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Push Underway To Keep OfficeMax In Town   

05-27-2005 6:42 AM

 

(Cleveland, OH) -- Northeast Ohio leaders are trying to craft proposals to keep OfficeMax's local headquarters open. The office supply company has been based in Shaker Heights, but could leave the region in a consolidation with parent company Boise Cascade. Cleveland city officials say possible sites for the combined companies' headquarters are in Ohio and Illinois, where Boise is based. They're supporting Shaker Heights' push to keep the existing 600 jobs, with the possibility of another 500 to 600 workers moving to the area. Boise Cascade officials say there are no immediate plans to consolidate its corporate jobs, but a streamlining process is necessary to shore up the bottom line.

 

For more info, click the link

Copyright 2005 Metro Networks Communications Inc., A Westwood One Company 

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

We'll see what comes of this... hopefully our elected officials will be able to come up with something, and hopefully Office Max'll stay in Shaker.

anyone know who the CEO or COO is right now?

I had no idea Officemax was HQed in Cleveland!

^jeff it was a cleveland area company, but it got bought out. thus this inevitable "bottom line" hq battle. ugh.

  • 4 weeks later...

NE Ohio offering OfficeMax HQ sites

Friday, June 24, 2005

Henry J. Gomez

Plain Dealer Reporter

 

Two downtown Cleveland sites are in the mix to be the next corporate home of OfficeMax Inc., the office supply retailer looking to consolidate its global headquarters in either Northeast Ohio or suburban Chicago.

 

For more info, click the link

www.plaindealer.com

We have to keep them here.  Cleveland dosen't need another company leaving.

500+ downtown would be great!

 

they would just be riding the rapid in a different direction!!

  • 1 month later...

From the business section of the 7/27/05 edition of the Chicago Tribune

 

Illinois trying to stave off OfficeMax move to Cleveland

 

THOMAS A. CORFMAN

Published July 27, 2005

 

 

The Illinois economic development agency is in talks with Itasca-based OfficeMax Inc. about financial incentives that could stave off a headquarters move to the Cleveland area.

 

For more info, click the link

http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/chi-0507270035jul27,1,718298.story?coll=chi-business-hed

very good staubach is doing this decision, they "lean" cleveland!

 

also, if office max has had corruption problems, chicago is the last place you would want to be located in -- hehe!

There was an open letter from Jane Campbell in this morning Plain Dealer.  Sorry I don't have it to post...but it was a discussion of the regional cooperative effort to keep office max and the DFAS jobs in the region.  In short, Saker and Cleveland cooperated to either locate the offices in Shaker or downtown, with a plan to re-develope the shaker campus if Office Max moved downtown.  Of course it's an election year, but it is good to see some regional cooperation...and it would be great to get Office Max in the Higbee bldg.

Regarding the DFAS jobs, more hearings have exposed Defense Dept bias against the Cleveland office.  The good news is that it is a very transparent and lame effort which has been recognised by the right people.

There was an open letter from Jane Campbell in this morning Plain Dealer.  Sorry I don't have it to post...

 

Here is the letter

 

More cooperation, creativity and jobs

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Judy Rawson and Jane Campbell

 

Recently the leaders of our region worked together to retain 1,200 Defense Finance and Accounting Service jobs. Our combined efforts resulted in the demand for a complete review of the DFAS consolidation process and analyses in Washington, D.C., which should lead to retention of these critically important jobs. Leadership from multiple governments and representatives from the region's private sector joined to make this happen.

 

For more info, click the link

www.plaindealer.com

Campbell ought to be careful. She's gonna get herself re-elected by forging partnerships like that. If Office Max and DFAS both stay, it's a cinch.

 

KJP

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

Her administration took a huge turn for the better once Roynanne (?sp) became chief of staff.  I am proud she is mayor right now.

she has made a remarkable turnaround since Ronayne came on board.  The amount of projects announced in the last few months has been pretty spectacular.  If this keeps up, she deserves another term to see what else she can do.

Let's get it done!

 

 

Taking it to the max for OfficeMax

Area leaders make 'best and final offer' to lure retailer

Thursday, August 11, 2005

Henry J. Gomez and Joan Mazzolini

Plain Dealer Reporters

 

Worried that Northeast Ohio will lose its battle with suburban Chicago to become OfficeMax Inc.'s permanent corporate home, regional leaders are working to improve their offer.

 

For more info, click the link

www.plaindealer.com

TRUE Regionalism at work here, finally! This is something northeast ohio has needed for a long time.  Cleveland and a prominent suburb working together to keep a major company here, locate it downtown, and share tax revenue... unbelievable.  If this sort of thing becomes a trend, we may be on our way to a healthier, successful in the 21st century Cleveland metro area.

 

:clap:

^ That is so true!  I hope we see more of this kind of regional thinking in the future.  In order for Greater Cleveland area to once again be prominent, there must be more cooperation of this kind between the city of Cleveland and the suburbs.

 

I really do hope that they choose to consolidate in the Cleveland area; N.E. Ohio really can't afford to lose another major corporation.

say "hi" to TRW on the way there!

damn, i was hoping against hope that they would consolidate here.  Well on the upside, Cleveland and Shaker showed promise of working together and regionalism, which WILL pay off in the future if we keep it up.

well shit... i guess the up side is that we cant blame it on lack of cooperation?

 

as soon as i read that the CEO *lives* in suburban Chicago heh i kinda thought we didnt have a snowballs chance in hell

yeah it was basically a done deal that they'd move to chicago.  The cool thing is that we were able to make it a two horse race, which shows we can compete with any region when we work together... Cleveland and SH need to work together to convince a company to replace OfficeMax.

on that note,  the worst thing we could do is chalk this up as a failure and not try again.  The region has had some success with cooperation, we just need to land that one big fish to prove we can compete as well as anyone.  I am hopeful that will be the case.

OfficeMax values the support that we have received in Ohio throughout the development and growth of our company and we remain committed to Ohio in our retail and contract businesses."

 

errr, despite your corporate-speak twisting that was our company not yours. was. whatev....dont let the door smak you in the azz on the way out guy.

 

sigh. so how many jobs go with it this time???

 

 

 

 

 

They say a "hundreds" of jobs, which isn't a city killer.  But it is a serious kick in our pride.  We've suffered so many losses and few (if any victories) corporate-wise recently.  Plus OfficeMax is a high-profile, national company.  And OfficeMax was a homegrown company (like Standard Oil was, of course), right there in it's Shaker Hts HQ. 

 

We really need to come together as a city/metro area an assess what we are doing/not doing to create this horrible atmosphere we have toward business.  It's not enough to simply keep leaning on the "its a bad economy" excuse, because other regional cities are either thriving (Chicago) or doing fine (Cincinnati).  Unlike other large cities that dominate the state, we can forget any assistance from the Statehouse.  Unlike the friendly downstate posters on this board, legislators and others downstate hate our guts and are probably chuckling about the OfficeMax move -- there's a real unhealthy rivalry in this state and it stinks.  So we Clevealnders really need to look w/in ourselves and pressure our leaders, who I think leave A LOT TO BE DESIRED.  :whip:

 

This nonsense has got to stop.

on that note,  the worst thing we could do is chalk this up as a failure and not try again.  The region has had some success with cooperation, we just need to land that one big fish to prove we can compete as well as anyone.  I am hopeful that will be the case.

 

You sure are hopeful, and I so am I, but how can losing another large corporation to another city be considered as anything other than a failure??? Yes, we saw Cleveland and a suburb cooperate in an unprecedented manner. We saw us standing in the tall grass with a big dog and competed with him. That's all very nice. But there's something you're forgetting....

 

WE LOST

 

Are we getting desensitized to losing? Are we so accustomed to losing that all have to hang on to are moral victories? You know what stops a losing streak?

 

A VICTORY

 

I'm still waiting, and yes, still hopeful we will win one. Otherwise I would have moved out long ago.

 

But let's be brutally realistic here. Let's bag the koom-baya, let's-blow-some-sunshine-up-our-sore-asses charade. It's time to start getting pissed off, not pissed on.

 

Were the odds against us? Probably. So you offer a better deal to beat your competition. So what if the CEO was from Chicago? He's a BUSINESSMAN. Offer him a better deal and, if he doesn't take it, he's got some explaining to do to his shareholders. He doesn't have a loyalty to Chicago. He has a loyatly to his company's bottom line. Sometimes I think we Clevelanders think if we wave our museums, our orchestra, our Metroparks and a few incentives in front of these rootless CEOs, they would keep their companies here. It's as if they'd be doing themselves a favor by staying in the city where their company has been since the beginning. This is the cold, unemotional business world. Stop pretending they're some family member you can guilt into staying put.

 

So, why, please, did our local officials forfeit the game a couple of weeks ago by tendering their "final offer" to Office Max??? What the hell was that? The only time a final offer is made is when you win, or the other team flat-out beats you. Why state at all that you've given a final offer? What kind of negotiating is that???

 

If you want to stop a losing streak, you have to go the extra mile to turn the losing culture around. Punch the other guy right in the nose and let him know you're through  getting pissed on. Do whatever you have to do in order to get a win. It's time to change the culture of losing around here.

 

There is no nobility in losing, just as there is none in poverty. Both of those seem to be in awful abundance around these parts. If the losing streak doesn't stop, then it's time to bench the quarterback, fire the coach, replace the owner, whatever it takes. Because, sooner or later, no one's going to be left to watch the game and the team will fold.

 

Demand more from your leaders, people! If you don't, then less is exactly what you'll get.

 

KJP

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

Unlike other large cities that dominate the state, we can forget any assistance from the Statehouse.  Unlike the friendly downstate posters on this board, legislators and others downstate hate our guts and are probably chuckling about the OfficeMax move -- there's a real unhealthy rivalry in this state and it stinks.

 

:lol:Oh you have GOT to be kidding me! :lol:

 

This little "we used to be the top banana and now we're playing second fiddle to the little cowtown in the center of the state because it's the capital" is cutely amuzing at best. Clevelanders can keep crying and saying it's Columbus' fault, or they can put on their big girl panties and play some hardball in the real world. (By the way, the Cleveland-Shaker Heights partnership is a great start. You're on the Huggies Pull-Ups Cleveland, now shoot for the big-boy undies!)

Well said, KJP! You graduate!

 

cover.01.jpg

^I agree. Cleveland's problems are Cleveland's fault. No one is out to get us. They don't have to. We do a better job of knocking our own legs out from under us, better than anyone else.

 

KJP

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

Well, KJP, I'm with you, and I am verrrrrryyyy pissed off that Cleveland took this sort of loss.. I kinda had some high hopes for seeing new faces downtown.

 

But, it's time for me to turn my cheek and look at how lousy the company is actually doing. I don't think the company has a bright future, at least not from the stores I have been inside. I was inside the Parmatown location today and a) the parking lot was empty and I was the only customer in the store at 3pm; b) everything is overpriced and undesirable when places like Staples, Wal-Mart, and Target offer it for 9 times out of 10, much cheaper; and c) the only reason I even went to Office Max was because I got a coupon in the mail for 10 dollars off a purchase of 10 dollars or more, meaning I got a 50 pack of CDR's for free - why else would they send me and my girlfriend these coupons at least 4 times a year if they weren't in desperate need of customers? My girlfriend is the one who said that they are pathetic sending us these coupons and she hasn't the faintest about the company's financials or consolidation process.

 

The truth of it is, with Wal-Mart and Target slowly becoming colossal monopolists in society, they will continue to lower their prices (the more they sell, the cheaper they sell it for). And places like Staples are popping up everywhere.. when I go inside a Staples store, I feel like I am in Office Max, still a fairly shitty place, but they are doing something different, because their stores usually consist of at least as many customers as employees at any given time, whereas Office Max usually has 1-2 people in the store with 10+ employees standing around doing little or nothing at all. With Internet shopping becoming easier than ever, not only through mature competition, but also through high speed Internet access, the entire process of online shopping has become so damn simple that places like Office Max and K-Mart won't last much longer. I wouldn't be surprised if all the big box stores say that their websites account for more sales than their brick and mortar stores do. So, with that said, maybe Office Max is consolidating to one location because the future is bleak at best. The company has definately had its up's and down's, but this is by far the biggest down, and that's not just from a pissed off Clevelander's standpoint. I recall at least 3-4 years ago when I was very skeptical of the company when some friends discussed buying OMX shares. I can't recall the story with Office Max at the time, but I could swear they almost went under at least once in the new millenium already.

 

So, in the end, I do feel it's a big loss for Cleveland, but then again, if and when they do go under it really won't matter anyways.. If MBNA, Progressive or Marc Glassman Inc. (which is definately a NE Ohio company on the up and about) went under then I'd be concerned, but Office Max??? **** 'em!

It's as if they'd be doing themselves a favor by staying in the city where their company has been since the beginning. This is the cold, unemotional business world. Stop pretending they're some family member you can guilt into staying put.

 

 

Couldn't have said it better.  Look how quickly both B.F. Goodrich and Firestone left Akron.  Both were HQ'd here for nearly a century before uprooting to greener pastures (Goodrich, 1870; Firestone, 1900).  Community loyalty means little to nothing in the business world, it's all about $$$$. :evil:

 

I found a listing to the remaining Fortune 500 companies in the Cleveland/Akron area:

 

- Goodyear

- FirstEnergy

- Progressive

- National City

- Eaton

- Parker-Hannifin

- KeyCorp

- Sherwin-Williams

 

This list is looking mighty thin when you think of the number of major companies that once called N.E. Ohio home. :-(

agreed, KJP.  i too am tired of the moral victories.  My point was not to overlook the fact we lost, but merely to state that if the region cooperated like this more often, we would have a few more victories to talk about. 

 

That being said, this sucks, and I realize it.  This area is still bleeding jobs nonstop, like it has ever since the manufacturing era died, and it just never seems to stop.  We hear one piece of good news and then "oh look, 2,000 jobs are leaving tommorow! happy day".  Until the city and area gets their head out of their ass, this will continue.  Until we are willing to stop wallowing in self-pity, pining for the industrial past, and wake up for the future, Cleveland will continue heading down the Youngstown path, and perhaps further into destruction.  Honestly, Cleveland is reaching its final point.  Will this city let its job, population, and influence bleed away for good, or does it finally take this as a wake up call to stop crying, shake off the dirt, and fix these damn problems once and for all.  Time will tell, and for northeast ohio's sake, I hope they choose the latter.

Look, Cleveland needs to stop solely looking at what's left and feverishly clinging on to it. Cleveland needs to do three things:

 

1. Pursue

 

While they may not be headquartered in Cleveland, several large companies have equally large investments in the Cleveland area. Pander to them, make them realize the benefits of doing business in Cleveland. Show them that this an area on the move, where business should expand and evolve. If one of these companies has a small intention of possibly leaving its home turf, throw your hat in the ring! It couldn't hurt, if anything it could lead to a better relationship and a better understand to what the business world wants and needs.

 

2. Create

 

I think Cleveland is hoping on this bandwagon, mainly due to its powerhouse medical and educational facilities. The need is out there for research and development, why not continue to showcase Northeast Ohio as the premier region for medical breakthroughs and technology. Cleveland needs to find a sector (preferably one that's growing) and actively pursue business associated with it. I think Cleveland could be a huge research magnet for many industries, not just medicine, and benefit from all the white collar jobs associated with them.

 

3. Diversify

 

While Cleveland has done a good job shrugging off the steel mills, much more still needs to be done. While easier said than done, I believe actively implementing the first two idea will lead to an economy that's driven on a variety of different sectors. Banking, education, and health care already have solid roots in Northeast Ohio, now look at other sectors.

 

I don't think Cleveland will go down the Youngstown road, it's prominance is too great for such a thing to happen. But a different mindset needs to take place in the city. One that's not so horribly engrossed in clutching to the old, but willing to dable in the new. I'm not saying that the city should completely shed it's history, that's a large part of what makes Cleveland great, but the region needs to be more willing to try new things.

Very good points, CMH.  Northeast Ohio needs to look in the mirror and realize that it's not Columbus' fault that the region is facing a bleak future.  It is a complete failure to change with the times and stop relying on the old way of doing things.  The reason a lot of Clevelanders moved to Columbus? oh thats right, they have jobs there and aren't stuck clinging to an industrial heritage that frankly is gone and is never coming back.  The population needs to educate themselves, foster a business-friendly climate, paticuarly to startup businesses, and use its healthcare, cultural and educational assets to attract outsiders to the city.  There is no silver bullet, it's a long, hard road back to the top, but for christ's sake, if not now, then when?  When the census report reads Population: two guys and a donkey? 

 

If there was ever a time for regionalism, the time is now.  The region WILL DIE if Cleveland continues to self-destruct, and the suburban morons have got to realize that as well.  No region can be successful with a crumbling, decaying inner city that bleeds jobs away like no other city in the country save Gary, Indiana.  All the denizens of Cleveland, both city proper and suburbs, must realize that it put up or shut up time for metro Cleveland. 

wow..........this is terrible. a fortune 500 company just gone........sad sad sad day for this whole region. no excuse for this.

wow..........this is terrible. a fortune 500 company just gone........sad sad sad day for this whole region. no excuse for this.

 

Get over it.  Cincinnati lost Cinergy (a Fortune 500 company) and Dayton lost Mead (to freakin' Conneticut).  But ya gotta move on.  Count your losses and move on.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

ColDayMan is right, people.  The best thing to do now is to give it a rest and get back to work on local economic growth.  Instead of bemoaning another large company lost, let's do what it takes now to create the next fortune 500 company right here in Cleveland.  The best way we can recover from this is by breeding high tech jobs and companies that have the tools they need to succeed and become large, successful companies.  The corporate headquarters left in Cleveland aren't there by accident.  They are home grown companies that made it big.  We had them in the past, we can haev them again, if the attitude is right and the support is there.

for CMH Downtown:

 

Hold on, Hoss.  Before you make a total jackass of yourself, consider (and read the post), I in no way blamed Columbus for our loss.  If you read my posts, both here and elsewhere, I’ve been the biggest attacker of local officials here – our mayor, Jane Campbell, our transit chief, Joe Calabrese – for not progressively enhancing our transit infrastructure, NOACA for similarly it’s lack of balanced, smart transit/transportation planning,  our CVB, … all of them.  Where were you when I posted, just 2 days ago, (see the transportation board) that Cleveland’s rinky-dink airport, Hopkins, has contributed to Cleveland’s poor business climate?  Or when I’ve attacked the mayor for not being proactive in attempting to ATTRACT business; forming a realistic plan as opposed to into an 11th hour huddle with Shaker’s mayor for a join tax-sharing package when it was already game, set and match with OfficeMax.  Is that blaming Columbus?    :?

 

And your comments about centering a business strategy on the strength of our medical prowess – we have the best medical research complex in the country, bar none (our #2 med research center, University Hosp, would be #1 in most big cities in America – like, say, our twice-as-big neighbor Detroit).  I’ve said hundreds of times, Jane and others (including Tubbs-Jones and Kucinich), have not pushed hard enough to attract spin-off medical corporate research complexes – like Pfizer’s amazing complex in tiny Ann Arbor.  Is that blaming Columbus?  :wtf:

 

Now, mentioning there is a lack of true statewide cooperation is a fact, just as it is that Columbus is no cheerleader for Cleveland, economic-wise, and is more a rival that an friend.  Was it lost on you that the State of Illinois actively recruits businesses for the state, particularly Chicago, and created a multimillion dollar fund to attract business like OfficeMax.  Is there such an initiative out of our state capital with state cooperation among our big cities?  I think not.  To act like there’s no upstate/downstate (unhealthy) rivalry in the state is to completely have your head in the sand.

 

So consider, CMH Downtown, before you go off in attack mode, first stop, think and consider exactly who you’re attacking.

 

^Wow...that was neat!  :-D

 

I was just havin' fun with ya. My comments were not aimed directly at you, clvlndr, but at pretty everyone that has, in one way or another, pointed the finger at the town 2 hrs south on 71. Your comment just happened to be the most convenient at the time.

 

I agree that Cleveland's medical facilities are bar-none, hence why I highlighed it in my post regarding my thoughts on what Cleveland needs to do to get back on its feet. There's no argument that a terrific base is already established, now its time to build on it, like you said.

 

Also, about the Illinois comment. If anything, Springfield likes to detract as much attention from Chicagoland as possible. Talk to any downstater and you'll see a deep resentment towards the prosperity of the Windy City. It goes both ways though, as Chicagoans tend to not associate themselves with the rest of the state of Illinois. Economically, I can't really think of any time that Cleveland and Columbus, or any other major city in Ohio has really been in a bitter fight for a commercial enterprise. The DFAS thing might be the closest thing I can think of, but that's government stuff anyways.

 

Buddy, relax. Don't take stuff so seriously! You'll develop less ulcers that way.

Problem is, is this region going to be a business incubator for the rest of the nation or world? Are we going to foster the hatching and growing of businesses so that, when they mature, they fly the coop? Being able to create an entrepenurial business climate is fantastic. It should be a "must have" for every city of decent size. But unless we can retain those businesses when they grow up to be big and strong, this region won't become as big and as strong as it can otherwise be. We MUST have a better strategy in place for keeping those businesses here (and even stealing a few from other cities).

 

KJP

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

Get over it.  Cincinnati lost Cinergy (a Fortune 500 company) and Dayton lost Mead (to freakin' Conneticut).  But ya gotta move on.  Count your losses and move on.

 

you gotta be kidding me cdm. holy toledo this just happened the other day. what you are reading here is called grief. the "get over it" part comes later, but not five freakin minutes later!

 

clvlndr --- it not fair to expect ohio to fully "fund" a city like illinois does funds for chicago. ohio is not a one-city state like they are. that kind of state help wont happen in ohio and when it does its diluted down for any one city. frankly i'm glad, ohio's strength is its diversity of cities. and yes the state government is generally against ne ohio, what's new about that? thats been true for twenty years or more. cleveland and ne ohio are on their own. be glad ---- it might have a silver lining, it might bring a call for changes in local government that much quicker. hell, the berlin wall fell overnight, anything can happen after a good kick in the pants like all these business and job losses.

Get over it.  Cincinnati lost Cinergy (a Fortune 500 company) and Dayton lost Mead (to freakin' Conneticut).  But ya gotta move on.  Count your losses and move on.

 

you gotta be kidding me cdm. holy toledo this just happened the other day. what you are reading here is called grief. the "get over it" part comes later, but not five freakin minutes later!

 

 

Hardly an excuse.  When Cinergy was consolidated with Duke, did you read Cincinnati forumers gloom and doom about how we need to retool our thinking?  No.  It's how America works.  Sorry, count your blessings that you still have Fortune 500 companies that you could invest and grow with.  My hometown has one left.  One.  But alas.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

Somebody is getting these Fortune 500 companies. When you try to keep them and don't, I would be more disappointed if Clevelanders weren't upset at the loss(es). There is every reason to be upset at the loss.

 

What's Ohio's economy supposed to consist of, delivering pizzas to each other?

 

KJP

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

There is a difference between being upset and moving on than being upset and just whining about the doom/gloom card.  To me, move on.  Ohio is a progressive state (well, it was but it still can be).  As another Clevelander said "screw em" and move on.  They clearly had an intention to leave.  Their loss.  Sure, Cleveland's loss too but hell, Somebody is getting these Fortune 500 companies and it could very well be Cleveland.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

CMH Downtown -- fair enough.  But it's not finger pointing to note that Statewide cooperation is lacking in Ohio that could benefit all the cities.  And we'd all, Cleveland too, could do more to lower the fiefdom mentality hampers such cooperation while the individual metro areas take the lead in addressing their own unique business problems... In that sense, I stand by what I said.

  • 1 month later...

Well, this sucks.  The article states that Cleveland offered the best incentive package, yet OfficeMax chose Chicagoland anyway.  :(  From the 10/1/05 PD:

 

 

NE Ohio incentives not enough for OfficeMax

Saturday, October 01, 2005

Alison Grant

Plain Dealer Reporter

 

Cleveland and Shaker Heights officials said Friday that they had offered OfficeMax Inc. the best incentive package to locate its headquarters here. But suburban Chicago won, apparently because OfficeMax executives were reluctant to pull up roots and move to Northeast Ohio.

 

For more info, click the link

 

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

[email protected], 216-999-4758

 

http://www.cleveland.com/business/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/business/1128162615160450.xml&coll=2

Makes you wonder if the decision was actually made and analyzed for the best business decision. The way the article portrays its, it seems to be just a don’t want to move thing.

I hope the executives get along well with their shareholders, or are adept at spinning the reasons for the decision.

 

Long-term, I think other companies in other cities looking to move might consider Cleveland -- assuming the word gets out about what Cleveland/Shaker Heights were willing to do.

 

KJP

"In the souls of the people the grapes of wrath are filling and growing heavy, growing heavy for the vintage." -- John Steinbeck

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