
Everything posted by KJP
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Cleveland - Tech companies will star in downtown hatchery
I think it sounds very intriguing. Maybe they're on to something. There's nothing like instigating collaboration. Let's see what happens.
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How to get out of Cleveland in case of disaster (run, you fools RUN!)
This ain't no throwdown. Whenever I snap my cap, that's when the disaster evacuation drill comes in handy! Given my finances, it might be time to brush up on that drill. Sorry my sense of humor sucks lately, but that's why... :evil:
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Cleveland: Opportunity Corridor Boulevard
Here is a link to revised report I drafted on including a consolidated rail line in the OC Corridor. Enjoy, but dial-up users beware that the document is 2MB. If it doesn't load properly right away, try clicking the link again.... http://members.cox.net/neotrans/OpportunityCorridorRapidREV.pdf
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How to get out of Cleveland in case of disaster (run, you fools RUN!)
What are you, an elder? I will put a sock in it, since there is no need to belabor my point that I didn't like ColDayMan's (or anyone non-local's) joke about Cleveland. Don't you know, it is written in blood that only we Greater Clevelanders can make a joke about our city? Although I'm not sure what the rest of your message means, MayDay.
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Cleveland: Ferchill Group Discussion
PM me.
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How to get out of Cleveland in case of disaster (run, you fools RUN!)
It wasn't intended to be a comeback. It was meant to be a kind way of telling you to measure your words carefully.
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Cleveland: Ferchill Group Discussion
Either way, it sounds like something is going in there? I was thinking this was going to be right at the "Doans Corners" intersection of East 105th and Euclid. Too bad. Speaking of which, I've had some thoughts about how to develop that intersection, building a multi-family residential structure around the north side of the Cole Eye Institute and effectively creating a curved indoor courtyard. It's all part of my "grand plan" to someday win the grand prize loot from Peter Lewis for redesigning UC. Anybody want in?!?! :-D
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Ohio Citizens League looking to cut Cleveland City Council membership by half
I haven't made up my mind yet on whether reducing the size of council is a good idea or not. But when it was revealed that "businessman" Tony George was a financial backer of the citizens league, I smelled something funny. George never does anything for the stated reasons, and he is never interested in something for the benefit of the public. If he's involved in something political, it's either for the benefit of himself or his friends/business associates. Also, please note some of the various establishments of which he was/is an investor: > Splash reggae club in the Flats... Raided in the mid-1990s by the Jamaican drug task force, which broke up a Cleveland-Jamaica drug ring. The listed owner of the club was attorney Blaise Brucato of Highland Heights, who went to prison. Tony George admitted to a fellow reporter that he was investor. > Kaos nightclub in the Flats... Site of numerous fights and gang activity in recent months. Site of the killing of a 16-year-old boy who was a customer of the club. Tony George admitted to a Plain Dealer reporter he was an investor of Kaos. > Krobar nightclub in North Olmsted... For the past several months, police have made dozens of arrests (as many as that in a single night at times) of underage drinkers and others using drugs, both in the club and in the parking lot. City officials are trying to revoke the club's liquor license. Tony George admitted he was an investor in Krobar, along with an informant friend of mine who communicated that information to me for an article I'm researching. The listed owner of the Krobar club is a young man with the last name of Hammons. His father is Dave Hammons Sr. who was arrested for his involvement in organized crime-run drug and gambling operations. The informant served two stints in federal prison (bank fraud and assault) as an earner for the Cleveland mob, specifically to Alfred "Allie" Calabrese who died in federal prison in 1999. He also ran investment scams on Wall Street for the Gambino crime family of NYC. Now, does all of that smell a tad "off" to you?
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Sprawl = Traffic: Article in "USA Today"
Thanks for finding that link, PG. And thanks for the clarification on the definition.
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Sprawl = Traffic: Article in "USA Today"
What is the difference between an urbanized area and a metropolitan area, per the Census' definition? I'll wager that they're the same. And the Census site to which I posted the link showed the land area for each of the metropolitan areas (including the primary MSAs).
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Greater Cleveland RTA News & Discussion
To my knowledge, RTA gets no federal operating support (it does get quite a bit in federal capital funding but that has little bearing on the operating funding problem that the fare increase is intended to address). RTA receives very little state subsidies, which are only $16 million for the entire state this year. The county sales tax RTA receives brings it more than $160 million. Ridership can be price elastic. From 1980 to 1982, RTA increased fares three times, from 35 cents to 80 cents for a local ride and to $1 for an express ride. Ridership plummeted from 121 million riders in 1980 to 83 million in 1983. Ridership eroded more slowly to 72 million in 1990, and then to 64 million in 1992, just before the last fare increase was enacted. Ridership slipped to 60 million in 1993, and has hovered in the mid- to upper-50s ever since. RTA will probably see a ridership decrease, but it will probably be more like the decrease in the early 1990s, than what it saw in the early 1980s. Part of the reason is that Cleveland's economy went into the tank in the early 1980s (you thought you've seen factory closings lately, you should have been around in the early 80s!). And, in the mid-1990s, RTA was able to fall back on the opening of Gateway and the ridership it generated, which likely offset losses from the fare hike.
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Cleveland: Innerbelt News
^ Very nice summary of the meeting. This one caught me by surprise (it was near the end)...... Hauser: -the bridge has been decided on and that is the part that has been decided on. FHWA: that desicion has not been finalized (wow, again)
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How to get out of Cleveland in case of disaster (run, you fools RUN!)
So was that attempt at humor.
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Sprawl = Traffic: Article in "USA Today"
Use the Census data: Charlotte--Gastonia--Rock Hill, NC--SC MSA: 1,499,293 By all means, do NOT use data from demographia.com -- it's run by a guy named Wendell Cox, who is anti-urban and especially, anti-accuracy, when accuracy conflicts with his agenda. Wendell Cox recently proposed double-decking Atlanta's highways to "solve" their highway congestion problems. He started running a bus charter business and tried to shitcan rail proposals nationwide so he could get his company to win privitization contracts from transit agencies. He does research for the Highways Users Alliance (the folks who have asphalt in their veins) and has a loyal band of supporters (aka Cox Suckers) around the country. My suggestion: visit this web page.... http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/GCTTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=D&-ds_name=D&-_lang=en&-redoLog=false&-mt_name=DEC_2000_SF1_U_GCTPH1R_US10S&-format=ST-7
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Cleveland: Cleveland State University: Development and News
One of things I love about Chicago is all the brick. I love brick. BTW, nice design. I like the glass and the openness of it. I suspect it will pour a lot of light onto Euclid.
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Cleveland: Ferchill Group Discussion
X, thanks for posting that list. And what's this one? ...East 105th Street and Euclid Avenue: National City bank branch and a 50,000-square-foot office building for $12.5 million. And I think these statements by Ferchill are some of the most important in the interview... The city doesn’t have enough economic firepower left. It’s got to be a joint venture of the city and county. I mean, if I went to the city and they gave me every resource that they have today, they don’t have very much. I’m talking about doing good-sized projects. ...I think the No. 1 thing that’s got to be done is there’s got to be complete cooperation between all of the various governments. If you think about what’s been going on here, we had a difficult mayor. We had a difficult county administration. And then [Commissioner Tim] Hagan came in and he was very helpful. And you had a state government that was in chaos. It still is.
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Cleveland: Random Development and News
That building's original owner was the Union Trust Bank, which built the structure in 1921 or 1924 (can't remember which). Union Trust Bank later became Union Commerce Bank. I couldn't find history on Huntington Bank.
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Ideas for real change in Cleveland transport, land use
I love talking about rail more than just about everyone else, but the intent of my idea (and, I would hope, other ideas) is not to run trains, but to reshape the region's land use, economic viability and energy/environmental sustainability. My contention is not to continue to build communities piecemeal and based around past trends, but to develop a regional masterplan based on public preference. What is that preference. Display some land use choices to people and let's find out.
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Greater Cleveland RTA News & Discussion
Does James Ewinger know that RTA is funded primarily by a 1-percent countywide sales tax? He mentioned everything else but that. I hope that was just an oversight.
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Cleveland: Innerbelt News
I wasn't able to attend the meeting since today is deadline day at the paragraph factory. But I was able to interview a number of officials who were there. My understanding is that this is the FIRST TIME that ODOT has undertaken an economic impact study. Also, as part of the impact study, ODOT would show things like how heavy the traffic will be on various streets -- suggesting that is a positive. Extent of vehicular traffic in a particular vicinity may be of importance to retailers, but not to office, light industrial or other non-retail commercial uses. Futhermore, in a downtown/urban-core area, I question how valuable vehicular traffic figures are to retailers, as motorists usually can't just pull into a parking space and walk in after spotting a retailer. Foot traffic is often more important. But ODOT don't do the pedestrian thang.
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Ideas for real change in Cleveland transport, land use
Here's another thing: Farmland preservation. There's the ethanol issue, eating and, for those who measure things only in dollars and cents, few land uses have as positive a net fiscal impact on the local taxbase as farms. They pay their taxes but require few if any public services in return. Check out this analysis by the Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission http://www.regionalconnections.org/documents/pdf/fiscalimpacts.pdf or The Pennsylvania State University http://cax.aers.psu.edu/localgovernment/Landuse.htm Here's another one: in Geauga County and elsewhere, the Amish and Mennonite way of life is under assault from development and traffic. And these folks vote in more elections than most of us.
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Amtrak & Federal: Passenger Rail News
Cool. But I don't think this administration cares what most of Congress or anyone else outside the NeoCon agenda thinks. It's probably the thinking part that scares them, if not the part that compromises their belief that they are God's chosen caretakers of the globe.
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How to get out of Cleveland in case of disaster (run, you fools RUN!)
Boy, that's pretty morbid! The way your e-mail started, I was expecting to read something about a hurricane whipping up from Lake Erie -- not a WMD incident.
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Ideas for real change in Cleveland transport, land use
"If you want go backwards, try standing still, as others are moving forward." --Ken Prendergast
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Cleveland: HealthLine / Euclid Corridor
Just in case you haven't heard, there's a conference coming up in several weeks about the Euclid Corridor, redevelopment and the transit, informational and intellectual infrastructure. Unfortunately, I will not be able to attend, so I hope a fellow UrbanOhio'er goes so I can hear what happens.... __________________ http://www.uli.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Events_Registration&Template=/Conference/ConferenceDescription.cfm&ConferenceID=1407 Euclid Avenue Conductivity – Education, Research, Development Universities and research centers are no longer islands of intellectual pursuits. They are critical components of a region’s economic future. Cleveland’s vision for an “intellectual highway ” paralleling the Euclid Avenue Transit Corridor is becoming a reality. The prerequisite technology, research and transportation infrastructure investments are underway. Join us to learn about the scale of these public/private investments and the opportunities to leverage them for technology related and mixed-use developments. Wednesday, March 15th 2006 The 4415 Building 4415 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, Ohio 44103 3:30 PM Registration and Badge Pickup 4:00 PM until 5:30 PM Panel Networking Reception and Building Tours will follow. ULI Members: $40 – Nonmembers: $50 YLG and Public Sector: $30 Please note: Registrations made after the March 9th deadline are considered “at the door”. Fees increase by $10 for “at the door” registration. For on-line registration go to: http://www.uli.org/events/index.cfm?id=1407 Please Park & Enter on the West side of the Building. We are meeting in an area currently under development. Please be aware and wear sensible shoes. Moderator: Hunter Morrison Director of the Center for Regional Studies and Urban Development, Youngstown State University Panelists: Lev Gonick, Chief Information Officer Case Western Reserve University Gordon Priemer, President & CEO Heartland Development LLC and Developer of The 4415 Building Jack Boyle, Vice President of Business Affairs & Finance Cleveland State University Russell Berusch, Vice President of Commercial Development, Case Western Reserve University James A. Haviland, Executive Director MidTown Cleveland, Inc. Please note: Registrations made after the March 9th deadline are considered “at the door” Fees increase by $10 for “at the door” registration. Registration limited to: 110 Registration Deadline: Thursday, March 9th 2006 After March 9th call 440 461-4233. http://www.uli.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Events_Registration&Template=/Conference/ConferenceDescription.cfm&ConferenceID=1407