tested.)

    But, given the tenor of talks with Brook Park officials, neither that nor Cleveland’s latest offering will stand in the way, according to the source.

    “They’re building that dome.”

    The Haslam Sports Group, in that statement Thursday, emphasized no decision has been made. “We will continue to provide updates as we have more information to share,” it read.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • ‘It’s Just Sad’: Drug Store Closures Could Make Some Cleveland Neighborhoods Pharmacy Deserts

    ‘It’s Just Sad’: Drug Store Closures Could Make Some Cleveland Neighborhoods Pharmacy Deserts

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    Mark Oprea

    Rite Aid’s closure on West 65th, like other pharmacies throughout Cleveland, have rippling effects on nearby residents.

    When the Rite Aid off West 65th St. and Franklin Boulevard announced earlier this summer it would be closing, a small wave of disappointment fell over Christina Keim and Mark Galit.

    Filing and picking up prescriptions would be a bit harder. Grabbing a few pantry items or cleaning supplies would require a 10-minute drive or a 20-minute ride on the 71 bus.

    Not, as it’d been for years, a quick dash down the block.

    “I mean, I can’t tell you the times I walked over there just to grab something like milk, you know,” Keim, 46, a dental hygienist, told Scene from Galit’s porch off West 65th. “Just anything that we needed at that specific time, you know, that you can’t get from Amazon.”

    But reality is soon to set in. That Rite Aid, like two others in Cleveland and others across Northeast Ohio, will close by the end of September, leaving a void and vacant building where thousands of customers once shopped on the regular.

    “It’s just sad in general,” Keim said.

    This is the result, on the ground level, of Pharmaggeddon. Since last fall, big name drug stores—Rite Aid, CVS and Walgreens—have opted to deal with so-called underperforming stores, or bankruptcy in Rite Aid’s case, by pulling out of neighborhoods that apparently couldn’t make profits. Stores mostly in low-income communities.

    In Cleveland, where 20% of residents don’t own a car, the implications of corporate slashing have rippling effects on residents who’ve long relied on them for medications, toiletries or a weekend snack run. Especially for seniors and the disabled.

    “It’s a huge equity issue,” Ward 15 Councilwoman Jenny Spencer, whose ward includes the Franklin Rite Aid, wrote in a statement. “It signals that we’re no longer a fully walkable neighborhood—in a community where many households don’t have access to cars.”

    click to enlarge José Miranda, who's lived in Detroit-Shoreway for the better part of the past 30 years, said Rite Aid's departure will throw off his usual errand running. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    José Miranda, who’s lived in Detroit-Shoreway for the better part of the past 30 years, said Rite Aid’s departure will throw off his usual errand running.

    And the probability that another chain will come in to scoop up the empty drug store buildings isn’t very high — the closed CVS on Madison, for example, has sat vacant for years. More are about to join the market.

    “It’s hard, because Cleveland’s not really a growth market,” Ryan Fisher, senior vice president of CRESCO, told Scene. Fisher chalked the exodus up to plain capitalist decisions. Pharmacies are “simply saying, this location doesn’t work for me. I’m either going to not continue on or I’m going to go dark, finish off my lease, and then that will be it.”

    With six-figure rents at most locations, it would take financial help from the city or some kind of landlord subsidy to get a replacement in most cases.

    “Finding somebody else to replace place that rent at that number in Cleveland,” Fisher said, “has been difficult.”

    But the constraints and cold truths of big business mean little to neighbors in the blocks surrounding the Franklin Blvd. Rite Aid, which, as of Thursday, was covered in yellow signs announcing its eminent closure.

    The consensus was apparent: certain items purchased after a walk could be bought elsewhere, via prescription delivery services, via Amazon, via other stores. But for many, there’s the issue of transportation and access. The nearest pharmacies lie either miles away on Clark or on 117th.

    “It’s not as convenient anymore,” David Heil, 70, said from his front door several houses west of Rite Aid. They have lingering questions: What do we do in a minor emergency? Will there be problems with my medical insurance? “TKTK,” he said.

    In statements to Scene, the big three pharmacies pointed to economic conditions stemming from the pandemic as reasons for pulling out of selected blocks over the past three, four years.

    The three CVS closures in Cuyahoga County this year were, a spokesperson said, due to a reassessment of store needs, of “population shifts, consumer buying patterns, a community’s store density.” A spokesperson for Walgreens said that a quarter of its 6,500 stores nationwide will close in the next three years because they are “not contributing to our long-term strategy.”

    And Rite Aid, which confirmed its three recent closures—Clark Ave.’s on August 3, Franklin’s on September 8 and Chester Ave.’s on September 15—blamed the same macro issues.

    “While we have had to make difficult business decisions over the past several months to improve our business and optimize our retail footprint,” a statement to Scene read, “we are committed to becoming financially and operationally healthy.”

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  • Cleveland Moves, City’s Effort to Improve Bike and Pedestrian Infrastructure, Hits the Streets for Public Feedback

    Cleveland Moves, City’s Effort to Improve Bike and Pedestrian Infrastructure, Hits the Streets for Public Feedback

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    Bike Cleveland

    A buffered bike lane on Detroit Avenue, which may be reinstalled later this year—or next.

    Last July, Mayor Justin Bibb announced that City Hall, in pursuit of making Cleveland more accommodating and safer for transit, scooters, bikes and pedestrians across town, would create a Citywide Mobility Plan.

    An in-house Mobility Team would, over the next five years, create and oversee a plan that would, ideally, dedicate much more public space and protective infrastructure to everyone not moving in a car.

    This summer, that Mobility Team created Cleveland Moves, a months-long survey of Clevelanders to help best answer fundamental questions of their work: Which city streets are begging for bike lanes or safer crosswalks? And how exactly could we modify them?

    The question has been best answered, at least since early July, in the form of a map. Cleveland Moves has since then been asking Clevelanders to digitally draw in their most frequented cycling and walking routes and paths that could best benefit from further separation from car traffic. (So far, 238 have answered.)

    In August, the Mobility Team will take the concept a bit further — hitting the streets to gather in-person feedback at pop ups and parks events to figure out what the draft of their five-year Mobility Plan will look like come December.

    “We’ve been hearing from people for a long time that they want to bike places,” Sarah Davis, an active transportation planner and head of Cleveland Moves, told Scene on Wednesday. “We’ve been hearing from people that people are speeding and they want people to go slower.”

    Slower on West 41st and West 44th, according to paths drawn on the Moves online map. On Clifton and Edgewater Drive. On Detroit in Ohio City, on St. Clair in the Warehouse District.

    “Some of the feedback here doesn’t surprise me,” Davis, a cyclist herself and transplant from Boston’s planning department, added. “I also would say that this map isn’t the end-all be-all. Everything that’s on here will definitely be something that isn’t built right away. We have to prioritize.”

    Building bike lanes in a city of 376,000 isn’t as easy as a feat as one might imagine, or at least on first glance.

    click to enlarge The results of Cleveland Moves so far, with requests for improvement in green, and frequently-traveled routes in blue. The Moves team believes that their August engagement will help chisel out a clearer picture of how to modify the city. - Cleveland Moves

    Cleveland Moves

    The results of Cleveland Moves so far, with requests for improvement in green, and frequently-traveled routes in blue. The Moves team believes that their August engagement will help chisel out a clearer picture of how to modify the city.

    On major road resurfacing projects, like the Midways or the in-progress repaving of Payne Avenue from East 13th to East 30th, the city has to work with a network of state engineers and (most of the time) consulting firms over a multi-year process. And lanes don’t always come out as originally hoped for.

    Cleveland Moves, its proponents told Scene, is crafted to help tend to the city’s yearning for bike lanes much faster than road work will allow. In Payne Ave.’s case, that would include a bike lane separated by a parking lane.

    “We want to build out bikeway connections much faster than we are able to churn out resurfacing projects,” Calley Mersmann, senior strategist of transit and mobility in the Mayor’s Office of Capital Projects, said. “They don’t require us to mess with asphalt. We can go in and do paint. We can drop delineators. Drop traffic stops.” As Mersmann likes to call them, “quick-build things.”

    Mersmann wouldn’t disclose exactly how much striping a new lane, say, on Detroit would take from the city’s general fund. But the costs aren’t cheap. Your average bike lane costs $133,170 per mile on average, according to data analysis by the University of North Carolina. One curb extension? $13,000. And a multi-use, paved trail? Nearly a half a million dollars. “A mile of the Superior Midway is going to cost more,” Bike Cleveland director Jacob VanSickle said, “than a mile of parking-protected lane on Payne Avenue.”

    Davis said she predicts her team will finalize a plan using a synthesis of both the Cleveland Moves feedback data and information that regularly informs Cleveland’s take on Vision Zero—the effort to try and bring traffic-related deaths down to zero.

    It’s why Mersmann said the city’s working on—”as we speak”—reinstalling the delineators on Detroit Avenue, yet did not give a completion date on that reinstallation.

    “Could we see anything else in the Downtown, Ohio City, Tremont area, and further out, implemented this year?” Scene asked.

    “In terms of new bike lanes?” Mersmann said. “No.”

    Both members of the team suggested that the Mayor’s Office of Capital Projects will begin the three-year process of installing those quick-build fixes after the Mobility Plan is sent to, and hopefully approved by, City Council in “early 2025.”

    Although a full list of pop ups wasn’t provided, Davis said Cleveland Moves will be at some of the Metroparks’ summer events, along with other city-related goings-on next month.

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  • Frontier Ending Five Routes Out of Cleveland Hopkins Airport Citing ‘Market Demand’

    Frontier Ending Five Routes Out of Cleveland Hopkins Airport Citing ‘Market Demand’

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    Frontier

    Frontier’s set to end five direct flights in September.

    Despite a relatively glowing year for Frontier Airlines at Cleveland Hopkins, the Denver-based company announced this week that they’ll be cutting five direct flights  at the end of the summer season.

    Come September, Clevelanders will no longer be able to book budget flights on the airline directly to Jacksonville, Florida; New Orleans; Myrtle Beach; Pensacola, Florida and Savannah, Georgia. Travelers will have to fly to these destinations with connecting flights, via Spirit, Southwest Delta and United.

    A spokesperson at Cleveland Hopkins deferred to Frontier, who did not return calls for comment Monday and Tuesday.

    “These routes are seasonal, and are ending with the conclusion of the summer travel season,” a statement from Frontier published in the Plain Dealer Tuesday read. “A decision on resuming service to these destinations next summer will be made at a later date, based on market demand.”

    Market demand has seemed to, regardless of its cancellations, prop Frontier up in recent years amongst its competitors.

    Along with adding a handful of new routes in the spring, and a whole new crew base of 450 set up here in January, the airline had its busiest stretch last year since 2008, with 221,434 customers at Hopkins—making it the most traveled airline, the PD reported, in Cleveland. (United had 217,898; American Airlines, 181,340.)

    Mass doesn’t come without controversy. As flights increased, so did a barrel of complaints.

    According to “The Plane Truth 2024” report from the United States Public Interest Research Group, Frontier amassed a new record of customer complaints—an increase of 29 percent last year—that revolved around scheduling issues, excessive cancellations, delays and slow-rolled refunds.

    That gave Frontier the “worst ratio of complaints to passengers,” the report reads, twice as high as Spirit, which came in at second place.

    Such report was before the Biden administration signed an executive order in April demanding that all U.S. airlines issue refunds for botched flights without having customers “jump through hoops” to get their money back. And within a week’s time.

    Frontier will most likely decide if they’re rebooting the aforementioned five flights to the South in early 2025.

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  • Cuyahoga County to Plant 1,200 Trees in Canopy Restoration Effort, But Residents’ Role in Solution Looms

    Cuyahoga County to Plant 1,200 Trees in Canopy Restoration Effort, But Residents’ Role in Solution Looms

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    Mark Oprea

    Cuyahoga County’s tree canopy is about a third of what county advocates said it could be.

    Fifteen-hundred trees are to be planted and grown on public land in Cuyahoga County in the next few years, the result of $1.2 million in grant rollout, county representatives said this week.

    That money, which hails from the county’s annual investment into trees, will equate to some 200 trees planted in Parma; 128 in Olmsted Township; 130 in Bedford; 18 in Lakeview Cemetery; along with a dozen other projects intending to keep parts of our canopy we’ve let go over the decades. (Cleveland got its tree due in 2023.)

    And, according to data from the last county survey in 2019, there’s a lot of space to fill: the current tree coverage of Cuyahoga County—some 96,000 acres—is roughly a third of the land area that’s viable for greenery.

    With the Urban Forestry Commission set to mesh its goals with Cleveland’s new Division of Forestry, optimists might see this influx of millions of dollars dedicated to sprouting new elms or sumacs across the city as a fine beacon of good things to come. Meaning the possible restoration of our depleted canopy by 2040.

    Yet, city and county specialists share similar anxieties about an aspect of grant dollars not easily influenced: the plots of private land that lie where the sidewalk ends.

    In other parlance: the pesky, vague sphere of the tree lawn.

    “It’s been my personal experience that residents have a wide variety of attitudes towards trees that shed leaves on their property,” Jenita McGowan, the county’s chief of climate and sustainability, told Scene.

    “If the residents wanted it, they thought there’d be an overwhelming want and need,” her colleague, Mary Cierebiej, the county’s director of Administrative, Planning, Information and Research, added.

    In past years, “people were not interested because again, the maintenance of leaves and trees falling or limbs or other bad things—maybe they’ve taken trees down in the past? Yeah, I mean, there’s a wild difference of opinions.”

    click to enlarge What $1.2 million in tree money gets you. - Cuyahoga County

    Cuyahoga County

    What $1.2 million in tree money gets you.

    Besides the historic neglect the city had in the late 20th century for its grated trees, as the 2021 Tree Plan showed, the deeper problem of restoring the canopy to a level Clevelanders can be proud of deals with a tough navigation between private and public property.

    The city cannot and does not plant on private land. Tree-planting incentive programs have existed for the better part of the past decade, which often offer planting and maintainance gratis—yet these are the best bets for City Hall to convince neighbors that the benefits outweigh having to rake a little more.

    There are innumerable benefits, after all: Higher tree canopies help lower rates of heart disease and asthma, help combat high summer temps on street level, help raise land values when planted strategically.

    And strategy, at least in the Tree Plan guidebook, means planting saplings with an equity planner’s lens: on streets and tree lawns in Lee-Miles, in Jefferson and Clark-Fulton, where tree canopy coverage is a third of what it is in leafier neighborhoods.

    “I think that the geospatial data bears out that we cannot street tree our way into a restored tree canopy,” McGowan said.

    “And it shades an area of our communities that are important when you’re walking around,” she added. “But if we planted a tree in every tree lawn in the county, I still don’t think we solve our tree canopy issue.”

    A solution, both McGowan and Cierebiej, admitted that could also stem from more accurate data. The last full-on tree count of Cuyahoga’s stock—which was by satellite image—is five years old.

    “I think Mary and I are in agreement in order to continue this program, it’s probably time to assess it,” McGowan said, “so we can make sure that we’re targeted in how we use public funding for trees.”

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  • Gordon Park Redesign Feedback Makes Future Makeover Clear: More Stuff For Families

    Gordon Park Redesign Feedback Makes Future Makeover Clear: More Stuff For Families

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    Google

    Gordon Park, long split by a six-lane highway and suffering from neglect, will undergo major transformation in early 2025.

    Like countless Clevelanders of her generation, Lorraine Bradley has always seen Gordon Park as the go-to place for softball and barbecue on the east side.

    At least as it was in the eighties and nineties, when Bradley would accompany her husband for league games on one of the park’s five baseball diamonds. The whole trip, typically a short walk from her home in Hough, grew into weekly association. Sundays. Softball. Cookout.

    “We always made it into a family affair,” Bradley, 75, told Scene. “The kids played. You’d go to the aquarium. All the families would gather. You know, we didn’t all live in the same community, but the park’s where we all met.”

    And as it was for countless Clevelanders, the image and aura of Gordon Park as a vibrant gathering space hugging Lake Erie has all but eroded in recent years. Today, the park is a shell of what it once was: 48 acres of underwhelming grass and field comprising a mountainous island surrounded by highway and industry.

    Gordon Park’s hopeful resurrection was the subject of a town hall situated in the Kovacic Rec Center on St. Clair Ave. on Tuesday evening, a public engagement procedure studded with the usual stickers and Post It notes nearby residents used to help direct the park’s future.

    Spearheading by the Metroparks, which took over Gordon’s lease in October, and a smattering of architecture firms, including LAND Studio and the SmithGroup, that went through the idea-gathering phase used in just about every recent parks project in Cleveland’s recent history—from Irishtown Bend Park to the elusive and yet-to-be-fully-funded North Coast Landbridge.

    click to enlarge Chad Brintnall, an architect at SmithGroup, led discussions around Gordon Park's redesign on Tuesday. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Chad Brintnall, an architect at SmithGroup, led discussions around Gordon Park’s redesign on Tuesday.

    The ideas, discussed over two hours with some 25 locals, pointed to not just cleaning up and rejuvenating Gordon Park, but bringing one of Cleveland’s largest park spaces into the 21st century: add interactive art, butterfly gardens, food kiosks, playspaces, hiking trails, fitness equipment and restrooms.

    In other words, the people spoke, reshape Gordon Park for everyone.

    “I feel like the amenities have to be diversified. To where it’s just not basketball, or not just softball,” Rodney Middleton, 66, a trustee of the InterCity Yacht Club that’s rooted just north of Gordon, told Scene after the meeting sporting a sailor’s cap.

    “And safe,” he said. “We have to be mindful of the age groups that utilize the park. It’s just not young people. It’s just not young Black men. You know, we’re talking about a space that families should be able to utilize.”

    All entities involved in the info-gathering on Tuesday declined to say Gordon Park should be this, or should be that, yet promised that the ideas gathered would help produce a working plan for the park come early 2025.

    The $8 million donation from the Mandel Foundation, which permitted Tuesday’s session, would also, said Chad Brintnall, an architect with the SmithGroup, be used for some public art installations—”a project that delivers significant impact to the community.” And, separately, 200 new trees on behalf of the Western Reserve Land Conservancy. Metroparks also reportedly put in new benches, tables and trash cans shortly after their lease takeover.

    But at the same time, as Brintnall exemplified on Tuesday, hunched over a table with a marker in his hand, such engagement helps right the wrong of two ideas of park planning. Ideas that separate Clevelanders who use the park on a regular basis, and those that have, historically, shaped and planned a city from afar.

    Those “who feel as if they’ve been left out of the conversation, who don’t feel the same attention. It’s vital that you have meaningful dialogue with those folks,” Brintnall said. “There’s so many empty and broken promises. How do you get over that?”

    Which only somewhat appeases Bradley.

    click to enlarge Gordon Park, shown here in 1927, was a bustling haven for east side parkgoers, until years of neglect and the construction of I-90 decimated it. - Cleveland Memory Project

    Cleveland Memory Project

    Gordon Park, shown here in 1927, was a bustling haven for east side parkgoers, until years of neglect and the construction of I-90 decimated it.

    Because Gordon Park was split in two by the construction of I-90, and the extension of the CSX railroad line, an ongoing silo effect has only harmed access to the parkland. Gordon Park, to put it simply, is not easy to get to. Residents complain often, as they did Tuesday, about its poor signage. A tiny bridge over a six-lane highway is the only link between Gordon’s north and south ends.

    “Honestly, I’d love to just see that bridge widened,” Bradley said. “So that we can go over it—safely.”

    Safe may take two decades. To the northwest, in front of the East 55th Marina, will be the primary location of the Metroparks’ gargantuan CHEERS park build, which vows to create six bays of new lakeside green space all from dredged material. (Like Burke and the Shoreway itself.) CHEERS won’t be finished until 2042, at the earliest.

    Kelly Coffman, an architect with the Metroparks involved with both projects, told Scene she sees Gordon’s future geographically intertwined with CHEERS, linked by a brand new bike trail on Marginal Road and, hopefully, a parasitic highway downgraded to a slower boulevard.

    All of which makes Coffman call up old pictures of Gordon Park in its glory days, of postwar women in white one-pieces, lounging on a crystalline lakeside, near bathhouses and hotdog stands. Images destroyed by a highway and decades of neglect.

    I think it’s just of a previous era,” Coffman mused, regarding past planning. “Like those are the decisions they made, they dealt with in the past.

    “I think we get so many more benefits out of the park now by building out, and just kind of working around it,” she added. “We can improve crossings, we can reduce interchanges. We can make it better.”

    The coalition working to restore Gordon Park will meet again for a second engagement session, with early conceptual drawings, Brintnall said, in September.

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  • Cleveland Finance Director Ahmed Abonamah Resigns

    Cleveland Finance Director Ahmed Abonamah Resigns

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    Chief Ahmed Abonamah at City Hall in 2023. The Akron native resigned late last week.

    After a breezy two-and-a-half years with the Bibb administration, Ahmed Abonamah, its director of finance since 2022, announced his resignation over the weekend.

    Besides a recap of Abonamah’s accomplishments during his tenure, and plans to install assistant finance director Jim Hartley come July 19, a press release from City Hall did not elaborate on Abonamah’s reasons for the abrupt (at least from the outside) exit.

    “I am proud of what we have accomplished and confident that the city is poised for continued success,” Abonamah wrote in the release, recapping his two years.

    He went on: “Since Mayor Bibb’s inauguration, the city’s financial condition has steadily improved as evidenced by consecutive structurally balanced budgets, the City’s first merit-based credit rating upgrades in decades, and record cash reserve levels.”

    On Monday, Abonamah told Axios Cleveland that his adios to City Hall was a mere “anodyne job change,” and therefore nothing controversial. The time was right for a “compelling opportunity,” he said, though he didn’t elaborate further.

    A confident advocate who aimed to modernize Cleveland’s budget book, Abonamah was a part of several major city plot points since Bibb hired him.

    He helped oversee the spending of Cleveland’s $512 million of American Rescue Plan Act dollars, aided Cleveland police in navigating a transition to 12-hour shifts and delved, most recently, into lakefront plans and the future (or not) of Cleveland Browns Stadium.

    In late 2023, Abonamah flanked Development Director Jeff Epstein to convince City Council that a Shore-to-Core-to-Shore tax increment financing (TIF) district would help speed up Downtown Cleveland’s evolution.

    The city’s assistant director of finance for 17 years, Hartley was a real estate tax professional before that, along with managing a $12 billion budget as Ohio’s Chief Investment Officer. Abonamah called him “an ideal leader to continue the city’s recent financial successes.”

    Hartley will officially take over the position July 19.

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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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  • As Cleveland City Council Begins Redistricting, Concerns About Ward Boundaries and Representation Rise

    As Cleveland City Council Begins Redistricting, Concerns About Ward Boundaries and Representation Rise

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    Mark Oprea

    Council President Blaine Griffin in Council Chambers last year. Griffin will be overseeing a redrawing of Cleveland’s warn boundaries to be wrapped up in December.

    Ward 8 Councilman Michael Polensek recalls 2013 with a slight distaste in his mouth.

    It was a year the city’s then 19 wards were set to be chiseled down to 17. Cleveland was still losing population, and then Council President Martin Sweeney had to follow a charter amendment passed five years before that required boundaries to be redrawn every decade with the number of seats tied to how many people lived in Cleveland. In 2013, that meant two politicians would lose their jobs.

    The result was some high octane in-fighting and crosstalk bickering. Jay Westbrook, the veteran council member who backed the 2008 charter law with enthusiasm, opted to retire to “stand up for the change I sought and let someone else pick up the torch.”

    Sweeney, accused of influencing the redraw of the wards map to back then Councilman Eugene Miller—who was, at the time, embroiled in a DUI scandal—found himself in a similar pickle as Westbrook. He was thus accused of imbalancing the Black and Hispanic neighborhoods he had supposedly promised to help.

    In 2013, Sweeney stepped down from his role, the Plain Dealer reported, to “set the whole record straight on the whole redistricting thing.”

    “He’s a sore loser,” Polensek said at the time. “He lost at what he tried to do. And now it’s nothing but bitterness.”

    Eleven years later, Council is six months away from another relook at Cleveland’s ward boundaries. With the help of the same consultants who drew the map a decade ago, it will decide how certain neighborhoods should be represented by elected officials. And eleven years later, as those hired guns begin interviewing its members, Council is again approaching the inevitable with feelings of dread in their back pockets.

    Especially those who recall 2013.

    “I told [the consultants] don’t mess up, don’t screw up my neighborhood again,” Polensek told Scene on Monday.

    “You have an opportunity to correct the mistakes that were made, the terrible lines that were drawn,” he said. “To disenfranchise east side and neighborhoods of color in the ethnic neighborhoods. That’s what they did.”

    Hired by City Hall three times to re-analyze its ward boundaries—in 1981, 2009 and 2013—the consultant team, led by 85-year-old analyst Bob Dykes at Triad Research Group, will have yet another opporunity to more carefully match Cleveland’s changing population numbers and neighborhoods with fairer, more accurate representation.

    All while doing its best to steer clear of gerrymandering claims. Some on Council in 2013 accused Sweeney of splintering Ward 14’s Hispanic population, curtailing it from 41 to 37 percent, until a successful pushback kept it more substantive. (A move that would undeniably help Councilwoman Jasmin Santana, the ward’s first Latina leader, secure her seat in 2017.)

    “Two of our primary goals are to have natural boundaries and keep neighborhoods together. Community involvement will also play a key role in redistricting,” Council President Blaine Griffin wrote in a press release. “We are eager to begin the work now to allow us time to get this right—and deliver maps that accurately reflect the needs of Cleveland’s diverse neighborhoods.” (Griffin was out of the office Monday and unavailable to comment for this article.)

    As will go the process, Dykes and his team of three, including architect Kent Whitley and former Cleveland State professor Mark Stalling, will have six months to hand over a redrawn map to Griffin. Council will vote on the revision. All minding that two of them, whomever they may be, will either lose their jobs or have to run for election in a different, newly created ward.

    That’s created a tiny panic in those who both trust their constituents yet find next year’s election too vague to pin down.

    “I don’t know what district I’m running. I don’t know what my ward number is going to be,” Ward 13 Councilman Kris Harsh told Scene. “I don’t know what my boundary is going to be. And I haven’t got any indications about what they might be. So I’m kind of waiting to see the map like everybody else.”

    click to enlarge Kris Harsh in 2023. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Kris Harsh in 2023.

    Next week, on July 11, Harsh said he’s hosting his first fundraiser in his council tenure, both as a bid to raise thousands of dollars before next June and to preempt what could be an eventual political threat. In early June, City Council doubled the limit that individuals and political action committees could contribute.

    Like Polensek, Harsh had his concerns that the new map could tilt neighborhoods’ identities, thus leading to a possible drop in what’s an already low voter turnout for council races.

    Calls to Dykes and Whitney were not returned on Monday. Salling said that his team vowed to “honor those boundaries” that Polensek claimed were rocked by 2013’s redistricting—namely the Black east side wards. He said the trio was committed to following the Voting Rights Act, the 1965 federal law passed to prevent, to the best of its ability, the disenfranchisement of minority communities.

    Regardless, Salling was blunt about the inevitable. Two fewer wards meant two fewer councilpeople. Two fewer councilpeople carried a world of implications—more campaign dollars needed to run elsewhere, changed dynamic in Council Chambers and the unavoidable sting when one’s job is threatened.

    “You know, somebody’s going to lose,” Salling said. “Hopefully it’s somebody that doesn’t really mind losing or that obviously maybe doesn’t carry the popular vote as strongly as other council people. But, you know, that, that’s sort of out of my domain.”

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  • Cleveland’s North Coast Land Bridge Gets $20 Million Closer to Reality

    Cleveland’s North Coast Land Bridge Gets $20 Million Closer to Reality

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    Mark Oprea

    A $230 million landbridge could be built in the coming years, if funds are raised.

    Clevelanders are a tad bit closer to seeing those barren, gray parking lots north of Browns Stadium go away for good.

    This week, the 135th Ohio General Assembly of the State Legislature okayed a $4.2 billion spending bill that allocated tens of millions of state dollars to high-stakes Cleveland development in progress.

    Its biggest allotment for Northeast Ohio: $20 million for the North Coast Connector, the long-elusive land bridge planned to link Mall C with the land around the stadium and the shores of Lake Erie.

    The state also will contribute dollars to the makeover of the West Side Market ($2.4 million), to the hillside renovation that is Irishtown Bend Park ($2 million) and the proposed Cleveland Women’s Soccer Stadium south of Progressive Field ($1 million).

    But the land bridge might be what City Hall is most excited about.

    This “is a game-changer for Cleveland, and will have a lasting impact on our city’s economic growth and development,” Mayor Justin Bibb wrote in a press release.

    “We are incredibly grateful for the support and dedication of our state partners who championed this project,” he added, “as well as the residents, business and civic leaders who advocated tirelessly for its realization.”

    First unveiled in earnest under the City Hall Rotunda in late 2021, the land-bridge quickly became Bibb’s development white whale when promising renderings—parking lots replaced by greenery and playgrounds—were released by architecture firm James Corner Field Operations the following year.

    Bridging that longstanding gap between Mall C’s green over the railroad tracks and the Shoreway could cost the city, and its taxpayers, at least $230 million, an early estimate predicted.

    The cost to convert a part of Cleveland’s already hard-to-access shoreline could be complicated if Browns owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam decide to relocate the team to Brook Park, which could signify a hefty price tag if the lakeside stadium is marked for demolition.

    Plans and budgets will likely change in the coming year or so, as construction costs and lending rates fluctuate with a global market tough on large-scale projects and apartment conversions.

    In April, James Corner Field Operations requested an extra $400,000 from City Council for its ongoing study of the proposed bridge and Master Plan—an ask that seemed to irritate a council itching to be more involved.

    The Assembly’s spending package also set aside $7 million for the second-phase renovation of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, along with $8 million for the massive Bedrock Riverfront development south of Tower City Center.

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  • As Cleveland Kicks Off Memorial Program for Pedestrians and Bicyclists Killed in Accidents, an Urgency for Protective Infrastructure

    As Cleveland Kicks Off Memorial Program for Pedestrians and Bicyclists Killed in Accidents, an Urgency for Protective Infrastructure

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    Mark Oprea

    Dan Chronister, Bob Wood and Laura Wood, former husband and parents of the late Danielle Chronister, spoke at the commemoration of a sign alerting drivers to pedestrians on Thursday. Danielle was killed in November 2021 after being hit by a dump truck on East 21st and Chester.

    In the early morning of November 3, 2021, Ben Chronister woke up, as usual, enmeshed in his life with his wife Danielle.

    They made inside jokes. They ate leftovers. They discussed plans and projects to come—namely, Danielle’s plan to segue from teaching at MC2 Stem High School downtown to the world of forensic science, for which she’d studied for years. The couple had relocated Downtown from Cleveland Heights for both a sense of convenience and progress.

    “She had, like, 85 million browser tabs open in her browser,” Ben recalled on Thursday. “She always had a bunch of things going on.”

    A half an hour later, around 8 a.m., Danielle was clipped by a Mack dump truck as she was crossing East 21st and Chester Avenue on her bike. Her body hit the truck’s sideview mirror as it was turning right. She fell under its tires. She died almost instantly.

    On Thursday, two-and-a-half years after Danielle’s death at the age of 33, friends and family of hers joined City Hall officials and traffic safety advocates on the corner just feet away where she was struck that November. Flanked by Danielle’s portrait, those present spoke in the former CMSD teacher’s honor and to commemorate a “Watch For Pedestrians” sign to be installed to ideally prevent any further deaths.

    Such a commemoration, with its funeral tones and emotionally tinged advocacy, seemed to pair fittingly with the city’s slow rollout of its Mobility Plan, a five-year mission to re-do certain Cleveland streets as to better protect cyclists and walkers . Not, as advocates urged on East 21st and Chester, just for drivers.

    As for the advocacy portion, Chronister seemed a bit perplexed as to why such a sign—memorializing his late wife and alerting reckless drivers—would be needed in a society so embroiled in car culture already.

    “We should not need to ‘increase awareness’ or ‘get out the message’ that driving cars and trucks into pedestrians is bad,” Chronister said at a podium from behind sunglasses. “There is no one over the age of five who is confused on this issue. Cars hitting people is bad. We all get that.”

    “So why are we even here?” he added. “Because while everyone agrees that people being hit by automobiles shouldn’t happen, it still does. And much more often than you might think.”

    Last year, some 550 Clevelanders were hit by cars while walking or biking, a Crash Report by Bike Cleveland found. Nine were killed. In his speech, Bike Cleveland director Jacob VanSickle said with alarm that nine Clevelanders had “already been killed so far this year.

    Besides the Memorial Street Program that led to the city’s installation of Danielle Chronister’s sign, Cleveland’s Mobility Team, represented Thursday by team director Calley Mersmann, has touted a range of solutions—in-progress and potential—to achieve the city’s Vision Zero mark of bringing that nine down to zero.

    click to enlarge Bike Cleveland Director Jacob VanSickle (center) and Cleveland's Mobility Team head Calley Mersmann used the sign installation as a way to call on or discuss the city's need for safer streets. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Bike Cleveland Director Jacob VanSickle (center) and Cleveland’s Mobility Team head Calley Mersmann used the sign installation as a way to call on or discuss the city’s need for safer streets.

    In her speech and in an interview afterwards, Mersmann reiterated that City Hall was going about modifying city streets in the right way despite the urgency culled by a reminder of Danielle’s death. Speed tables are being installed, she said. Clevelanders are opining as to where to put bike lanes.

    All ideas which will be presented to City Council when the Mobility Plan wraps up in “early 2025,” Mersmann said.

    But why are there still no buffered bike lanes downtown? Why can’t lanes be quickly painted? Why aren’t more 35 MPH streets converted, like Lake Avenue, into 30 or 25 MPH?

    “Citywide, some things are happening, but the real challenge is doing those at scale, at priority locations where we know there are concerns,” Mersmann told Scene, hinting at the point of the Mobility Plan. “And that is the piece that we’re really trying to build up capacity: to do those types of one-off things at a meaningful level.”

    When pushed back, Mersmann clarified that the administration was working in a timely, concerted manner. After all, most quick-to-build bike lanes—like those in California created after traffic deaths—take at least five years, from conception to install.

    “We’re trying to line up the budgets, we’re trying to go through procurement to get the supplies, we’re trying to get the contracts in place to design protected bikeways and then be able to install them,” she added. “And all of those [things] are new in the history of the city.”

    click to enlarge A snapshot of the city's Mobility Plan thus far. Orange dots are where Clevelanders, as of Thursday, think better bike and pedestrian infrastructure should go. - City of Cleveland

    City of Cleveland

    A snapshot of the city’s Mobility Plan thus far. Orange dots are where Clevelanders, as of Thursday, think better bike and pedestrian infrastructure should go.

    That whole gap between life-saving urgency and political reality was what pushed Patty Knilans into the world of cyclist safety activism. Knilans, who spoke Thursday, had lost her husband, Randy, in June of 2019 after the then 67-year-old was killed by a drunk driver while riding his bike in Avon Lake.

    Like Chronister, Danielle’s parents, Bob and Laura Wood, Knilans was jolted. She helped form the Northeast Ohio Families for Safe Streets chapter, which, other than pushing for safer streets and lowered speed limits, urges harsher sentences for drunk drivers who kill—the maximum of which is eight years in prison.

    “You can get in your car under the influence and kill someone, receive no more than eight years as a penalty,” Knilans said, “but if you use a gun while robbing someone but you don’t kill them, you are looking at a maximum of eleven years.”

    She paused, then added with vehemence: “Why is our legal system so tolerant of drunk driving?”

    Knilans’ frustration matched the Woods, who traveled from Toledo on Thursday to once again talk about their daughter’s death. When asked about her activism, Laura Wood urged the public to acknowledge car-caused fatalities, a discussion the American public has been immune to for decades.

    “I know we’re not alone. We’re not alone,” she said. “So, if we can save another family from this [pain], it’s well worth sticking my neck out, talking a deep breath, saying, we can do this for her.”

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  • At Recent Panel, Sports Stadium Financing Experts Warn Against Massive Public Subsidies for Cleveland Browns

    At Recent Panel, Sports Stadium Financing Experts Warn Against Massive Public Subsidies for Cleveland Browns

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    Mark Oprea

    Ward 16 Councilman Brian Kazy (far right) fixed together a panel of stadium politics experts—Ken Silliman, Victor Matheson and Brad Humphreys.

    If you were to pick out any average Browns fan or Northeast Ohioan off the street, you’d probably get a mixed bag of answers to what’s become an increasingly controversial question: What should come of Cleveland Browns Stadium?

    Let the Haslams relocate to Brook Park with a $2-billion dome (with half coming from the taxpayers of Ohio, Cuyahoga County and other sources). Focus on renovating the current one to the tune of $1 billion (again, with the Haslams asking for half the tab to be picked up by the public). Forego costly renovations and instead do the best we can with the current stadium?

    Last Thursday afternoon at the Cleveland Public Library a panel of experts on stadium builds and sports politics gathered for two hours to discuss the hard facts and real-world implications of those possibilities.

    The panel—comprised of Ward 16 Councilman Brian Kazy, former Law Director Ken Silliman, and stadium economics experts Brad Humphreys and Victor Matheson— offered lots of opinions and facts but one seemed to come with agreement: That erecting a $2.4 billion Brook Park dome and surrounding village, saying goodbye to the lakefront, would not carry the perks to Clevelanders some have been touting.

    Namely, Cleveland plus Domed Stadium equals Wealthier City.

    “There’s zero evidence in 30 years of peer-reviewed academic research that a professional sports team in a city generates any substantial jobs, raises wages, raises income, raises property taxes,” Humphreys, an economics professors at the University of Alberta, said.

    “What professional sports are good at,” he added, “is moving economic activity around to different parts of the city.”

    With Browns owners Jimmy and Dee Haslam’s stadium lease with the city to end in 2028, time is closing in on a decision that’s divided Clevelanders, just as it seemed to divide attendees at Thursday’s panel: Ask for public dollars to bankroll a projected $1.2 billion upgrade of Cleveland Browns Stadium where it is, or use (more) public dollars to construct a $2.4 billion football neighborhood 14 miles south in Brook Park, across from the airport and where the old Ford plant once stood.

    The Haslams have been vague on their intentions after it was announced, in April, they secured the rights to buy 176 acres of land east of I-71 big enough for a ballpark village to stand. The move, seen by Thursday’s panelists as a chess ploy, has nevertheless prodded local politicians, from Mayor Justin Bibb to Councilman Kazy, to ensure that Cleveland doesn’t lose—with some PTSD—the Browns to a southwest suburb. (Bibb has said his preference is for the Browns to stay downtown, and has argued the city has put forth what, is in their opinion, a good deal for the city and the team).)

    It’s what seemed to beckon Kazy, who was the face of Council’s emphasis of the 1996 Art Modell Law that attempts to protect cities from billionaires seeking to pick up their team and leave, to gather three experts on stadium deals to espouse the starry-eyed Clevelander’s wish for a shiny new domed megapalace. Like Nissan Stadium in Nashville. Or Jerry’s World in Dallas. Or Los Angeles’ behemoth that is AT&T Stadium.

    click to enlarge Matheson (right) brought hard data to back up the panel's bottom line: expensive sports facilities are bad public investments for a city in general. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Matheson (right) brought hard data to back up the panel’s bottom line: expensive sports facilities are bad public investments for a city in general.

    Sensing some in the crowd yearned for a Taylor Swift-level echelon of concerts, or say another Rolling Stones stopover, Matheson was quick to shut down the perception of huge change with some hard data. From 2002 to 2022, he and Humphreys found, Cleveland Browns Stadium hosted 12 concerts. Detroit’s dome hosted 38. Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium, 31. (And two Super Bowls, in 2006 and 2012.)

    The bottom line for the two visiting professors, who speak regularly against city-subsidized stadium deals, was evident: the billions of dollars that go into inviting a Swiftie World Tour doesn’t produce a sound return in investment. They quoted a Chicago economist: “It would be better to drop [money] from a helicopter than invest it in a new ballpark.”

    “So if you said, ‘Well, look. There’s so much more you can do with an indoor stadium,” Matheson said. “Well, yeah: one more concert [a year] here. You might get a men’s basketball Final Four. And a Super Bowl—but you’ll get one.”

    For Silliman, the former chair of the Gateway Economic Development Co. who recently published a 600-page memoir-slash-stadium exposé on Cleveland’s own chaotic history with sports stadiums, the more sensible route was to convince the Haslams, the city and its denizens to reframe Cleveland Browns Stadium in the historical vein of Fenway Park in Boston, or Wrigley Field in Chicago.

    Which meant, he said, doubling that dollar stream Cuyahoga County residents have been using for stadium upkeep since 1990. The tax on booze and cigarettes. The tax on concerts and shows. The tax on parking lots and car rentals.

    “You know, our sin tax has never been adjusted for inflation,” Silliman, who was an adviser to former Mayor Mike White in the 1990s, said. “If you were to double the annual amount available for each sports facility that would take it from $4.5 million per facility, to about $9 million.”

    Silliman, like Kazy himself, reminded everyone in attendance that he was first and foremost a Cleveland sports traditionalist.

    And believed that, in reality, most Clevelanders had more practical priorities than the Haslam Brook Park renderings. (Only five percent of members of the Cuyahoga County Progressive Caucus thought the public wanted to or should pay for a new stadium in the first place.)

    “If you ask the average ticket buyer at Cleveland Brown Stadium,” Silliman said, cracking a smile, “they would say, just give us a team that’s consistently competing for the playoffs.”

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  • Many Ohio Dispensaries Move One Step Closer to Being Able to Sell Recreational Marijuana

    Many Ohio Dispensaries Move One Step Closer to Being Able to Sell Recreational Marijuana

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    Photo by Graham Stokes for Ohio Capital Journal

    BUCKEYE LAKE, Ohio — AUGUST 17: Marijuana plants in a flowering room where the artificial sunlight is adjusted to stimulate growth of the flowers, August 17, 2023, at PharmaCann, Inc.’s cultivation and processing facility in Buckeye Lake, Ohio.

    Ohioans will likely be able to legally purchase recreational marijuana sooner than initially expected. 

    The state Division of Cannabis Control recently awarded about 60 dual-use provisional licenses to various medical marijuana dispensaries, cultivators, laboratories and processors, according to the state’s online database. Thirty-one dispensaries, 15 cultivators, 11 processors and five laboratories received licenses. 

    However, a dual-use provisional license does not automatically allow the sale of recreational marijuana, according to an email from Jamie Crawford, spokesman for the Division of Cannabis Control.

    Rather, it acts as a placeholder while the business works to get a Certificate of Operation by meeting various requirements including having an inspection and demonstrating that employees can tell the difference between medical and recreational sales. 

    “There have been no Certificates of Operation issued to dispensaries to begin selling non-medical cannabis at this point,” Crawford told the OCJ.

    It’s hard to determine when exactly recreational marijuana sales will begin in the Buckeye State.

    “There will be no one singular day when sales begin,” Crawford said. “We will start issuing licenses and it will be up to the retailer based on staffing, stock and other considerations as to which day they will begin sales.”

    Ohio legalized marijuana for those 21 and up last year through Issue 2, a citizens initiative that received 57% of the vote. At the time, those behind Issue 2 speculated the first round of licenses wouldn’t be issued until August. 

    License applications opened earlier this month and must be approved or denied by Sept. 7. 

    Under Issue 2, Ohioans can grow up to six plants with up to 12 per household. 

    The House and the Senate had different ideas of changing marijuana legalization after Issue 2 passed — something lawmakers are able to do with a citizens initiative — but neither proposal was able to pass in the opposite chamber.  

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

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    Megan Henry, Ohio Capital Journal

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  • Buildings and Food’s ‘Party within a Party’ Brings Food, Booze and Live Tunes to Taste of Tremont

    Buildings and Food’s ‘Party within a Party’ Brings Food, Booze and Live Tunes to Taste of Tremont

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    click to enlarge

    Aaron Sechrist

    B&F block party poster.

    Taste of Tremont, one of Cleveland’s most beloved street festivals, returns to the neighborhood on Sunday, July 21. The popular event takes place from noon to 8 p.m.

    Will Hollingsworth, founder of Buildings and Food – the parent company of Prosperity Social Club, Good Company, Old 86, La Cave du Vin and Peristyle Coffee – is using the event as a launching pad for a new mission-driven objective. His “party within a party” featuring food, drinks, bands and DJs will provide a much-appreciated boost for the Greater Cleveland Food Bank.

    “Buildings and Food has three big goals for 2024, and one of them is to develop a big annual fundraiser for the Greater Cleveland Food Bank,” Hollingsworth explains. “We’re honored to be a stakeholder in this neighborhood for as long as we have, we’re honored to be taken seriously by an organization as vital to our city and community as Greater Cleveland Food Bank is, and we’re especially honored to get Wesley and the Honeytones back onstage after so long!”

    Hollingsworth, who lived in the neighborhood for a decade, says that the departure of Rocco Whalen and his enduring restaurant leaves a gap in the annual festival that he is eager to fill.

    “Since he and Fahrenheit have left the neighborhood, it’s important that Jefferson Avenue doesn’t become a ‘dead zone’ during Taste of Tremont, which is such an important event to the neighborhood.”

    So, in addition to the usual lineup of food, art and entertainment that Taste of Tremont brings, Buildings and Food’s “Food Bank Block Party” will showcase food and alcoholic beverages from all of its bars, restaurants and coffee roaster. Wesley Bright and the Honeytones – featuring an expanded horn section – will perform after a long hiatus, as will neo-funk band Nathan-Paul & The Admirables, TK’s Soul Collective, and DJs Nicc Nac and Erie Street Vinyl.

    The fun takes place on Jefferson Avenue between West 7th Street and Thurman Avenue. The concert stage will be situated at the bottom of Jefferson Ave.

    “The gradual downward slope of the street will create an amphitheater-type atmosphere,” says a rep.

    Attendees can purchase wristbands for the Block Party on the day of the event or in advance through this link. VIP wristbands grant buyers access to La Cave du Vin’s courtyard, exclusive food and wine, and a private view of the stage.

    Proceeds will benefit the Greater Cleveland Food Bank, with a fundraising goal of $30,000.

    “The Greater Cleveland Food Bank is excited to be the beneficiary of this inaugural event,” says Jessica Morgan, the food bank’s Chief Programs Officer. “The need for food continues to remain high especially during the summer months when children are out of school and not receiving the free and reduced-priced lunches. We are fortunate to work with Building and Foods and with this money raised, provide thousands of meals to those in need right here in our community.”

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    Douglas Trattner

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  • ‘Unhealthy’ Air Quality Alerts Issued for Cleveland as Heat Wave Arrives

    ‘Unhealthy’ Air Quality Alerts Issued for Cleveland as Heat Wave Arrives

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    AirNow

    A radar report of the region’s air quality rating Monday morning, showing moderate levels of ozone pollution in yellow.

    The Northeast Ohio Area Coordinating Agency issued an “Unhealthy” air quality warning for the five-county region on Monday morning.

    Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Medina, Portage and Summit counties will all see noticeable shifts in potentially harmful ozone content, NOACA said, which could cause coughing, sore throats and congestion for children, the elderly and people with lung disease.

    As of 11 a.m. Monday, Cleveland had a 69 air quality index rating, a composite score of polluting particles that reach ground-level. Sandusky’s was 70. Wooster, 65. Mentor, 69. And Youngstown, 63.

    A gas that could be toxic in extreme levels, ozone—bad ozone, not the naturally occurring gas that protects us from harsh sun rays—is caused primarily by emissions from cars, solvents, paints, industry and fossil fuels in general. Higher heat levels, like those slated to rise this week to near 100-degree levels, exacerbate ozone gas’s deleterious effects.

    NOACA’s late June warning brings to mind the Canadian wildfires one year ago, when harmful smoke made its way southward, covering Cleveland in a thick cloud of gray and brown. On June 27, 2023, Cleveland reported an AQI rating of 291, just 10 points away from a “Hazardous” alarm from the Environmental Protection Agency.

    The good news, NOACA announced in April, is that air pollution levels across Northeast Ohio aren’t slipping into the unmanageable.

    In the agency’s latest Air Quality Trends Report, NOACA listed pollution from ozone as “stable,” while listing pollutants from fine particle matter, like PM2.5, as “decreasing.” A trend, the agency says, that can be extended by cleaner energy production and an overall shift away from vehicles that run on fossil fuels.

    Regardless, Cleveland was ranked 4th worst U.S. city for asthma patients, according to a report published last September by the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America.

    And human-driven climate change continues to make sustained periods of extreme heat more frequent, with heat being the number one-related weather killer.

    The city of Cleveland is operating six cooling centers this week. Details below.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Old Brooklyn Mustard is Rebranding as POP Mustard After New Partnership with Michael Symon

    Old Brooklyn Mustard is Rebranding as POP Mustard After New Partnership with Michael Symon

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    Ed Anderson

    Michael Symon is now a partner in POP Mustard, formerly Old Brooklyn Mustard.

    In 2016, Michael Januska launched Old Brooklyn Cheese Co., an artisanal cheese venture in Cleveland’s Old Brooklyn neighborhood. In his quest to find the perfect accompaniment for those amazing cheeses, the owner began experimenting with whole-seed mustards. After exploring various mustard seed blends, and processes like fermentation and smoking, Januska launched Old Brooklyn Mustard. Before long, distinctive products like Original IPA, Pepped Up and Bohemian Blend were snagging top honors in food competitions around the country.

    And yet, says Januska, his products were failing to gain the attention and traction he felt they deserved. He wasn’t alone. Michael Symon, one of Old Brooklyn Mustard’s biggest fans, had the same impression.

    “At Lola, we always did these pickled-mustard seeds, and I thought his products were superior even to what we were making,” says Symon.

    Recently, Symon and Januska formed a business partnership.

    “I started working his mustards into my repertoire — using them more and more in recipes and for cookbooks — and that’s how the partnership started,” adds Symon.

    After rebranding the products as POP Mustard, the Cleveland-based company is poised for growth, adds Symon.

    “There are a lot of whole-grain mustards out there, but there’s nothing like what Michael is making,” he says. “I feel that there’s an opportunity for a unique whole-seed mustard like this to go nationwide.”

    Januska says that all of the changes are on the outside of the jar; the mustards are still produced in Old Brooklyn using the same ingredients, techniques and recipes.

    “Nothing has changed; we just got a new coat of paint,” Januska says.

    Customers will begin seeing the new labels on store shelves shortly. And those store shelves might start multiplying, says Symon, adding that some very big distribution deals are currently being ironed out.

    In advance of these developments, Januska recently invested heavily into his production facility, giving him the ability to scale up output.

    POP Mustard is launching with three varieties: Smoked, Kraut, and Original IPA.

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    Douglas Trattner

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  • Museum of Illusions, Instagrammable Edutainment, Opens Friday in Downtown Cleveland

    Museum of Illusions, Instagrammable Edutainment, Opens Friday in Downtown Cleveland

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    Mark Oprea

    The Museum of Illusions opens Friday in the May Building downtown. It could be a boon to Public Square’s foot traffic.

    In the realm of good downtown retail news, the stories are typically predictable. A flashy bar concept opens up on Euclid. A restaurant with a fire-pitted rooftop on Public Square. A casino extension for chainsmokers.

    But things to do for families downtown? A little harder to come by.

    It’s possible that the Museum of Illusions, the “edutainment” collection of brain teaser exhibits opening around the country, could help fill a downtown gap of attractions for more than just barhopping adults and event-goers. The museum, situated at 184 Euclid Avenue in the May Building on Public Square, will open to the public on Friday, May 31.

    The museum’s debut comes nearly a decade after the space’s last tenant, the Cadillac Ranch restaurant, shut its doors in 2014, after six years in business. Most of the ground floor retail space facing Public Square have remained vacant, despite its massive $50 million makeover preceding the Republican National Convention eight years ago.

    “The addition of the Museum of Illusions to Downtown will be fantastic,” Audrey Gerlach, vice president of economic development at Downtown Cleveland, Inc., told Scene in December. “It will create a nice connection between Euclid Avenue and Public Square, and offer a unique, year-round experience for people of all ages.

    “This is exactly the type of experiential retail that brings people downtown,” she added, “and invites them to linger: I think it will thrive.”

    click to enlarge Krystal Casteneda, the museum's general manager, sitting on Beuchet's Chair, which can only be viewed as one from a specific perspective. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Krystal Casteneda, the museum’s general manager, sitting on Beuchet’s Chair, which can only be viewed as one from a specific perspective.

    click to enlarge Both museum staff and downtown boosters hope the spot can help respond to the growing need for all-ages attractions in Cleveland's city center. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Both museum staff and downtown boosters hope the spot can help respond to the growing need for all-ages attractions in Cleveland’s city center.

     Claiming to be the “largest and fastest-growing chain of privately-held museums in the world,” according to its website, the Museum of Illusions first opened in 2015 in Zagreb, Croatia, which sees, the company says, more than 300,000 visits per year.

    Since then, the museum’s “edutainment” brand has sprouted to over 40 locations worldwide, with 15 currently in the U.S., including Las Vegas, Kansas City and Scottsdale. New locations, including Cleveland’s, will be opening in Seattle and San Diego later this year.

    Filling about 9,000 square feet with a wraparound series of low-lit hallways and breakout rooms, the actual experience itself conjures both a kind of hilarity with eye trickery and, to the adult crowd, a sense of nostalgia. (Remember the “magic box” with the “floating” object? The 3D green laser etchings?)

    In one mural, Nikola Tesla’s eyes follow viewers as they walk by. In another, museum goers can “sit” on Beuchet’s Chair, albeit from the right viewing angle. And in the Infinity Room, or the Kaleidoscope, viewers can see themselves in an endless series of mirrored triangles.

    And for those that need to know who the scientist behind the Ames Room (a shifty sense of perspective) is, or who could easily (like this writer) develop nausea at mere sight of the revolving Vortex Tunnel, which is no joke, the museum has a staff of Illusion Experts wandering around to help.

    The whole trip, as suggested by camera icons that dot the floor, is undeniably—and maybe a tad bit too suggested at times—ripe for social media.

    “Sure, it’s very photo-friendly, and intentionally interactive,” Krystal Casteneda, the interim general manager of Cleveland’s museum, told Scene on a tour Thursday. She had just demonstrated the Swiping Bodies half-mirror exhibit. “But at the same time it’s also a place to learn, why we call it ‘edutainment.’”

    click to enlarge Daria Jelavić, a marketing manager for the Museum of Illusions, "sitting on" a mirrored reflection of the building's facade. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Daria Jelavić, a marketing manager for the Museum of Illusions, “sitting on” a mirrored reflection of the building’s facade.

    But will families show up as predicted? Bespoke, niche concept museums not affiliated with any Cleveland institution are rare in the city center, which means the whole draw could ride nicely for a while on novelty. Moreover, the museum’s admission prices—$24 for adults, and $22 for kids—could be a little high for some.

    It’s why, again, the museum’s draw rests, its employees say, in a fun-for-all vibe. (Think and Drink and yo-pro happy hour events are on the agenda.) Wonderment, the trickery of mirrors or upside-down basketball hoops or concaved masks, are definitely, staff believe, worth a stop.

    “There’s a lasting value because kids love this,” Daria Jelavić, the museum’s head of marketing in Croatia, told Scene after “sitting on” a mirrored reflection of the museum’s facade. “I mean, they want to stay for five, six hours. I’ve seen some in Copenhagen scream when they have to leave: ‘I don’t want to go home!’”

    Jelavić walked over to the inverted basketball hoop, in a small room dressed up lightly for, it seems, Cleveland sports fans. A photographer took the shot.

    “Did you get a good one?” Casteneda said. She looked at the photo, at Jelavić underneath the backboard. “See? She’s upside down, right?”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Cleveland State’s Waterfront Line Study Urges Apartments on the Muni Lot, New Loop Connections

    Cleveland State’s Waterfront Line Study Urges Apartments on the Muni Lot, New Loop Connections

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    RTA

    RTA’s Waterfront Line in an undated photo.

    From the perspective of a Downtown Cleveland optimist, the area spells promise for the near future as far as development is concerned.

    A new Rock & Hall of Fame extension is coming. Bedrock just broke ground on its $2 billion riverfront neighborhood. And Mayor Justin Bibb’s Lakefront Plan’s likelihood got a boost after his Shore-to-Core-to-Shore tax-increment financing plan was passed earlier this year by City Council.

    But, a group of students at Cleveland State’s College of Urban Affairs asked recently: What is to be done with Downtown’s prime piece of transit potentially linking—key word being potentially—all of the area’s newest points of interest?

    That is to say, how do we ensure the Waterfront Line, the RTA’s two-mile line of track that hasn’t been in daily service since 2021, doesn’t miss out on Cleveland’s trajectory forward and serves as a reliable connector?

    Such speculation was at the heart of the study released this week by a team of 16 graduate students, a plan detailing, in a highly-comprehensive 125 pages how the city, the county and the RTA could efficiently makeover the line and idling land around it. A plan that cried with a resounding voice: build housing, build housing, build housing.

    “Right now, there are a lot of great opportunities, but there’s not a residential density that supports the Waterfront Line,” John Miesle, 29, a graduate student and member of 17th Street Studios, the moniker the CSU team gave to their cohort project, told Scene. “There’s not a commercial density that could support it. That could support 24-hour rail service.”

    click to enlarge John Miesle, a graduate student in CSU's College of Urban Affairs, helped, with 15 others, create a capstone class' massive makeover plan for RTA's flailing Waterfront Line. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    John Miesle, a graduate student in CSU’s College of Urban Affairs, helped, with 15 others, create a capstone class’ massive makeover plan for RTA’s flailing Waterfront Line.

    Miesle’s lament, common amongst transit advocates, revolves around the cry to reopen the Waterfront Line to how it used to function before it went out of commission following the need for necessary repairs in the fall of 2021.

    Although the RTA teased its comeback by running the line during Browns Sunday home games last season, the result—and ridership—was somewhat disappointing. Only 2,300 Clevelanders and Browns fans rode the line on average each football Sunday; twenty-two years ago, in 2002, the entire light rail system (including the Green and Blue lines) clocked about 259,000 riders per month.

    Hence 17th Street Studios’ central thesis. The team believes that, like found in light rail systems in Denver and Minneapolis, the Waterfront Line could see a whopping comeback if large amounts of shops and apartments were built nearby it, primarily on the vacant parking lots built decades ago to meet a perceived demand for cars.

    Like the actual feat of reviving the lingering waterfront in general, the students’ ideas are quite massive in both scale and financial heft.

    Along with trails and bike paths up and down West 3rd and East 9th, the students suggest a new connection—with a line of townhomes—linking East 18th St. to the easternmost South Harbor Station. (Near where Noble Beast Brewing is.) Over in the Flats East Bank, redoing West 10th with a tree line and erecting a brand new Settlers Garage to consolidated parking demand left by new housing a few blocks north.

    And, of course, the plan’s pièce de résistance: linking the South Harbor Station and the Tri-C Station with an on-street track line running down East 17th, a line that would link Historic Chinatown, Playhouse Square and Cleveland State with, for the first time ever, an actual route.

    And call it, appropriately, the Waterfront Loop.

    click to enlarge Part of the study suggested better connectors to Waterfront Line stations, like a bike lane linking West 3rd pedestrians to its station near Cleveland Browns Stadium. - Cleveland State

    Cleveland State

    Part of the study suggested better connectors to Waterfront Line stations, like a bike lane linking West 3rd pedestrians to its station near Cleveland Browns Stadium.

    click to enlarge The master recommendation from CSU's year-long study: suggestions for housing in orange, and new or improved green space in green. - Cleveland State

    Cleveland State

    The master recommendation from CSU’s year-long study: suggestions for housing in orange, and new or improved green space in green.

    In urbanist parlance, that’s transit-oriented development, homes erected as close to transit stations as city permits will allow. Which should in theory lead to, the students believe, “increasing density, getting parking right, providing safe connections, fostering vibrant public spaces, and prioritizing affordable housing.”

    “As the area becomes more livable, walkable, and connected, this will attract more residents and visitors and increase demand for regular light rail service,” it added. “This, in turn, will make the Waterfront Line an even more convenient and attractive option for getting around, thereby creating a virtuous cycle that benefits everyone.”

    The key word being everyone. Though Downtown’s population has grown 41% in the past decade or so, the growth has been mostly composed of white people in their mid-to-late twenties and thirties. RTA’s average rider, which it has long catered to, is a carless Black woman in her twenties making less than $25,000 a year.

    17th Street’s study, which echoes Bibb’s calls for equity on the lakefront, makes an attempt to bridge the gaps left by demographics and pure economics. (And those who can afford a car in the first place.)

    Either near the Settlers Landing Station or the Muni Lots hugging the North Coast Station on East 9th, the students suggest, based on housing data, that there’s “unmet demand” for some 1,840 apartment units. And units of varying rent levels. In one analysis of the Historic Flats, the students found that 400 units clocking $456/month would be worthwhile to build—just as some 500 units charging renters $1,902/month.

    But, as 17th Street’s shiny renderings give off, anything is better than barren concrete lots. In the Muni Lot West, they imagine a shipping container park and mid-rises. In “The Pit,” the gargantuan lot south of the Browns Stadium, some 70,000 square feet of day cares, pet goods stores, apartments and restaurants.

    Both the demand and promise for defeating RTA’s, and transit in general, oldest stigma as lesser than car trips comes straight from 17th Street’s survey of hundreds of Clevelanders, about half of which claimed they would ride the Waterfront Line even if they didn’t own a car. A little more than half called the line “not convenient”; two-fifths found the train cars took “too long”; twenty percent couldn’t find the RTA sufficiently safe.

    “The Flats have lost their color,” another stakeholder wrote. “Everything is gray.”

    “Public transit has a stigma,” another said.

    Thomas Hilde, a professor who co-teaches, with James Kastelic, the “Planning Studio” graduate course that produced the study over the past two semesters, told Scene that his students came to the typical conclusion that planners have long arrived at: defeating RTA’s “unsafe” perception and increasing its riders are parallel goals.

    “I think that’s the biggest challenge, just getting more people” on the line, Hilde said. “Like Jane Jacobs said in the 1960s—eyes on the street, just having people present. That’s the best way of changing that perception.”

    But could the city actually build all of this? Will developers, often skeptical observing rising construction costs and steep lending rates, see the vision promulgated by a series of optimistic planners in their mid-to-late twenties?

    Hilde thinks so, to some extent.

    “Many of these planning studio projects have influenced real outcomes in the city,” he told Scene. He cited “Balancing Broadway,” 2022’s study of Lorain’s Main Street. “They’ve taken off! I mean, not as they’re written, but they’re influential. And they contribute to the conversation.

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  • Cleveland Heights School District Failed to Address Student Sexual Harassment and Assault Incidents, Lawsuit Claims

    Cleveland Heights School District Failed to Address Student Sexual Harassment and Assault Incidents, Lawsuit Claims

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    Cleveland Heights-University Heights

    Roxboro Middle School, shown here in an undated photo, was a site of one of several Title IX cases included in a lawsuit against the district on Wednesday.

    Superintendents, principals and student coordinators at the Cleveland Heights-University Heights School District failed to handle multiple instances of sexual harassment and assaults going back at least 14 years, a federal lawsuit filed Wednesday afternoon alleges.

    The complaint, filed in the Northern District of Ohio Court by parents of students and former students who are now adults, accuses the district and employees of Fairfax Elementary, Roxboro Middle School and Cleveland Heights High of ignoring clear violations of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, a federal statute that protects students from any major discrimination on the basis of sex or gender.

    CHUH and the nine other defendants listed “failed to take prompt and effective steps to end the harassment and assaults,” the complaint reads, “once notice of the misconduct had become sufficiently severe.”

    The allegations, compiled over the past year by attorneys Eric Long, Karen Truszkowski and Antoinette Frazho in the 36-page suit, cover a wide range of sexual misbehavior by male teenagers that were, lawyers say, mismanaged by a string of teachers and principals.

    At least five former female students, titled as Jane Does 1 through 5 due to them being minors at the time, are involved. In one incident, a Heights High freshman was raped by a member of the varsity soccer team, and was later denied a transfer to a separate building after admins chose not to punish the assailant, the lawsuit alleges. In another, a mother named “E.K.” was unable to pull her daughter out of a kindergarten class at Fairfax Elementary after a boy placed “his hand up her shirt and down her pants.”

    And in one of the extreme cases, an 11-year-old girl was allegedly assaulted by an eighth grader in a production closet behind the Roxboro Elementary Auditorium. She was, the complaint claims, later coerced by a Roxboro counselor into admitting the closet sex was “consensual.”

    “At the time, Jane Doe 1 was 11 years old, and did not know what ‘consensual’ meant,” the lawsuit reads, “nor did she have the legal ability to ‘consent’ to sexual contact.” Though the boy had charges brought against him eventually, the girl was initially suspended for “engaging in sexual conduct while on school property.”

    In an interview Wednesday, Long told Scene that he and the plaintiffs had waited so long to file—about a year—due to the nature of formulating a sound Title IX case, along with the obvious sensitivities that go into matters of sexual assault.

    “I think part of that answer is that it takes time to realize that you’re not the only one. Right?” he said. “When we’re talking about systemic problems and actively trying to avoid doing what needs to be done under the law, it takes time for this stuff to come forward.”

    Long said that he and his team had attempted to mediate a settlement outside of court with CHUH’s legal team but those talks had failed. He declined to reveal the dollar amount the litigants were seeking.

    The suit filed brings ten counts of charges against the district, from three involving the Title IX sex discriminatio, to those of negligent hiring, retention and supervision of school staff. But the bulk of the claims, Long said, are straight-forward: CHUH failed to protect at least five female students from assault “because of their gender.”

    Which, to Long, is a relatively unique case in Northeast Ohio courts.

    “I’m not aware of kind of a multi plaintiff case that kind of fits the same pattern where over a course of a decade plus, the school has continuously failed to take the steps they need to take under Title IX,” he said. “So I think this is somewhat unique in that way. But I would venture to guess this will not be the last case like that.”

    In a statement to Scene, Elizabeth Kirby, CHUH’s superintendent, backed up the school system’s ability to both handle Title IX issues and prevent them.

    CHUH, after all, she said, has a “full-time Title IX Coordinator” to provide “education sessions” to students; teachers and staff regularly attend Title IX seminars; and, following a particular case in 2022, the school beefed up its support staff to combat sexual harassment.

    “We take all allegations of this nature seriously, including the District’s obligations to report and investigate,” Kirby wrote in a statement. “We are aware that a number of parents are dissatisfied with the District’s Title IX response. We respect their right to voice their opinion.”

    CHUH and their legal team have 60 days to respond to the complaint.

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