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Neighborhood News Archives ~ 2007

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Cleveland neighborhood revival plan focuses on anchor projects

Plans build on anchor projects in 6 parts of city

Sunday, November 25, 2007 ~ Cleveland Plain Dealer

To read this story online, go to our "City Of God" page or click: http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/stories/index.ssf?/base/iseco/1195997438111340.xml&coll=2&thispage=1

by Tom Breckenridge,

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NOTE: Pastor Allen attended this forum...

Homeless problem needs regional approach, Cleveland panel says
Friday, November 02, 2007
Stan Donaldson, Plain Dealer Reporter

Cleveland officials and social-service experts called Thursday for a regional approach to dealing with the 20,000 or more homeless people in the region.

Meeting at the City Club of Cleveland, a three-member panel also suggested working more with faith-based organizations, creating more affordable housing and providing more outreach services.

Natoya Walker, a special assistant to Mayor Frank Jackson and one of the panelists, told an audience of 140 people that homelessness is not just a city issue.

"It is a national issue," Walker said in an interview after the event. "But at the local level, we need all of our partners to work and help come up with solutions to provide people with access to services."

The other panelists were City Councilman Joe Cimperman and Michael Sering, who oversees 2100 Lakeside Men's Shelter. The panel was moderated by Plain Dealer Associate Editor Joe Frolik.

The panel took part in the second of three group discussions on poverty in Northeast Ohio, said Gary Musselman, director of operations at the City Club.

During Thursday's discussion, Walker said that Aviation High School, an overflow homeless shelter that serves about 150 men, will remain open until the city and county can open a transitional shelter.

The overflow shelter was slated to close this week, but Sering said it would stay open at least until January.

Some attending the event said the information about poverty in the city is not new, but the discussion is important because it could lead to change.

"I think any time the community leaders get together and talk about the pressing issue of homelessness is a good and encouraging thing," said Gerald Skoch, director of the West Side Catholic Center. "Poverty will be an everlasting issue, but more people need to be aware that homelessness is solvable."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
sdonalds@plaind.com, 216-999-4885
© 2007 The Plain Dealer
© 2007 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.

 

Thursday, November 01, 2007 12:00 PM
Homelessness in Cleveland Panel Discussion at the City Club
Cleveland Councilman Joe Cimperman, Mike Sering of LMM, and Natoya
Walker of the City of Cleveland

Sponsor: Saint Luke’s Foundation

Cleveland, like all major cities, has a significant homeless
population. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
defines homeless individuals as those who lack a fixed, regular, and
adequate nighttime residence, or whose residence is a publicly or
privately operated temporary shelter. The Northeast Ohio Coalition for
the Homeless estimates that there are more than 26,000 homeless
individuals in Cuyahoga County.

A panel will discuss topics ranging from what is being done to provide
housing and services for homeless individuals, day to day life in
homeless shelters, the distinction between homelessness and
panhandling, and the balancing of the civil rights of homeless
individuals with the community’s desire to reduce aggressive
panhandling and to preserve safety in Cleveland’s public spaces. Joe
Frolik of the Plain Dealer will serve as moderator.

This program is second in the three-part series “Engulfed: The Rising
Tide of Economic Disparity” sponsored by the Saint Luke’s Foundation.
Other programs include "The Working Poor: Invisible in America" on
10/5/07 and "Is the Middle Class Shrinking?" on 11/27/07.

http://www.cityclub.org/content/speakers/SpeakerDetail.aspx?spkID=5540
 

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Message From Bob Shores,
OCNW Safety Coordinator

October 26, 2007

Please see the Channel 3 News report on the aggravated robberies in Tremont and Ohio City, which was aired on their 7:00 News last night. Since Ohio City Pizza was mentioned, I think it would be a great idea to express our support of a good neighborhood business and patronize Ohio City Pizza whenever possible. They were the victim of an armed robbery a little over two years ago, and they remain in our neighborhood. Please let them know that you are patronizing them in response to this TV news report. A Plain Dealer report is also attached. I'm sure they will greatly appreciate your business. Plus, they make a great pizza! I love their white sauce pizza with tomatoes and green peppers. They also deliver, and are open late. Their information is listed below:

Ohio City Pizzeria
3223 Lorain Ave.
Phone: 216.281.5252

Let's show Ohio City Pizza that the Ohio City community is there for them in this time of need!

Bob Shores,
OCNW Safety Coordinator

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From the Plain Dealer:
http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2007/10/undercover_vice_cops_foil_pizz.html

Undercover vice cops foil pizza robbery in Ohio City
Posted by Gabriel Baird October 25, 2007 20:29PM
Categories: Breaking News, Crime

Sgt. Tommy Shoulders and his crew of three Cleveland undercover detectives were looking to arrest prostitutes along Lorain Avenue at W. 33rd Wednesday night.

Instead, they caught two suspects robbing the Ohio City Pizzeria, which is at the corner. Here is how police say it went down:

Shoulders was sitting in an unmarked police car about 9 p.m., when two men across the street covered their faces. The 26-year-old police veteran knew what was about to happen, even before one of the suspects pulled out a gun. Inside, the gunman pointed his weapon at a worker's head as the other emptied the register. The second man asked another worker where the safe was. When she didn't answer fast enough, he told his partner to shoot her. He didn't. "When he first said, 'this is a robbery' -- I said look, dude, you've got to be out of your mind . . . are you kidding me," the 43-year-old female employee recalled.

As the robbery unfolded, the woman could see the undercover police outside.

"I knew vice was out there somewhere, because they've been cleaning up Lorain Avenue," she said. "They didn't want to come in and create a situation."

Shoulders had his men - Detectives Kevin Fairchild, Michael Rinkus and Neil Hutchinson - wait outside for fear the robbers would take the workers hostage or even kill them. Once the came out, the detectives chased the robbers. They arrested Tyrone Ballou, 20, of Maple Heights. Shoulders drove the unmarked car after the other suspect, who pointed his gun at Shoulders. Shoulders hit him with the car. The suspect, a 17-year-old Clevelander, was treated at MetroHealth Medical Center and released. Police recovered a gun and cash. Cleveland police are investigating the run-in as a use-of-deadly force. The juvenile is being held at the detention center and Ballou at City Jail on suspicion of aggravated robbery.

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Channel 3 News Report from http://www.wkyc.com

Police: Four juveniles, 2 adults under arrest in connection with Tremont robbery
CLEVELAND -- Cleveland Police have six robbery suspects in custody and say they know the identity of another adult suspect. Police believe they are part of a robbery ring that has targeted victims across the entire 2nd District. They were arrested after three people were held up after leaving a popular Tremont restaurant. No one was hurt. The victims quickly contacted police and told them a group of robbers made off with money and mobile phones. Detectives called one of the phones. It was traced to the suspects. While they wait for their day in court Tremont restaurant owners hope it calms the nerves of patrons who have stayed away. An e-mail that has circulated on the web warns Tremont was a dangerous place to visit. Chris Garland, the Executive Director of the Tremont West development Corporation says there's no need to be afraid to visit the Tremont neighborhood. "There's no need to stay away from Tremont. It's as safe a neighborhood you'll find anywhere in the 2nd Distri!
ct. Certainly one of the safest neighborhoods you'll find in the City of Cleveland," said Garland.

Police say another robbery across the Lorain-Carnegie bridge, in Ohio City, has also been solved. The suspects who robbed Ohio City Pizza did not know the vice unit was in the area. When the robbery call came over the radio, vice officers quickly responded and arrested several suspects.
   
* Play Video for Bill Safos' story:
http://www.wkyc.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=76816&provider=gnews


Le Petit Triangle is taste of Paris in Ohio City
Friday, November 02, 2007

Beth Segal, Special to the Plain Dealer

It could have been Paris on a sultry Saturday night. Outside, beneath a green striped awning, candles flickered on small red enamel bistro tables under the looming gaze of a Gothic cathedral. We dined on perfectly tender and garlicky escargot and seductively rich pate and drank wine that sparkled as if it held the entire shimmering night in its depths.

This is Le Petit Triangle Cafe, a little bit of France on Fulton Road in Cleveland. Charm comes easily here, in the former Le Oui Oui Cafe, and, more likely than not, a delicious meal follows. Modeled on a classic Gallic boite, the little "box" establishments that are the culinary keystone of every great neighborhood in Paris, this tiny restaurant, eponymously enough, has an interior with three sides and just eight tables nestled comfortably around a very open kitchen.

There is much to indulge us in the appealing menu, which features mostly daytime fare: savory and sweet crepes, omelets, salads and sandwiches. And though the sensibility is French, the dollar is still strong in Ohio City. The vast majority of dishes do not exceed the single digits, so have fun.

Try a robust Croque Monsieur ($9), the cafe's take on the classic ham and Gruyere Parisian snack, served on thick slices of grilled challah and blanketed in a light bechamel sauce. The addition of a side of perfectly cooked broccoli and an even better bearnaise sounds like overkill, but they're both so delicious, it would be a shame to neglect one for the other.

The savory crepes we tried truly were savory in their tasty and tender wrappings. The three-cheese option ($7) sounded heavy, but each bite offered a different taste experience and there was no problem polishing it off. The ratatouille tucked into another crepe ($9 crepe, $3 side) was bright with fresh color and flavors, cooked "al dente" with a light glaze of fruity olive oil.

Other highlights include the flaky turkey croissant ($8), baked in-house and deliciously stuffed with mango chutney, chevre, dried cranberries and mesclun, and the "Chocolate Lovers Crepe" ($5) with rich creamy Nutella (the Italian hazelnut and chocolate spread) inside, whipped cream outside with coconut, bananas, strawberries and nuts available for extra fabulousness. An individual chocolate souffle ($6) was beautifully served in a bright blue ramekin with a side of creme Anglaise.

Things that did not work so well included the omelets ($6 to $10), which were overcooked and dry on the several occasions that we tried them, and the Salade Nicoise ($10), which started out well with beautiful vegetables and then hit a snag with a salmon fillet that seemed to be suffering from a case of rigor mortis. Several items, including the couscous lentil salad ($3), could have benefited from a more liberal seasoning. Finally, a cafe, by definition, should be able to produce a good cup of coffee. Our two visits produced two cups of not happening.

But why be negative? The instincts are good, the prices are right, and the food can be delectable. With winter approaching, it's nice to have a cozy little bit of Paris in Cleveland.

Segal is a free-lance photographer and writer in Beachwood.
© 2007 The Plain Dealer
© 2007 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.

 

 

Collapsing Riverbed Street threatens sewer line; repair to be costly

Preventing catastrophe will cost $20 million to $70 million
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Michael Scott
Plain Dealer Reporter -- Find this story at: http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/stories/index.ssf?/base/other/1190883091289240.xml&coll=2

Riverbed Street looks as if it had been split by an earthquake.

The disintegrating road, which shadows the Cuyahoga River from Columbus Road to the Detroit-Superior (Veterans Memorial) Bridge on the west bank of the Flats, has been closed since November 2005, when city workers noticed pavement cracks.

But in recent months, the lower hillside in an area that was once a teeming immigrant shantytown is falling fast. The lane closest to the river has dropped more than four feet and is in danger of collapsing completely -- driven into the water by the sliding slope above it.

"This is a very heavy hillside that wants very badly to do what nature does -- find balance," said Craig Hebebrand, a planner for the Ohio Department of Transportation. "Balance means collapse."

What comes next might be worse -- environmental aftershock and taxpayer sticker shock.

Regional sewer officials say they expect the sliding roadside to eventually crush an aging sewer pipe -- spewing millions of gallons of untreated waste into the river. The pipe carries from 1 million to 20 million gallons of waste per day, depending on weather conditions.

Paying to prevent that -- and then shoring up the riverbank to stop further collapse of the road -- could cost between $20 million and $70 million. The low end of that range involves at least moving the sewer line from danger; the high end would mean rebuilding the entire slope and putting in bulkheads along the river.

Sewer engineers are so certain that the crumbling, 60-year-old brick sewer beneath Riverbed Street will fail that they're already planning an emergency pump station and possibly a permanent pump to try to reroute the sewage before the line blows.

"When it goes, it won't go slowly - it will be pretty dramatic," said Rick Switalski, manager of sewer design for the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District, which owns the sewer pipes beneath the eroding road. "Failure is imminent, and we have to do something right away."

The sewer district reinforced one part of the failing 60-inch-diameter pipe, which takes in sewage from the near West Side and sends it to a treatment plant near Edgewater Park.

Workers first sent a robotic camera and then a professional diver into the sewer pipe 30 feet below the road to inspect for damage before strengthening the northernmost section with a liner inside the pipe.

Above ground, officials from the city, sewer district, ODOT and Army Corps of Engineers are scratching their heads at how quickly the fissure has opened. Four geo-technical studies have suggested that it's likely to only get worse.

City officials said they have been meeting with officials from the Army Corps and the Coast Guard about options for correcting the slope by reconstructing the riverbanks.

Several analyses and computer models of the slope mechanics have suggested that the area is "at risk of repeated failure until the riverbank is modified, changed or stabilized."

The west bank of the Cuyahoga at Riverbed Street is not strengthened by bulkheads, sewer district engineer Bob Ericsson said. Constructing the steel and concrete supports along the riverbank would push the cost of repairs toward the $70 million mark, officials said.

The head of the Flats Oxbow Association said full reconstruction of the road and hill and the addition of bulkheads are crucial to the areas.

"We feel it is absolutely obligatory to get Riverbed reopened," said association Executive Director Tom Newman. "This is adversely affecting a number of businesses and residents as well."

While Riverbed Street is considered a "low-volume roadway" by the city - it averaged about 1,300 vehicles a day in a May 2000 study - its importance may increase in the future.

ODOT is looking at the route as one option for a project that would reroute truck traffic from above, down into the Flats.

"Riverbed could become very important if that route became the preferred way," said ODOT's Hebebrand. "But that road can't take any traffic now, and the project is on hold for now, anyway."

Sewer District Director of Engineering Charles Vasulka said in a written report that the west bank of the Cuyahoga River between Columbus Road and the Detroit-Superior Bridge has had a "history of instability issues that date back to the late 1880s."

More recently, the unstable soil sloping from West 25th Street down to Riverbed Street stopped the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority from going forward in the late 1990s with its proposed large-scale Irishtown Bend housing development and park atop the hill, where it owns most of the land.

The area still bears that informal name from its history as a thriving Irish immigrant settlement in the late 1800s. The National Park Service in 1990 added part of the area to the National Register of Historic Places as the Irishtown Bend Archaeological District.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

mscott@plaind.com, 216-999-4148


 
© 2007 The Plain Dealer
© 2007 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.

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FRANKLIN-CLINTON BLOCK CLUB
               MONTHLY MEETING

           THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 2007
            (NEW STARTING TIME!!!)
              7:00 TO 8:30 p.m.

           At the Fairview Gardens
          Senior Citizens Apartment
           3207 Franklin Boulevard

                   AGENDA:

Welcome and Introductions

Special Guest, Maria Keckan, President of Cinecraft
Products, will present the plans for her recently
aquired building on the NW corner of W.25th and
Franklin, which was the location of the former "Quik
Pik" carry-out.  Maria has prepared a PowerPoint
presentation that should be quite interesting.

Discussion of the Mike deCesare proposal for 3102/04
Franklin Blvd.

Update on the grant request to fund upgrade of Vine
Court ("Alley Allies")

Community announcements and safety updates: The OCNW
Interim Director, Dave Stack, will be in attendance.
An officer from the Police Community Services Unit
will likely be in attendance.

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Volume 15, Issue 16
Published August 22nd, 2007

This article can be found at: http://www.freetimes.com/stories/15/16/the-good-fight

 

The Good Fight

Preacher-activist The Rev. George Hrbek Reflects On Sacrifice And Satisfaction

 

It is a resplendent Tuesday in late spring, warm but not humid. On the lawn next to City Hall, two dozen people - graying veterans of '60s rallies, young mothers with children in tow, folks holding signs pronouncing "God Loves Poor People Too!" - have gathered to protest state indifference to the poor and indigent. Passersby on Lakeside Avenue smile and nod, but do not stop.

 

The Rev. George Hrbek stands quietly in the back, unfazed by the lack of attendance. "You got to do it, to be faithful to yourself, to your vision, to continue to be a voice crying out in the wilderness," he says, chuckling.

1971 Reverend Hrbek shortly after moving to Cleveland
PHOTO (left) 1971 Reverend Hrbek shortly after moving to Cleveland

Hrbek is a legend in activist circles, a change agent who organized civil-rights activities in Selma, Alabama and Chicago during the 1960s and knew Martin Luther King, Jesse Jackson and Fred Hampton, the Black Panther gunned down by police in 1969. He is the preacher known in poorer Cleveland neighborhoods during the 1970s as "that minister, a good cat," the long-time advocate at Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry who launched innovative community re-entry programs for ex-offenders and helped to persuade East Ohio Gas to provide financial assistance for people who could not pay their bills. He was the first ombudsman of Cuyahoga County, champion and friend of the homeless at the downtown men's shelter.

 

When the robust, white-goateed Hrbek takes the bullhorn to speak to the protesters standing on the lawn outside City Hall, he has the mantle of authority of a religious orator addressing a crowd of hundreds of congregants. His voice cascading with emotion, he struts back and forth. "Do not balance the state budget at the expense of those whose challenge to hold life and limb together in this state is the most difficult. Let's not, through the budget, give to those who already have and take away from those who have not. Everyone say amen to that?"

Amen, the crowd chants in unison. Amen.

 

"STUDYING FOR THE MINISTRY was my way of rebelling against my family," Hrbek confides in his office at the Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry in Ohio City. At 76, he has come to an understanding of how he came to develop his religious commitment to social change. He grew up in New Jersey in a family of social activists. His Czech grandfather was a Marxist, a union organizer, and his father not only worshipped Franklin D. Roosevelt, but as an architect, helped design one of FDR's houses in Warm Springs, Georgia. But like many secular progressives of the 1930s, his relatives were not enamored of religion.

 

Home life was warm, but Hrbek found school stultifying, even oppressive. He rebelled, defended himself with his fists, once slugging a teacher who hit him. Searching for a way to reconcile the contradiction between home and school, he attended a variety of church services, coming across a Lutheran mentor who related a message that made a lasting impression: Each person is gifted, and these gifts cannot be taken away.

 

Intrigued, Hrbek enrolled at Concordia College, a Lutheran school in Fort Wayne, Indiana. After graduating from seminary in St. Louis in 1958, he received his first assignment - to start a Lutheran church in Selma, Alabama.

 

The site of Martin Luther King's storied march across the bridge in 1965, Selma was an old, affluent cotton town, with beautiful antebellum homes, a genteel veneer and racist mores, says J. David Ellwanger, a lawyer who worked with Hrbek in the 1960s, grew up in Selma and recently retired to Dallas. Unwritten law dictated that whites could fraternize in black establishments, but "Negroes" were strictly forbidden from mixing with whites in their homes or places of worship.

 

Hrbek broke the law.

FUTURE FIREBRAND - Hrbek, age 5, Warms Springs, GA
PHOTO  (right) FUTURE FIREBRAND - Hrbek, age 5, Warms Springs, GA

He invited a number of African-American worshippers to attend the dedication of the new church. The police raided the service. Hrbek was not arrested, but it would not be the end of his troubles with the town establishment.

 

One evening, Hrbek heard a knock on his door. He was surprised to see Ed Fields, the middle-aged, balding editor of the Selma Times Journal. Hrbek invited him in. His wife Gertrude and young children were sitting around the house. Hrbek and Fields sat down at the kitchen table.

"I have your letter," Fields said, and Hrbek knew immediately what he meant. A Baptist minister had recently delivered a keynote speech at a barbecue for white high school students brazenly entitled, "Better Dead than Intermarriage." Hbrek had submitted a letter criticizing the preacher, stating that his comments were not representative of the Christian faith and pointing out that there were a lot of light-skinned people of color in Alabama.

 

"I want you to take your letter back," Fields told Hrbek. "Because if you don't take it back, I'm going to print it. If I print it, I'm concerned about you. I really like you, and if I print this letter, your life is going to be at risk."

 

A big man with a '60s-style crewcut, Hrbek looked more like a football coach than a preacher. Repulsed by what he'd seen in Selma, he refused to retract the letter.

 

Fields printed the letter on the front page. Within a couple of days, another letter appeared on the front page, this from the White Citizens Council, Selma's racist elite, excoriating Hrbek. Shortly afterwards, a cross was burned on his lawn and the White Citizens Council pressured church officials to fire Hrbek. In a testament to Hrbek's growing moral influence, church leaders flatly refused.

 

CHICAGO, 1968. The Leopold Mansion in Hyde Park has been transformed into a place of nonviolence. It is Hrbek's base of operation, used to organize community workshops on institutional racism, the site of '60s-style, guitar-accompanied Sunday morning worship services, part of a larger human relations project funded by a national Lutheran organization.

 

One Sunday morning as the service begins, three young African Americans show up and ask if they can speak. Breathing the fire of the growing black power movement, they announce that if the Lutheran group is serious about fighting racism, they should bequeath the building to them. But the pastor who would not let white racists intimidate him in Selma will not give ground to black power advocates in Chicago. Hrbek listens politely, then says: "My two-word response is fuck you. But after the service we can sit down and we can talk."

The crowd is stunned. The men leave, return and discuss the issue with Hrbek. He gives them space in the building.

 

By the end of the decade, Hrbek's radical politics and unconventional style have attracted attention, pleasing liberals, but upsetting the church hierarchy. The regional division of the national Lutheran organization claims that his radical activities are inconsistent with the precepts of the church, and he is ordered to appear before a church governing council. He avoids conviction when an African-American member of the group defends him and the whites recognize they will appear racist if they vote to convict.

 

Hrbek keeps his vestments and ministerial cloth. But the church fires him, removing him from the human relations project in Hyde Park. He relocates to Cleveland in 1971, hired to work on an avant-garde project coordinated by a newly formed community religious group, the Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry. With a staff of just four, including a secretary, the future is uncertain.

CHICAGO, 1969 - Hrbek protesting the Vietnam war.
PHOTO (left) CHICAGO, 1969 - Hrbek protesting the Vietnam war.

 

But the years of work have taken a toll on Hrbek's wife Gertrude and their three daughters and son, and the 20-year marriage disintegrates. Gertrude had courageously stood by Hrbek and had worked in a Chicago school to help defray their children's tuition costs. There were good times and fond family memories. But Hrbek, increasingly preoccupied by his work in the community and venerated by his followers, falters.

 

When the divorce becomes official, some Lutherans complain, saying that it is not right for a man of the cloth to bear the stigma of divorce. Hrbek immerses himself in his work, but their comments, and the pain of divorce, affect him deeply, and he comes to recognize that he must reflect on his experiences and become a better person.

 

"WHAT MOTIVATES THIS GUY?" Charles See mused, hoping to get a fix on Hrbek. It was 1973. See, who had recently joined the staff at Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry, had known a lot of white people who gave lip service to helping the poor, but Hrbek seemed different: "He seemed to genuinely be concerned about the plight of folks that he was working with. He would sit down and listen to what individuals had to say and then really went back to try to help folks solve problems."

 

The two, along with the late Richard Sering, the organization's inspirational leader, worked on an innovative program called Probation Friends, which provided an alternative to prison for convicted felons. They were placed on probation and worked in tandem with a community volunteer, who would offer social support. Joe Thornton, an early Probation Friends participant, worked with elderly residents, escorting them on walks and protecting them from thugs. He credits the program with helping him gain confidence in himself. Although community re-entry programs do not always work - the sociological literature on the topic is complex and multifaceted - they are generally regarded as constructive alternatives to more punitive approaches.

 

Yet three decades ago, the idea of community activists working with prisoners was novel and irked some. Around 1976, Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry staff co-sponsored a bail-bond ball at Franklin Castle in Ohio City to raise bail money for prisoners in the county jail. It was a merry event, with music, dancing, and much beer and wine, until the police came, 30 of them, with guns drawn. A couple of police officers grabbed Hrbek, twisted his arm behind his back, kicked him and hauled him into a police car. He was arrested and thrown into a cell, charged, along with several others, with disturbing the peace and serving liquor without a license. (The event's sponsors had procured a permit to serve beer and wine.) Hrbek and others in the cells belted out gospel hymns.

 

He was subsequently released and the charges were thrown out. Pressed to bring charges against the policemen, Hrbek demurred. He told friends, "I want to take those policemen out to lunch." And that is just what he did.

 

Hrbek found himself increasingly enamored of Ohio City. He liked its rough authenticity, its earnest attempt to transform itself into a unique multi-layered, multi-ethnic part of the city. "There was something about this area that was different," he reflects. "In a city that was divided by the river politically, racially and academically, it wasn't here. You had the world here, a diversity and hospitality." And so he made it his home.

 

In 1978 Hrbek married Stephanie Morrison. Hrbek had mentored Morrison's older sister Melanie, then a college student, in Chicago. Hrbek became friendly with Melanie's family, who were pastors in a Michigan church. He met her younger sister Stephanie, and in the late 1970s encountered Stephanie again while on vacation in Virginia. He and Stephanie hit it off, and in 1978, the recently divorced Hrbek married her. Hrbek pledged to himself that he would not make the mistakes he had made the first time around. He and Stephanie had two sons, and Hrbek worked hard to involve them in his religious and social protest activities, striving to keep himself in tune with the daily rhythm of family life.

 

There was a stability to his routine during this period. He could walk from his Ohio City home to the Lutheran Metro Ministry office. He enjoyed the quiet hospitality of the neighborhood. The intensity and chaos of Leopold House had given way to the urbane calm of a modest but artfully decorated house on West 31st Place.

 

By 1981, the advocate who bristled at the suggestion he was involved in anything less than systemic change had an office and a title and, to outsiders at least, had become that least radical member of contemporary society: a bureaucrat. Recognized for his skill in bringing different sides together, Hrbek was appointed Cuyahoga County Ombudsman. It happened serendipitously. The county commissioners, impressed by a Lutheran Metro Ministry nursing home ombudsman program, asked the ministry to explore models for creating a county ombudsman office. Hrbek played a key role in the two-year research project that culminated in the creation of a citizens ombudsman office for Cuyahoga County. He was subsequently selected to be the first one.

 

Hrbek found himself at the vortex of conflicts between East Ohio Gas management and community organizers who were concerned with the company's indifference to the plight of low-income customers who could not pay rising heating bills. He knew the issues well; a couple years before he had organized the protests.

Ohio City, 1983 - Wife Stephanie, son Seth and Hrbek at home.
PHOTO (right) Ohio City, 1983 - Wife Stephanie, son Seth and Hrbek at home.

 

Bob Varley, manager of consumer affairs at East Ohio in 1982, credits Hrbek with creating an environment in which both sides could understand each other's position. A series of reforms emerged from the discussions Hrbek coordinated, including the formation of a community advisory board and a series of assistance programs to help low-income customers pay their bills.

 

Another change also materialized, emblematic of an evolution in Hrbek's approach to social activism. He took up golf with a passion, as David Abbott, executive director of the George Gund Foundation, who worked with him in the 1980s, relates. The adolescent pugilist - Hrbek had boxed in high school - became a middle-aged linksman. He replaced the reflexive weapon of self-defense with the strategic precision of the chip shot.

 

In the early 1990s, the Virgil E. Brown Center was often seen as an austere glass-encased, unyielding artifice, Kafka's bureaucracy-ridden castle transplanted to 17th and Payne. The Cuyahoga County Department of Human Services would be an odd place for Hrbek to work, and he thought long and hard about whether he should accept the offer to become interim director of human services. The county commissioners had become familiar with Hrbek's high-profile role as ombudsman, and one of the commissioners surprised Hrbek by calling him at home and offering him the job. He would be working in "the belly of the beast," as he put it. Charles See, who had risen to become Metro Ministry's director of community re-entry, told him, "It's a travesty if you don't go. We have been struggling to get people in these positions who see the world the way we see it." Hrbek took the job.

 

He was put off at the outset by the punitive nature of the organizational culture. The department's emphasis on punishing the bad apples rather than rewarding the good ones, as he articulated it, was diametrically opposed to his own approach of focusing on people's assets. For starters, clients had no privacy. Case workers took personal information from clients on topics ranging from drug dependence to spousal abuse in a room where new applicants sat right next to them, filling out papers.

 

Soon after Hrbek became interim director, several case workers asked if they could meet with him clandestinely to explain this problem. They asked if they could restructure the space to give clients more privacy. Hrbek liked their plan. He said, "That's great, do it."

"We can't," one of the case workers replied. "We suggested this to our supervisor and our supervisor won't let us."

Hoping to instigate change, Hrbek walked over to the supervisor's office. "'You know," he said, "the workers have come to me and they make sense. Why don't we just go ahead and do this?"

 

The supervisor replied, "We can't. The coordinator won't let us. And once the coordinator makes up his mind, that's it."

Recognizing the intransigence of the culture, Hrbek took a page out of his mediation handbook. He arranged a meeting with the coordinator and told him, "I really am going to give you an opportunity to be a hero." Two days later the room was arranged exactly as the workers wanted it.

 

It was vintage Hrbek, notes David Reines, who got to know Hrbek when they worked together in the department of human services.

"He did things in a very non-threatening way, but you could tell that there was steel to him," Reines notes.

Hrbek today - Still instigating change.
PHOTO (left) Hrbek today - Still instigating change.

In some instances, Hrbek's approach caused him problems. When he worked in the human relations department, he became concerned that the county would lose over $1 million in federal grants because it was not managing workforce development programs properly. "I had to do something quickly," he recalls. "So I did something illegal."

 

Hrbek knew of a Cleveland-based company that specialized in program management. "Without putting out bids and without doing a request for a proposal, I just recruited this company and said, "Do it,' and they did it," he says, almost gleeful as he recalls the defiance. "The state wanted to nail me," Hrbek admitted, but by the time state officials discovered the problem, he said, the company had successfully managed the county's projects and everyone was happy.

Hrbek acknowledged that his action was not kosher and could have placed the county commissioners in a difficult position. More fundamentally, it exemplified the type of patronage he had opposed as interim human services director and might have criticized as a young activist.

 

"There's a streak of independence," Hrbek said. "It bodes well for me sometimes, but perhaps not so well other times."

After working in human services, Hrbek moved back to Lutheran Metro Ministry, where he helped to develop detailed procedures by which the ministry could coordinate the men's homeless shelter. His wife, Stephanie Morrison Hrbek, marvels over how much Hrbek loves the men there; it amazes her how he is able to transform a situation that others might find "crushing and devastating" into one that showcases triumph and hope.

 

Hrbek says he is drawn to the men at the shelter and is impressed by the resilience they display. He makes it a point to have lunch with the men at least once a week.

 

His two sons from the second marriage are grown now and live in Cleveland; the youngest just graduated from the Cleveland Institute of Art. The four children from his marriage with Gertrude are settled in their professions, each reflecting varying degrees of their parents' social activism philosophy. The celebrated Cleveland advocate has slowed down in recent years, but not much, dividing his time among the shelter, community re-entry work at Metro Ministry, and neighborhood development activities in Ohio City.

 

"What impels me," he says, "is this sense of participating in a little leaven, keeping alive this vision of right relationships and being part of a movement that in whatever small way, in the midst of so much brokenness and tragedy and injustice, values people."

 

Asked how he keeps from feeling discouraged, he turns the question around: "Who says I'm not discouraged? I get discouraged by disappointments like everyone else," he says. But Hrbek says his inspiration comes from two sources: people's refusal to surrender their spirit in the face of injustice, and a radical vision of Christianity.

 

"Jesus was a radical in the midst of his society. He rubbed shoulders with the outcasts. He talked of a community in which people are in respectful relationships, he gave expression to a counterculture. There have been people like that throughout the ages who have kept the dream alive, kept it bubbling. That's what the social justice movement is about, and I've been privileged to make a contribution in whatever small way I could."

 

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OHIO CITY CHIEF HIRED BY STARK

Thursday, June 28, 2007  from the West Side Sun News

By Ken Prendergast
West Side Sun News

The director of Ohio City Near West Development Corp. will leave at the end of the month to join Robert L. Stark Enterprises' ambitious downtown development efforts.

Friday will be Joe Mazzola's last day as the group's executive director. He headed up the community development corporation's staff for three years, and was director of two other CDCs.

Mazzola spent six years at the Flats Oxbow Association and three at the Friends of Shaker Square. He also worked for five years at EG&G Landscape Architects.

"It's been a great opportunity," he said. "I've been building on the legacy of many others who worked here."

In recent years, Ohio City has seen a flurry of construction and building renovation projects. West 25th Street, especially near the West Side Market, was rejuvenated with shops, taverns and housing, be it market-rate and low-income, or new construction and renovation. That mix of housing has flourished throughout the rest of Ohio City.

"There's some things that people won't see for a while," Mazzola said, referring to the Shoreway reconstruction as a boulevard, the Detroit-Superior Lofts and the One Charter Place condo developments. "We have quite a few developments going on."

Mazzola was hired by Stark as director of development. He be responsible for the coordination and oversight of various development projects, most prominent of which is Stark's $1 billion plans for mixed-use development in downtown's Warehouse District.

"His experience in and around downtown Cleveland will make him a great addition to our development team, particularly for our Warehouse District project," said Steve Rubin, Stark's chief operating officer.

"We're going to miss him from Ohio City Near West, but we're going to keep him downtown," Ward 13 Councilman Joe Cimperman said. He noted that a search is already underway for his permanent replacement.

"He's a pragmatist," Cimperman said of Mazzola. "He's built relationships over the long haul, worked on streetscapes and understands the big dreams of developers. The project of Bob Stark is so huge and awesome. I don't think I've had such a good vibe about the city since the (city's 1996) bicentennial."

Stark's first phase alone, to be built on 8 acres of surface parking in the Warehouse District, could include 1 million square feet of retail, 750,000 square feet of office space and 600 residential units.

Darryl Whitehead, Stark's director of marketing, said "it's going to be a while" before a formal announcement of the project can be made.

"The next step will be solidifying letters of intent" from retailers and office tenants, he said.

On June 18, Stark's offices and its 50 employees were moved downtown from its former headquarters in east-suburban Woodmere. The move followed a brisk, 14-day renovation of a 107-year-old, five-story office building at West 3rd Street and St. Clair Avenue. Stark acquired the building May 1 for $1.3 million.

Despite the delay in Stark making his big announcement, Cimperman said Stark has been actively pursuing the downtown project.

"I don't think Bob could be doing one more thing," Cimperman said. "We've got to support this guy. He's taking the hits and taking the risk."

© 2007 Sun Newspapers

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Fourth Annual Garden Tour

The Ohio City Gardeners' Fourth Annual Garden Tour will take place on Sunday, July 22, from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. This years tour will include eight urban gardens featuring diverse and rich environments such as a Caribbean Paradise, a Zen Spa, and even a Mediterranean Oasis! Tickets including the map of the self-guided walking tour will be available on tour day at the starting point of the tour, 5005 Franklin Boulevard, from 9:30 until 3:00 for $10 each. Convenient street parking is available for those who wish to drive to gardens or reach points of information by both foot and car. Homeowners welcome questions and comments about their gardens. Please see the attached postcard.

Ohio City Gardeners, a non-profit organization, promotes educational programs for its members, who also participate in philanthropic gardening endeavors to beautify Ohio City. For additional tour or membership information, please contact Anne Frank at 216.961.4333 or HFrank3883@aol.com. 

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ARTS & CULTURE
Energizing Detroit-Shoreway
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Steven Litt
Plain Dealer Architecture Critic
Matthew Wiederhold, economic development director of the Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization, had a nagging question about historic preservation on his mind.

To find the answer, he climbed a 20-foot ladder inside the long-vacant Capitol Theatre on Cleveland's West Side, aimed a flashlight at a 6-foot-high decorative plaster panel of a gazelle leaping through a forest, and started tapping on it gently with his fingertips.

His goal: to figure out how to get the fragile panel and several others like it off the walls so they could be restored as part of a $7 million makeover of the theater, scheduled to start in October.

"You know what? It just sounds really brittle; it seems really fragile," he said, speaking to a co-worker. "It's going to be critical to keep it upright, because if you tilt it, it will snap."

Wiederhold is part of a team engaged in the latest effort to revitalize the neighborhood. Like laboratory scientists conducting a large-scale urban experiment, they're getting ready to strengthen a vital catalyst in the mix: the arts.

The arts have been an important part of Detroit-Shoreway ever since Cleveland lawyer and arts leader James Levin founded Cleveland Public Theatre in 1983 at 6415 Detroit Ave., and established another performance venue and an art gallery nearby when he bought the former St. Mary's Church and its associated parish hall.

But now, after decades of urban husbandry in housing and retail, the district is about to gain critical mass.

The rejuvenation of the Capitol Theatre is part of a $24 million project to create a cluster of theaters, galleries, bars and coffee shops around Gordon Square Arcade, the block-long building at Detroit Avenue and West 65th Street, which anchors the neighborhood.

Originally built inside the Gordon Square building as a silent-movie theater in 1921, the Capitol will become a three-screen multiplex devoted to independent films operated by Jonathan Forman, who also operates the Cedar Lee Theatre and Shaker Square Cinemas.

When it's done in 2008, the Capitol will become the second major cultural venue in the neighborhood after Cleveland Public Theatre, located a few doors east on Detroit Avenue.

Then, in 2011, construction should be completed on a new $5 million building designed by Cleveland architect Richard Fleischman for the Near West Theatre on West 67th Street, just south of Detroit. That theater, now 30 years old, will move 30 blocks west from its present home in Saint Patrick's Club Room.

In the meantime, Detroit Shoreway will help raise $7 million to renovate Cleveland Public Theatre and to add air conditioning.

Together, the three theaters will anchor an already burgeoning collection of galleries, plus the growing cluster of restaurants lining Detroit Avenue east and west of Gordon Square. Additionally, starting this fall, Detroit Shoreway will kick off a $3.3 million streetscape project along Detroit Avenue.

Designed by City Architecture of Cleveland, the project calls for widening sidewalks, narrowing traffic lanes and planting new trees. The intersection of Detroit Avenue and West 65th Street will be resurfaced with decorative paving in red and yellow tiles designed by Cleveland artist Suzie Frazier Mueller to resemble a vortex generated from the letters "G" and "S."

Advocates hope that within a few years, the Gordon Square district will lure diners and movie- and theatergoers from across the region.

"This is absolutely a regional thing," said Jeffrey Ramsey, executive director of the nonprofit Detroit Shoreway organization. Speaking of the Capitol, he said, "This theater is going to be the sexy economic-development engine for the entire district."

Ramsey described the current plan as a fulfillment of Levin's vision at Cleveland Public Theatre.

"He founded the theater in this neighborhood at a time when not too many people were thinking about Gordon Square as a destination for arts and culture," Ramsey said.

The emphasis on the arts in Detroit-Shoreway could be dismissed as a fad. Collinwood, another Cleveland neighborhood, is creating an arts district. Tremont and Little Italy already host gallery walks. Every year, artists with studios in the St. Clair-Superior neighborhood offer tours. If art districts pop up everywhere, it raises a question whether there's enough good art and theater to go around, much less to lift every city neighborhood out of decline.

But Gordon Square has a scale and financial heft that goes beyond neighborhood developments elsewhere. It also has the potential to bolster $300 million in surrounding real estate development, including Battery Park, a $100 million, 13-acre residential project aimed at building more than 320 apartments on the site of a former Eveready plant overlooking Lake Erie.

Shoreway improvements

will benefit neighborhood

On top of all that, the Ohio Department of Transportation's plans for a $50 million transformation of the West Shoreway promises to reconnect Detroit-Shoreway to Edgewater Park and the Lake Erie shoreline.

Built in the 1950s as a high-speed thoroughfare, the Shoreway sliced across the West Side and severed neighborhoods from the water. ODOT is redesigning the three-mile road as a 35 mph boulevard with traffic lights and intersections connected to new north-south roads at West 73rd, 54th and 45th streets.

Tom Bier, executive-in-residence at Cleveland State University's Center for Housing Research & Policy, thinks Detroit-Shoreway has all the ingredients for success.

"It's easy to get to, it's clear where it is, and I think its proximity to the Shoreway and the lake gives it a special attractiveness."

Furthermore, he said the Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization and its offshoot - the Gordon Square Arts District - are building on a solid record of success.

"They've demonstrated that they produce, but it didn't happen overnight. They've grown their reputation, and I think now the delight of it is that these other sparks are really starting to flame up with the arts district."

In many ways, Detroit-Shoreway is a quintessential Cleveland neighborhood. Originally built to house workers in local factories and warehouses, the area's streets are lined with modest wood-frame houses on lots with 35- and 40-foot frontages.

The area's population plunged after factories started closing in the 1970s, but has rebounded within recent years as new immigrants and young professionals arrived, drawn by affordable housing and proximity to downtown and the lake. Housing values are rising substantially. In the past three years, Ramsey said, Detroit-Shoreway has had 300 housing starts, more than any other city neighborhood.

Gordon Square, built in 1920, was conceived as a neighborhood commercial hub, with storefronts on the ground level framing a farmers market and a silent-movie theater, and with apartments on the second and third floors.

The interior of the Capitol Theatre, like other silent-movie palaces, was designed like a wedding cake turned inside out. Its delicate plasterwork evokes an 18th-century fantasy on ancient Roman architecture with fluted pilasters, garlands of flowers and Wedgwood-style cameos originally painted in pale blue, cream and lavender.

Today, however, the cake icing is literally melting off the ceiling after decades of untended leaks, which have revealed gaping black holes of rotting plaster and rusting metal reinforcing bars.

But Wiederhold said that the restoration, to be led by the Cleveland architecture firm of Westlake Reed Leskosky, will bring all the ornamentation back to life, while dividing the theater into three separate screening areas ranging from 100 to 400 seats.

When it opens, the theater will certainly look the part of an artistic magnet. The question is whether it will attract enough energy to thrust Detroit-Shoreway into a new era of prosperity.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

slitt@plaind.com, 216-999-4136

© 2007 The Plain Dealer
© 2007 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.
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[Sun logo -- The Sun comes out on Thursday]

Condos to change Detroit
Lofts being planned for corner of West 28th Street

By Ken Prendergast

Staff Writer, West SideSun News

June 21, 2007

It's hard to keep an attractive development site down.

Developer Tom Gillespie of TEG Properties Inc. announced he is seeking to build a seven-story, 50-unit condominium building called Detroit-Superior Lofts on the southwest corner of West 28th Street and Detroit Avenue.

The site is next to another development by Gillespie - the former Painters Union building that is getting converted into market-rate apartments. There are also several other apartment conversions nearby, plus new nightclubs and restaurants. The site is just across the Detroit-Superior Veterans Memorial Bridge from downtown.

"This project takes advantage of the momentum created by other condo development in both downtown and Ohio City," Gillespie said in a written statement. He said the mid-rise condo building would have good views of downtown and the lake.

Sales are being handled by Progressive Urban Real Estate. Construction on the project will begin when pre-sales reach a certain point, typically 40 percent to 60 percent of a project's proposed housing units. However, Gillespie's goal is to open the Detroit-Superior Lofts in late 2008 or early 2009.

Proposed earlier for the same site was a smaller, five-story building that was marketed as gay-friendly housing. A Place for Us Development Inc. reportedly could not make the project work financially and will seek another location.

Lee Chilcote, PURE's new-construction project manager, said condos at the Detroit-Superior Lofts will be available in one- and two-bedroom loft configurations, as well as two-story townhouse units with first-floor parking. Sale prices range from about $150,000 for the one-bedroom units to above $400,000 for the townhouses, he said.

© 2007 Sun Newspapers
Go to The Sun News www.sunnews.com  home page

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Cottage Living Magazine: Cottage Community

 Find the story at: http://www.cottageliving.com/cottage/travel/article/0,21135,1632876,00.html

Our Top 10 Cottage Communities for 2007

Each year we look for neighborhoods we’d like to call home. Our 2007 favorites have charming cottages, a sense of community, and an eye on the future.


Ohio City Cleveland, Ohio

This comeback story started locally, fueled by creative and committed newcomers.

Community Profile
Location: less than a mile from downtown Cleveland
Number of homes: 4,000 total households
What $300,000 will buy you: a fully renovated cottage (1,700 square feet or so) with $100K left over
For more info: www.ocnw.org

Just over the Cuyahoga river from downtown Cleveland, this historic urban neighborhood fell into nearly irreversible chaos beginning in the 1960s. In the late ’70s, recognizing the gracious street layout and fine 19th-century homes—from brick worker cottages to porch-fronted Victorians—urban pioneers traveled against the suburban-bound current to land here and work shoulder-to-shoulder with existing residents to turn things around.

Bernie Thiel arrived with the second wave of pioneers in the late 1980s, fixing up a house with a childhood friend. Now Bernie lives with wife Angela Hummel in a different home, an 1860s clapboard vernacular the couple restored. You can hear the pride and pleasure in his voice.

"Ohio City is very friendly. It's a real talking-over-the-fence community," he says. And one that’s more active than ever. "I think at any given time you can find either a party or a meeting of some sort in the neighborhood."

Lessons from Ohio City
If crime is a problem, organize a block watch program. The residents of Ohio City maintain a Yahoo! site where they post information about vandalism, robberies, and other problems almost as soon as they occur. Police and city officials are more likely to respond to block watch groups than individuals.

Copyright © 2007 Cottage Living

Executive Fellowship shifts home to Leadership Center
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
The Cleveland Executive Fellowship program, aimed at developing civic leaders, is on the move - locally and abroad.
On Friday, the program officially shifts from its home in the Cleveland Foundation offices to the Cleveland Leadership Center. The foundation, which created the fellowship in 2004 with the intention of spinning it off, will continue to provide financial support.
Yemi Akande, who will remain as fellowship program manager after the shift, said the move makes sense because the organizations' missions are so closely aligned.

The Leadership Center is the umbrella group for Leadership Cleveland and Cleveland Bridge Builders, both of which focus on leadership development; (i)Cleveland, which promotes internships to keep college graduates in Northeast Ohio; and Look Up to Cleveland, which promotes leadership among high schoolers.

Not too long after the executive fellowship program settles into the new digs, the fellows will be on the road again - this time to China.
The eight fellows developed the trip to gain a global perspective on leadership and economic development, a better understanding of how cultural differences can affect doing business, and the chance to make contacts that could allow Northeast Ohio to tap into China's economic growth, Akande said.

Forest City and General Electric Co. have made donations to help pay for the two-week trip, she said, but the fellows also are raising money and seeking in-kind donations or contacts. More information is available by calling Hannah Fritzman, the fellowship program's coordina tor, at 216-685-2010.

Leadership, innovation awards:
The Mandel Center for Nonprofit Organizations at Case Western Reserve University is honoring Steven Raichilson, executive director of the Menorah Park Center for Senior Living, and Entrepreneurs for Sustainability.  The center's leadership award, which Raichilson will receive, is for sustained excellence in nonprofit management. He has been Menorah Park's executive director for more than 20 years.

Entrepreneurs for Sustainability will receive the innovation award, recognizing organizations that address complex social problems through collaboration. The network is committed to creating a sustainable, environmentally friendly economy in Northeast Ohio.

Name change honors donor:
In recognition of a $13.5 million pledge from the Mandel Foundation earlier this year, the Jewish Community Center of Cleveland now carries that family's name.

The money is earmarked for renovations and expansion at what this month formally became the Mandel Jewish Community Center. Construction at the Beachwood facility is likely to start next year.  Brothers Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel established their foundation in 1953.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: bgalbincea@plaind.com , 216-999-4185
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Restoring Prosperity
The State Role in Revitalizing America's Older Industrial Cities

by Jennifer S. Vey
May 2007
[This is from the Brookings Institute.  For access to the full report, please go to: http://www.brook.edu/metro/pubs/20070520_oic.htm ]

With over 16 million people and nearly 8.6 million jobs, America's older industrial cities remain a vital-if undervalued-part of the economy, particularly in states where they are heavily concentrated, such as Ohio and Pennsylvania. They also have a range of other physical, economic, and cultural assets that, if fully leveraged, can serve as a platform for their renewal.

Across the country, cities today are becoming more attractive to certain segments of society. Meanwhile, economic trends-globalization, the demand for educated workers, the increasing role of universities-are providing cities with an unprecedented chance to capitalize upon their economic advantages and regain their competitive edge.

Many cities have exploited these assets to their advantage; the moment is ripe for older industrial cities to follow suit. But to do so, these cities need thoughtful and broad-based approaches to foster prosperity.

"Restoring Prosperity" aims to mobilize governors and legislative leaders, as well as local constituencies, behind an asset-oriented agenda for reinvigorating the market in the nation's older industrial cities. The report begins with identifications and descriptions of these cities-and the economic, demographic, and policy "drivers" behind their current condition-then makes a case for why the moment is ripe for advancing urban reform, and offers a five-part agenda and organizing plan to achieve it.

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Church's general store: market with a mission
Malachi Mart offers bargains while raising money
Monday, April 16, 2007
Michael O'Malley
Plain Dealer Reporter

This article can be found online at: http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/117671227730590.xml&coll=2

At Malachi Mart, a small general store in an old Flats warehouse, you can buy a white, frilly First Communion dress for only $8. Or a box of Kix for 50 cents. Animal crackers are a quarter.

The mart is a funny bazaar of stuff - lamp shades, Slim Jims, dog food and hair spray - all stacked and racked at rock-bottom prices. No shiny, wide aisles. No surround-sound soft rock. No beeping bar-code readers.

It's just a one-register operation, in a hard-to-find spot, yet people from all over Cuyahoga County find their way for the deals.

"We have the businessman in the $800 suit and the homeless guy off the street," said cashier Lee Oglesby.

Malachi Mart is a nonprofit store in a century-old brick building on Washington Avenue, just down the hill from St. Malachi Catholic Church on Cleveland's near West Side. Its basic mission is to serve low-income people and raise money for the Malachi Center, a social service agency affiliated with the church.

Eighty percent of the store's stock is donated by big companies such as Drug Mart, Giant Eagle, American Greetings and Pat Catan's.

The mart, which has little curb appeal, opened 17 years ago in this hillside section of the industrial Flats. The neighborhood is a mix of machine shops, saloons and poor people living under bridges or in nearby public housing projects.

But a recent building boom of upscale apartments and condominiums around the ruins of an old viaduct has drawn yuppies and well-to-do baby boomers to the area.

In the face of fatter wallets, Malachi Mart has begun expanding. In January, the mart rented a warehouse next door for storage space, which will allow for expansion of its retail area.

"We want to appeal to a broader market," said store manager Roger Deike. "We want these newcomers to be our customers as well."

The mart keeps a list of 500 preferred customers, who get advance notice about special sales. But some regulars come nearly every day. "They say it's like coming to a treasure hunt," said Oglesby.

Every two weeks, Drug Mart unloads 10 skids, stacked 6 feet high with donated stuff. The drug chain recently donated 20,000 items of name-brand makeup - eyeliner, lip gloss and nail polish.

"It's quite a laborious process, sorting through all this stuff, box by box, piece by piece," Deike said.

Much of the work is done by volunteers and young people working through job-training programs. Only four people are on the payroll. The mart last year turned over $17,000 to the Malachi Center.

"We had a lady who came in here the other day and spent $89 on foot scrub, makeup and school supplies," said Deike. "Another woman recently spent $139, mostly on food items."

Regular customers Tom and Melody Brennan of Lakewood stop in about once a week. "You never know what you're going to find," said Melody Brennan, running her hand over a fluffy bath mat. "Sometimes you see deals on perfume. I wear Halston and I found some Halston here for $5. In other stores, it's like $40."

Another regular is Pam Hodge, who uses the mart as sort of a wholesale supplier for her street-vending operation. She once bought a case of Cleveland Browns caps and resold them - at a markup - outside Cleveland Browns Stadium. Last week, it was vases for her upcoming Mother's Day sale at a gas station at West 14th Street and Clark Avenue.

"I come here all the time," she said. "I get everything I need."

On a recent day, customer Bonnie Gridley clutched a $10 bill and watched the cash register as Deike rang up her toys and school supplies. "I can't go over $10," she said as the till hit $8.45. Seeing she wasn't going to make it, Deike said, "I'll tell you what.

"We'll magically ring it up at $10 and call the rest part of the deal."

Said Gridley, handing over the $10: "Works for me."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

momalley@plaind.com, 216-999-4893
© 2007 The Plain Dealer
© 2007 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.

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Reach for a rebound
Architect hoping revitalizion of Near West Side extends to area where he's purchased five buildings

[For the full article, go to: http://www.crainscleveland.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070312/REG/70309018&SearchID=73276180387624 ]

By STAN BULLARD

6:00 am, March 12, 2007

Architect David Ellison was upset that demolition crews might raze a boarded-up, two-story brick commercial building erected sometime in the 1860s on the southwest corner of Lorain Avenue and West 41st Street.

So, the free-spirited operator of D.H. Ellison Co., an architectural firm specializing in providing historic detailing for new mansions, recently shelled out $110,000 to buy the building and four desolate, beat-up wooden frame buildings that came with it.

Mr. Ellison is betting on a section of Lorain that has yet to see a rebound that other parts of the lengthy street are experiencing. However, as Joe Mazzola, executive director of the nonprofit Ohio City Near West Development Corp., rides west past West 32nd Street on Lorain, he says, “This is next.”

Mr. Ellison plans to refurbish the main building’s architectural details, from arched windows to tooth-like bricks next to the roof, to use part of it for the office of his four-person firm, which now is in a storefront at 6403 Detroit Ave. next to Cleveland Public Theater.

“I want to walk to work,” Mr. Ellison said, as the site is just blocks from his Carroll Avenue home in Cleveland’s Ohio City neighborhood.

Such a deal is striking for Lorain west of West 32nd Street. In his memoir “Hollywood Animal,” screenwriter Joe Eszterhas, who grew up in the neighborhood, described the buildings Mr. Ellison just bought as being in a “strudel ghetto” of Hungarian residents. The gritty, tough street has gone downhill since.

However, the area north of Lorain in Ohio City now is home to astonishing restored Victorian homes and a plethora of tony townhomes. South of Lorain, the Ohio City Townhomes a few years ago transformed part of West 41st Street near Mr. Ellison’s buildings.

In between, Lorain Avenue itself west of West 32nd Street remains desolate. There are stretches of boarded-up buildings and bumper-to-bumper used car lots. An occasional antique store or hardy small business punctuates some blocks.


Urban renewal

Mr. Ellison’s purchase of the buildings from Ohio City Near West indicates a change could be afoot. So, too, Mr. Mazzola said, do rumors about speculative purchases of buildings not yet visible in the public record plus plans for a nearly $2 million townhouse complex on the north side of Lorain near West 47th Street. Most of all, there’s the benefit of two recent projects in the area.

One is the Cleveland Environmental Center, a $2 million conversion of the landmark former Cleveland Trust bank building at 3500 Lorain as offices for multiple “green” nonprofits. Defining the other end of that segment of the street is Urban Community School’s new $12 million campus at 4909 Lorain.

Mr. Ellison’s project sits in the middle. Ironically, Mr. Ellison’s plans call for demolishing the four frame buildings surrounding the brick building he wants to save.

Demolishing the frame buildings will provide room for parking and landscaping and give prominence to the surviving building, Mr. Ellison said. The Ohio City Near West Design Review Board and the Cleveland City Design Review Board have approved Mr. Ellison’s plans.

Councilman Joe Santiago, whose Ward 14 includes Mr. Ellison’s project, said he supports Mr. Ellison’s intentions. He notes five prior plans to redo the corner fell through.

“That is known as a highly drug-infested area,” Mr. Santiago said. He said he hopes the new investment, plans to convert West 41st and West 44th streets to two-way streets from one-way streets, and attention to the area by Ohio City Near West’s security coordinator and police can help remake lower Lorain.

Mr. Ellison estimates he needs to spend about $500,000 for his project. He said he hopes to land tenants for the first-floor storefront and part of the 2,100-square-foot second floor, or simply gain more word-of-mouth design work, to help swing financing.

If he cannot, Mr. Ellison vowed to finance the work by selling his house and moving into a loft on the second floor next to his proposed office.


Sprucing up the corridor

Another breakaway project for the street that has won local design review and city approvals is Courtyard Homes, a nine-townhouse development at West 47th Street and Lorain by Robert T. Boothe Co., a shopping center development consultant and custom home builder in Gates Mills.

Robert Boothe, president of the namesake firm, said he hopes to build a model home in late spring or early summer for a model. His plans call for nine, three-bedroom brownstones each costing upwards of $185,000. He currently is negotiating for financing.

“It’s raw, but there are successful housing projects nearby,” Mr. Boothe said. “It’s not a 100-unit project, but it will mean something for the Lorain corridor.”

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Interesting Article In Light Of Cleveland's Situation:

My View: T. Garrott Benjamin Jr.
No world-class city should have blood on its streets

To read this article, go to: http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070109/OPINION01/701090326/1031

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Agencies need cash to keep getting IDs for the poor
Friday, January 19, 2007
Diane Suchetka
Plain Dealer Reporter
[To view this article on the web, go to: http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/116920775849660.xml&coll=2 ]

They show up at churches, soup kitchens, homeless shelters - hundreds of people desperately in need of a little something to help them get back on their feet.

They're not looking for money or food.

They want an ID.

For the past few years, a small group of nonprofit agencies has been helping the down-and-out of Cleveland get birth certificates and state identification cards so they can get on with their lives. The IDs have cost those agencies more than $23,000 since June.

Now, the money is running out.

That means many people will go without identification, the first tug for those trying to pull themselves up by their bootstraps.

"It's almost impossible to function without identification," says Gerald Skoch, executive director of the West Side Catholic Center, a nonprofit agency that has been helping people obtain IDs for years.

"You can't register your kids in school. You can't qualify for much of any government benefit. You can't go get food stamps. You can't vote. You can't open a bank account. You certainly can't get a job. You can't even get into some buildings downtown without producing it."

Skoch's agency - along with a handful of others - has applied for a grant to help pay for the identification because the $23,000 has run out.

In the meantime, those groups hope private donations will tide them over. Those who need the IDs - women who've run from domestic violence, teenagers who've aged out of foster care, prisoners returning home, the homeless and others - are counting on them.

Until help arrives, at least some of them will be turned away.

"Unfortunately, that just stops a person's life in its tracks," says Eileen Kelly, outreach minister at St. Colman Catholic Church on Cleveland's West Side, another organization that helps. "It really does paralyze people.

"A woman applied a couple of weeks ago for her birth certificate because she was trying to get into treatment for alcohol abuse and they require an ID, so she had to wait to get into treatment."

Money isn't the only problem.

Paperwork and figuring out the different requirements for different cities and states takes up hundreds of volunteer hours a year that could be used in other ways.

The worst of it is the Catch-22 people encounter in so many places: You can't get a state ID card or driver's license without a birth certificate, but you need an ID to get your birth certificate.

Agencies have worked around that in Cleveland by sending volunteers into City Hall - an ID is required to enter - to pick up birth certificates.

"It's just such a morass of bureaucracy. It makes us crazy," Kelly says.

Her toughest case was a legal Nicaraguan immigrant who needed identification to collect the Social Security retirement he was entitled to after 30 years in this country.

"It took two years," Kelly says.

It's why agencies helping with the problem - they include Care Alliance, Community Women's Shelter, the Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry's 2100 Lakeside Men's Shelter and the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless - are hoping for money to hire someone to help process the requests.

One employee, instead of several volunteers, could help streamline the process, sort through various state rules and lobby for government agencies to help people get IDs required for government benefits.

Those working on a solution realize identity theft and 9/11 have heightened the problem, and they understand the need for greater security.

But, they say, those concerns shouldn't be making life so hard for people struggling to survive.

Certainly, they say, there's a way for local organizations, state agencies and others to work together on a systemwide solution.

"This has got to be a national problem," Skoch says. "There's nothing unique about this to our community. And it's doubly frustrating because you know there's a way to deal with this."

Kelly agrees.

"People deserve to have access to life," she says. "This is just a little thing. It should be easy."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

dsuchetk@plaind.com, 216-999-4987


© 2007 The Plain Dealer© 2007 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.

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To read an excellent article on the current state of initiatives in Cleveland to reduce homelessness from The Free Times, click HERE or go to http://www.freetimes.com/story/4535.
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2007 Ohio City Home Tour Dates Set

Weekend in Ohio City is one of the most popular events in Cleveland, as the historic west side neighborhood unrolls the welcome mat for its annual spring tradition. The weekend kicks off with the 14th annual Evening in Ohio City progressive food and wine tasting from 6:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. on May 19, followed by the 19th annual Ohio City Home Tour from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on May 20.

Evening in Ohio City, which sells out weeks in advance, features progressive food and wine tasting—catered by the best neighborhood restaurants—in six unique homes in the neighborhood, while the Ohio City Home Tour includes eight to 10 additional homes ranging from new construction to historic renovations.

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Murals with a mission
Monday, January 08, 2007

From The Cleveland Plain Dealer

Go to:  http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/stories/index.ssf?/base/news/116824907139720.xml&coll=2


On Sunday, March 4, Katherine Chilcote will see the sixth mural of her career be mounted on a wall in Fairmount Presbyterian Church in Cleveland Heights.

Her murals are inspired by people she meets and the stories they share. She converts their colorful words into her colorful paintings. Her hands serve as translator, turning their stories into art. About 200 families contributed stories for a 40-foot-long mural at West 25th Street.

"I envision public murals creating sanctuaries in places that are otherwise neglected," she said.

Chilcote is the founder of the year-old Building Bridges Mural Program, under the umbrella of West Side Ecumenical Ministries. She one day hopes to step out alone as a nonprofit.

"I hope my murals become dialogues between faith communities," she said.

Chilcote's studio is a house on St. Claire Avenue near East 66th Street. From the outside, its barred windows and locked doors give no hint to passers-by of the artist hard at work. Inside, strips of track lighting mounted on walls and resting on the floor illuminate her work space. A space heater provides warmth. Twisted, squashed, half-used tubes of oil paint are piled on a table.

She moves comfortably around her work space, painting for a bit, then briefly stepping back to assess her brush strokes. She steps in again to add some shadow detail to a boy's arm, then steps back again for a check. She does this until she is satisfied.

She then climbs onto a small wooden chair to bring life to sunbeams and gulls high on the mural.


© 2007 The Plain Dealer© 2007 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.

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Neighborhood News Archives ~ 2006

 

'Birthdate' of Jan. 1 bonds African refugees

From the Friday, December 29, 2006 Cleveland Plain Dealer
Robert L. Smith
Plain Dealer Reporter

Salvator Kagoma and his wife, Helena Ntihabose, left behind more than birth certificates when they fled Burundi.

In the madness of civil war, they lost four children, including two boys who were shot while walking home from school.

So swift was the family's flight, they packed nothing, and carried only babies.

Eleven years later, in a refugee camp in Tanzania, a U.N. resettlement officer told the couple that America would take them but that the U.S. government ex- pected an official birth date.

Someone typed Jan. 1 beside their names, and Salvator and Helena joined a tragic and grateful club.

On Saturday, the couple and their six children will gather with about 200 other refugees, mostly Africans, to celebrate the New Year and one thing more - a birthday weighted with meaning.

If you're an African immigrant and your birthday is Jan. 1, other Africans know you almost certainly experienced a refugee's odyssey.

You have losses to grieve and a new life to pursue. And you found some peace in Northeast Ohio.

"We thank God that he brought us here from Africa, because we had no place to go," Salvator Kagoma, 59, said through his 17-year-old daughter, Esperance.

The birth date, so casually assigned, came to connect him to people much like himself in a world he never imagined. It came to be something to celebrate.

Among the professionals and volunteers who help to acclimate refugees to Cleveland, the import of Jan. 1 dawned over time.

The West Side United Church of Christ hosted the first New Year's celebration last year for a refugee community growing on Cleveland's near West Side. Organizers decided to make it a birthday party, too, hoping to unite a disparate group.

The Cleveland Catholic Diocese has helped to resettle about 700 refugees from Africa, Afghanistan and Russia in the last four years. The Africans, the largest group, hail from several different nations, cultures and language groups.

Jan. 1 soon emerged as their common denominator.

Some of the refugees came from places where record keeping was lax or where things like exact birth dates are not important. Others lost everything when their village burned, or they were born in flight.

"I haven't come across too many refugees who have their birth certificates," said Amanda Cannon, program director of the church's new Refugee Family Center.

Her previous job with Migration and Refugee Services of Catholic Charities had clued her in to a reality of becoming American. Everyone needs a starting point.

"If you don't have the date of birth, Jan. 1 is the default," said Leslie Phillips, a spokeswoman for the U.S. State Department, which approves refugees for admission.

Once assigned, a made-up birth date is hard to change. It goes on your driver's license and medical records. It's a date that myriad forms demand.

And so the African immigrant community has come to accept the designation as something both humorous and important, a bit perplexing, very American.

"Other people say, 'Wow, how come all of you have the same birthday?' " laughed Ayan Mohamud, a Somali from Kenya, who will turn 25 on Jan. 1. "For the refugees, it's no big deal. They know the reality."

The first New Year's birthday party drew more than 100 people. Word has spread, and organizers expect double the crowd this year.

Salvator and Helena plan to bring their six children, including Esperance, who was raised in refugee camps and is now an honors student at Lincoln West High School.

The teenager knows and uses her real birth date, but she says the birthday assigned to her parents carries more meaning.

Jan. 1 meant they were going to be safe. They were going home.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

rsmith@plaind.com , 216-999-4024


© 2006 The Plain Dealer© 2006 www.cleveland.com  All Rights Reserved.

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New, redone theaters to anchor Gordon Square Arts District
From the Friday, December 29, 2006 The Palin Dealer
Joe Guillen

Plain Dealer Reporter
 

From the outside, the old Capitol Theatre on West 65th Street is practically invisible.

The theater's anonymous set of green doors, boarded-up ticket booth and archway lined with empty light bulb fixtures easily are hidden among the surrounding storefronts in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood.

But beyond its nondescript exterior, the Capitol Theatre is a cornerstone of an ambitious plan to revive the once-struggling neighborhood with a new arts and commercial project, called the Gordon Square Arts District.

It will become the Capitol Movie Theatre and screen independent and art films. Renovations are to be finished in early 2008.

Labeled the West Side's version of the Cedar Lee Theatre in Cleveland Heights, the Capitol is among a trio of theaters that will anchor the venture, which is on a half-mile stretch of Detroit Avenue, from West 58th Street to West 73rd Street.

The Gordon Square Arts District can become as identifiable as New York's Greenwich Village or Washington's Dupont Circle, boasts the leadership team behind the project.

Cleveland Councilman Matthew Zone, whose ward includes the district, said it is the neighborhood's "single most important economic development project" in nearly 90 years, since the Gordon Square Arcade was built.

"I don't believe there is a more catalytic project going on than the arts district," he said.

A variety of shops, restaurants and art galleries will complement the core of theaters. With the district's proximity to downtown and decades-old buildings, Zone compared it to an authentic version of Westlake's Crocker Park.

The community's face lift is already under way, with an art gallery in place and a coffee shop and an Irish pub set to open.

"We have a real identity; it's not a place that's created," Zone said.

Plans for the Gordon Square Arts District also call for the Cleveland Public Theatre to be renovated, construction of a new building for the Near West Theatre and a new Detroit Avenue streetscape.

Cleveland Public Theatre founding Director James Levin said he envisioned such an intersection of culture and commerce when he chose the site of the theater on Detroit Avenue more than 20 years ago.

"Now it feels, after all these years, the Gordon Square Arts District is really going to happen," said Levin, who also is co-founder and executive director of Ingenuity, Cleveland's festival of art and technology.

The plan gained momentum, Levin said, when the Near West Theatre decided to relocate to the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood. The new location for the theater will be on West 67th Street, within walking distance of the two other theaters.

The Near West Theatre - now in a cramped space at St. Patrick's Club Building in Ohio City - uses theater to build awareness and self-esteem in young people, Executive Director Stephanie Morrison-Hrbek said.

Construction of the new Near West Theatre hasn't started, but the goal is to open the 300-seat facility in 2010.

The entire Gordon Square Arts District project carries a price tag of around $20 million. Three organizations - Cleveland Public Theatre, Near West Theatre and the Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization - are uniting to drive a fund-raising campaign.

"Competition in Cleveland for philanthropic dollars is tough," said Joy Roller, director of the Gordon Square Arts District committee.

Some of the money for the project is on the cusp of being secured, or is already in the bank.

Restoration of the Capitol Movie Theatre, owned by the Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization, will cost $6 million. A "prominent" Cleveland bank is in negotiations to provide most of the money in exchange for tax benefits, said Jeffrey Ramsey, executive director of the organization.

The new Detroit Avenue streetscape will cost about $3 million, which is in the coffer. Improvements include a narrower street, wider sidewalks and buried utility wires. Construction will begin next summer.

Exact costs to restore Cleveland Public Theatre and build a new Near West Theatre aren't yet nailed down.

Zone, Ramsey and other stakeholders said the Gordon Square Arts District is a can't-miss venture, pointing out the public and private investment in the neighborhood. Examples include:

Battery Park is a $100 million housing development under construction at the former Eveready Battery Plant site. The development will include more than 300 housing units with prices starting at about $170,000.

City and state officials are drawing up final designs for a $50 million to $70 million project that will convert the West Shoreway (Ohio 2) into a 35-mph boulevard by 2011, providing residents better access to Lake Erie and sparking interest from residential and commercial developers.

The city is also chipping in $500,000 toward the Detroit Avenue streetscape improvements, Zone said.

Despite what appears to be a widespread, concerted effort to reinvigorate the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood, a reputation for drugs and crime that developed decades ago lingers.

In August, a string of five homicides in a week's time shook the neighborhood. Among the victims were two artists shot by a neighbor in their condominium building at the corner of Detroit Avenue and West 75th Street.

Community leaders said the violence is not typical of the neighborhood, nor did it ding the confidence of investors. "That was something very freaky," Ramsey said.

Zone recalled how the community banded together during the turmoil. More than 300 people gathered for a peace vigil to remember the victims.

While striving to erase any indications the area is unsafe, community leaders are adamant about maintaining other aspects of the neighborhood.

A priority of the Gordon Square Arts District steering committee is to maintain the neighborhood's economic and racial diversity and preserve its affordable housing options.

The Gordon Square Homes project is one of the Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization's affordable housing programs. It will provide 85 housing units, some of which already are rented by artists in a building adjacent to the site for the Near West Theatre.

"What we believe we're doing here is the new American neighborhood," Ramsey said.

Buzz about the project is beginning to spread.

Nate Coffman, executive director of the Home Builders Association of Greater Cleveland, has lived in the neighborhood for about seven years. He said the new Capitol Movie Theatre is "going to be immense."

"I think it's one of the hottest neighborhoods for new development and rehabilitation in the city," he said.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

jguillen@plaind.com, 216-999-4675


© 2006 The Plain Dealer© 2006 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved.

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Cleveland Mediation Center celebrates 25th Anniversary

From The Plain Press

On Thursday November 16th, Cleveland Mediation Center (CMC) held a 25th Anniversary celebration at Massimo da Milano on W. 25th and Detroit Avenue. Originally called the Cleveland Youth Mediation Program (CYMP), the organization was founded in 1981. CYMP was modeled after a program from Scotland first introduced to the neighborhood by a worker at the West Side Community House. Some of the early board members took a trip to Scotland to see the program first hand.

In 1982 CYMP trained its first mediation class. In 1985, peer mediation programs and family school mediations began in Cleveland schools. In 1986 CYMP became a United Way member.

In 1990 community cases increased beyond youth cases. The organization began to mediate some larger neighborhood wide disputes such as the proposed expansion of St. Herman’s facility to include a dining hall and the merger of Near West Housing and Ohio City Redevelopment Association to form Ohio City Near West Development Corporation.

In 1992 Cleveland Youth Mediation Program changed its name to Cleveland Mediation Center to reflect its growing community work. In 1998 the center received funding from the Office of Homeless Services to help mediate evictions cases between landlords and tenants.

Today Cleveland Mediation Center offers a wide variety of mediation services including couples mediation, divorce mediation, training in conflict resolution and mediation skills, group facilitation and workplace intervention, training in cross cultural communication and dissolution of marriage kits. The organization still works with youths to resolve conflicts and has initiated the School Attendance Project which uses mediation to work with families to help improve school attendance.

Cleveland Mediation Center Board of Directors President Lisa Gaynier presented Cleveland Housing Court Judge Raymond Pianka with the first ever CMC Community Service Award saying Pianka helped to make the court system “more humane.” She praised Judge Pianka’s work to create the selective intervention program which helps the indigent and elderly avoid eviction.

In accepting the award, Pianka said mediation was a “win-win situation that allowed the parties to keep their dignity even if they were falling off the last rung of the housing ladder.” Pianka noted that the Cleveland Mediation Center’s staff regularly reviewed the area’s 11,000 annual evictions to look for prospects for mediation in the Alternative Dispute Resolution Program.

Recounting a conversation from 22 years ago, Cleveland Mediation Center Executive Director Dan Joyce said he still remembers the conversation with Marita Kavelec, CYMP’s first executive director. Joyce said it was a cold snowy winter day and fifteen people showed up at the West Side Community House for mediation training. Joyce wondered why the volunteers had braved the elements to attend the training session. Kavelec said a common belief that the status quo was not good enough bound people together to work for change.

Joyce believes that CMC has been part of that effort for change over the past 25 years empowering people and giving a voice to the voiceless. Mediation offers an alternative, he says, showing that “blame, shame and punishment is not the answer.”

For more information about the Cleveland Mediation Program call 621-1919 or visit the Cleveland Mediation Center website at: www.clevelandmediation.org.

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Proposed Nuisance Abatement Legislation expected to take effect in November!

Are you wondering how the ordinance will affect landlords/renters/nuisance property/established businesses/etc.

Please join us at a Landlord Tenant Law Workshop

Presenter: Michael Piepsny, Executive Director Cleveland Tenants Organization

DATE: Tuesday, November 14th

TIME: 6:30-8:30 pm

PLACE: St Ignatius ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, 10205 Lorain Avenue

COST: FREE

REGISTRATION REQUIRED: Call 432-0617 RESERVE A SPOT!!!!


Councilman Joe Santiago
(216) 664-3706 office
Executive Assistant Sister Alicia Alvarado 664-4569
City Hall Email: jsantiago@clevelandcitycouncil.org

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West Side Community House
Dedicates New Building


The West Side Community House, a fixture in our Ohio City/Near West Side neighborhood for over 100 years, has relocated. to serve a shifting client base. Pastor Allen and Ann Wolf were present for the November 9 Dedication Ceremony and Open House in the new, $2.6 million building at West 93rd Street and Lorain Avenue. A buyer expects to redevelop the old building, at Bridge Avenue and West 30th Street, into condominiums, according to Dawn Kolograf, executive director.

She said the organization decided to move because at least 75 percent of people now using its services live west of West 65th Street. The new location is also on a major bus line and just off the freeway.

The building, which officially opened the previous Monday, allows the consolidation of the senior citizens program from the Bridge site with West Side's satellite seniors operation that has been in Simpson United Methodist Church, at West 86th Street and Clark Avenue, for about 20 years. The new site includes a computer lab and game room for the seniors, as well as a learning lab for youngsters and a spacious dining room and kitchen. There's also a playground out back for kids who attend the day care program for school-age children, and an indoor playroom. Two rooms are for family visitation with kids in county foster care.

Kolograf estimated that the center serves about 400 people a day through the senior citizens programs, Meals on Wheels to homebound elderly, the day care and other family services.

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Gordon Square rehab done

By David Plata, West Side Sun News
Staff Writer

Nov. 23, 2006

CLEVELAND — After getting under way at the start of the year, work was essentially completed this week on Gordon Square Homes, a $12 million residential and commercial rehab of four 1920s-era buildings in the Detroit Shoreway neighborhood.

All told, the project consists of creation or preservation of 85 low-income apartments and 6,000 square feet of commercial space.

"We've renovated four buildings that have been vacant and blighted on Detroit Avenue," said Councilman Matt Zone, D-17, in whose ward the properties are located. "And we've restored 85 quality affordable housing units to the market."

Mayor Frank Jackson and a coterie of officials attended a dedication of the project Monday at Near West Lofts, 6706 Detroit Ave.

Formerly known as the Conrad-Balsch-Kroehle Building, the property once was the site of Lou's Furniture and consists of eight apartments fixed up as live-work artist's space and 5,000 square feet of retail space on the ground floor.

At one time, Near West Theatre, which is planning to build a new theater behind the building and move from the Ohio City neighborhood, was going to rent the ground-floor space as well. Instead, the theater group will sublet the space, possibly to a restaurant.

Stephanie Morrison-Hrbek, theater director, said a $20 million fundraising campaign is aimed at making the move possible in three years.


For the rest of the story, see your local Sun newspaper.

© 2006 Sun Newspapers
Go to The Sun News www.sunnews.com  home page

 

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Feature Article at Religion & Ethics Newsweekly: Mentoring Inner City Boys
Find the full article at:
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/week1008/feature.html#

Synopsis: At Jireh Sports in Indianapolis, African-American boys from one of the city's poorest neighborhoods are receiving spiritual guidance and emotional support through a special faith-based and church-sponsored mentoring program. Managed by minister Tim Streett, the program offers inner city kids, often from broken or single parent homes, the chance to build meaningful relationships with mentoring adults through a variety of sporting, recreational and educational activities. Religion is also an important part of the program, although participants are not required to belong to a particular church.

Lucky Severson provides a behind-the-scenes look at how Jireh Sports is helping urban youths turn their lives around. According to Reverend Streett, "We believe that the only way to get them to truly value themselves is one, to have a sense of accomplishment; and two, to have a relationship with God -- to believe that they were not a mistake, that they were created by a loving God who cares about them."

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Gypsy coffee moving
business near Shoreway 
[Editor's Note: Gypsy Coffee has OPENED as of January 3rd, 2007] http://www.gypsybeans.com/

By David Plata
Staff Writer - West Side Sun News http://www.sunnews.com/news/2006/part2/1005/WCOFFEE.htm

Oct. 5, 2006

After two decades as a wholesale coffee operation in a Fulton Road warehouse, Gypsy Beans & Baking Co. is moving to the Detroit Shoreway neighborhood.
[The sky and buildings across the street are reflected in the storefront window at Gypsy Beans & Baking Co., a wholesale coffee sales and neighborhood coffee shop that owner Niki Gillota plans to open at West 65th Street and Detroit Avenue.]The sky and buildings across the street are reflected in the storefront window at Gypsy Beans & Baking Co., a wholesale coffee sales and neighborhood coffee shop that owner Niki Gillota plans to open at West 65th Street and Detroit Avenue. Sun photo by Brad Ruebensaal.



And while the wholesale coffee sales, serving restaurants in the Greater Cleveland area and beyond, will continue, the new venue also will include a neighborhood coffee house.

"I've always been an urban pioneer of sorts," said Niki Gillota, who is spending some $200,000 to move the business and open at the new location.

"I love being in a community," added Gillota, who has lived in Lakewood about a year but is looking to move back to Cleveland. "I think Cleveland is so great for having these little pockets of community that grow and expand and develop around some key players."

The new business covers 2,200 square feet at the southeast corner of West 65th Street and Detroit Avenue, in a former Dollar Store, vacant about two years.

"It's awesome," said Councilman Matt Zone, D-17, noting the "key players" Gillota referred to include the 1point618 art gallery and a new Mediterranean-style restaurant, yet to be named, to be opened by chef Marlin Kaplan — all of them next to Cleveland Public Theatre.

The project is aided by some $30,000 in city loan and grant funds, including $20,000 routed through Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization, which owns the building.

For the rest of the story, see your local Sun newspaper.

© 2006 Sun Newspapers
Go to The Sun News www.sunnews.com home page

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Building Bridges Mural Unveiled At W. 25th St. & Route 2

PHOTO BY JOHN CARTWRIGHT
Friday, October 13, 2006; W. 25th Street Mural Dedication by the Building Bridges Mural Program, Side of the Route 2 Bridge at the Corner of W. 25th and Detroit: Artist Katherine Chilcote and 2006 Summer Interns Jerome Harris, Kareem Stittman, Adam Prince, Chris Drake, Denzel Mammett, Angelo Jessup and Antonio Harris participated in the unveiling of this mural illustrating figures building community in different ways.

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Neighborhood Watch Training

Join your neighbors for a Neighborhood Watch Training with the II District Cleveland Police Department and Police Officer Jeff Stanczyk. Learn more about practical tips for personal and home safety
Topics Covered:

Personal Safety
Kids Safety
Home Safety
Safety for Seniors
Neighborhood Safety
Auto Safety
How to organize and gather information
CB & Neighborhood Patrols
Dates: November 2, 9, 16 and 30, 2006 (All Thursdays)

Time: 6:00-7:30 PM

Location: W. 58th Street Church of God
3150 W. 58th Street
For more information, please contact Ed Webb,
SRO Safety Coordinator at (216) 961-7687 ext. 206
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Cleveland Innerbelt Plan
The Conceptual Alternatives Study (CAS) of the Cleveland Innerbelt Plan details the history, development, and evaluation of the alternatives considered for the reconstruction of the Cleveland Innerbelt.
The CAS is available to the Public at:
www.innerbelt.org
Cleveland City Hall Library, Room 100, 601 Lakeside Ave., Cleveland
Cleveland Public Library, Science and Technology Dept., 525 Superior Ave., Cleveland
NOACA, 1299 Superior Ave., Cleveland
ODOT, District 21, 5500 Transportation Blvd., Garfield Heights
For more information, contact ODOT at 216-584-2007.

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Gifts Of The City To Be Celebrated September 30

“Gifts Of The City” is a day long educational and experiential event designed to inspire and network people of faith who are committed to the people and culture of Cleveland's urban core.  "Gifts of the City" will take place on Saturday, September 30 from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Franklin Circle Christian Church, 1688 Fulton Rd., on Cleveland's Near West Side.  Registration, which will take place at the door, will be on a sliding fee scale, from $1 to $20 and includes continental breakfast, lunch, and all programming.



 

We are especially excited that Andrés González, Executive Director of El Barrio, will be our keynoter and that Molly Carreon, of Merrick House, will oversee our children's programming again this year.  Mr. González, whose topic will be "Gifts Of The Hispanic Community To The City" is director of El Barrio (see fuller bio and picture below).  Ms Carreon is director of the Help Me Grow program at Merrick House in Tremont.

Workshops during the day will include:
o     Historical Near West Side Neighborhood Tour
o     Visit 2100 Lakeside Men's Shelter and Women's Transitional Housing
o     Learn how to deal with stress
o     Mediation Training
o     Positive Educational Experiences in Cleveland

There will be a Community Fair with booths from many different organizations, as well as health screenings for blood pressure, blood sugar, and lead poisoning.  Throughout the day there will be entertainment, including a neighborhood children's choir made up of recent immigrants from Africa.

The event is being sponsored by many different organizations, including Urban Hope UU Community, InterAct Cleveland, God's AGAPE Love for the Homeless, United Clevelanders Against Poverty, St. Patrick's Catholic Church, St. Paul's Community Church, UCC, Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry, Congregation of St. Joseph, West Shore UU Church, Mae Dugan Center, and Franklin Circle Christian Church.  Other sponsors are being sought.  If you have any questions or would like to sign on as a cosponsor, please call Doris Matthey at (216)773-4289 or Molly Holland at (216) 382-4367.
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Andres Gonzalez is the Director of Hispanic Services at El Barrio, a part of the West Side Ecumenical Ministry (WSEM).  El Barrio seeks to bridge the language, culture, and service gaps that separate Hispanics from the other people, agencies, and services.  Their goal is to assist their clients with attaining self reliance through education and job skills, job placement and retention, and community integration. Previously, Andres was the Executive Director of Hispanic UMADAOP (Urban Minority Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Outreach Program, Inc.).  He holds a Masters in Education degree from Cleveland State University and is a graduate of the Cleveland Bridge Builders Flagship Program.

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Providence House plans expansion on West Side
Friday, September 08, 2006
Barb Galbincea
Plain Dealer Reporter

Providence House, a crisis nursery for young children, is primed to expand in its near West Side neighborhood.

The nonprofit, which serves about 200 youngsters a year, already has acquired most of the land it needs around its two buildings on West 32nd Street, south of Lorain Avenue, according to board member Edward Bell.

He said Providence House wants to raise $15 million to build and support the expanded campus, featuring four connected homes. Those houses would be linked to a child-care center with classrooms and playrooms.

Plans also call for converting one of the existing buildings to an education center for parents and child-care professionals, building a secure playground behind the houses and adding underground storage for donations.

Currently, Providence House can serve up to 26 children, age 5 and under, at any one time. With the expansion, capacity would grow to 40.

Natalie Leek-Nelson, chief executive and president of Providence House, said a change in the law will allow the organization to take in older siblings - probably up to age 10 - if a younger brother or sister is being sheltered there.

Providence House aims to prevent abuse and neglect by giving families in crisis a safe haven for their children, she said. Those crises can range from homelessness and domestic violence to health problems.

While the children are cared for during stays that average 24 days, adults are linked to services aimed at allowing the family to safely reunite. Last year, Leek-Nelson said, 93 percent of families were reunited.

Founded by Sister Hope Greener in 1981, Providence House generally has a waiting list of from seven to 10 children, underscoring the need to expand, Leek-Nelson said. It has a $1.6 million budget this year and does not charge for services.

Instead, it runs almost entirely on private donations, the CEO said, adding that the planned storage area would be welcome because the organization got about $300,000 last year in in-kind contributions such as new clothes, baby formula and diapers.

Children at Providence House come from throughout Cuyahoga County and beyond.

"People have a misconception that it's all about poverty, but crisis is everywhere," Leek-Nelson said. "This is not an issue unique to the inner city."

Bell said he hopes the fund-raising campaign is successful enough that construction can begin within two years, allowing the campus to become fully operational by 2010.

More information about Providence House is available at www.provhouse.org or by calling 216-651-5982.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

bgalbincea@plaind.com, 216-999-4185

http://www.cleveland.com/search/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/1157705099124680.xml?ncounty_cuyahoga&coll=2

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Letter To The Editor From A Neighbor

Spend money to alleviate poverty, not wage war
Friday, September 01, 2006

Overlooked in all the com mentary about how to im prove Cleveland's "poorest city" ranking is the devastating effect that federal spending on war is having on our city.

The Web site costofwar.com lists Cleveland's share of the cost of the Iraq war alone at more than $300 million. This money could have paid for more than 5,000 public school teachers for one year, enrolled more than 41,000 children in Head Start for a year, provided more than 15,000 students with four-year scholarships at public universities, and built more than 2,800 additional units of affordable housing.

All of the above interventions reduce poverty, and all of them rely on federal funding that is not available when billions of federal dollars are used on military spending that brings us neither security nor prosperity.

There is an alternative, rooted in the tools and strategies of nonviolent action, which has proven effective in resolving political conflicts while offering a roadmap for a more rational, effective use of our public wealth. Those interested in learning more are invited to attend the Labor Day Peace Show from noon to 7 p.m. Monday at the Free Stamp on East Ninth Street and Lakeside Avenue in downtown Cleveland.

James Misak
Cleveland


© 2006 The Plain Dealer
© 2006 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved

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Top chef eyes site Restaurant next to CPT
Thursday, August 31, 2006
By David Plata
West Side Sun News

With a reputation as one of the top 100 restaurant operators and chefs in the country, Marlin Kaplan has set his sights on the Detroit Shoreway neighborhood.

Specifically, he plans to spend about $500,000 to open a Mediterranean-style restaurant, yet to be named, next to Cleveland Public Theatre.

We anticipate a March 1 opening, he said.

Kaplan, who has owned a number of restaurants in the Cleveland area since 1991, now has only one _ One Walnut Restaurant in the Ohio Savings Plaza downtown. Described as a fine-dining, white tablecloth restaurant, it is geared to business people and travelers.

I wouldn't want to call this an Italian restaurant, but there would be Spanish, Italian, Greek influences in the food we would be serving, Kaplan said of the new venture.

Councilman Matt Zone, in whose ward the restaurant would be located, said a special use option for a liquor license will be on the November ballot.

The precinct _ the south side of Detroit _ was dried out years ago when his late mother, Mary Zone, represented the ward on City Council. But Zone said Kaplan is a top-flight, responsible business operator, whose restaurant will be good for the neighborhood. A similar permit was approved for Cleveland Public Theatre, Zone noted.

It was wild, Zone said, recalling the atmosphere more than two decades ago, when 13 bars were dried up along Detroit.

Since then, two liquor licenses have been approved for the area, Zone said: the Happy Dog and Cleveland Public Theatre.

Zone said he will hold a community meeting before the November vote for residents to meet Kaplan and hear about his plans.

Robert Maschke, an architect whose office is just next door to the restaurant site, is designing the new business.

Since it's a neighborhood restaurant, as you come in, we want it to be very welcoming, with a small bar, Maschke said.

The building, once the site of Perry's Family Restaurant, was burned in the mid-1990s, then sat vacant for about eight years.

The refurbished site will combine different influences, Maschke said.

It's going to be cross between modern, contemporary elements with the rusticated construction of the building, he said. The building's over 100 years old; it has beautiful brick walls that are exposed, going all the way down to the basement.

Kaplan said the dining room, seating about 60 people, is on the first floor, with a spiral staircase leading up to the bar on the second floor. An outdoor patio will seat about 60 more.

Kaplan said the new restaurant will be very casual, family-oriented, seating from 80-100 people. A wine cellar with brick walls will be on the bottom floor.

It would fit in the fabric of this neighborhood, he said. The menu has pizza, pasta, a lot of shared plates.

Appetizers would range from $5-$8, entrees from $12-$17.

A pick-up window for pizza and other to-go food will be on the side.

Zone said the building has gone through the Storefront Renovation program, and that additional city financial aid is possible.

Kaplan said he started to look at Cleveland neighborhoods as a possible restaurant location about a year ago.

I have a lot of staff who live in this neighborhood, he said. They urged me to come and look here.

The restaurant will employ about 25 people, Kaplan said.

I felt this was a neighborhood that really was about to blossom, he said, noting the upscale Battery Park housing development under way on the former Eveready Battery Co. site, and plans for a streetscape revitalization and other development in the area.


© 2006 Sun Newspapers
© 2006 cleveland.com All Rights Reserved

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Developer seeks plan for recreational use of former West Side YMCA
At its May 25th Meeting the Franklin Clinton Block Club discussed the proposal by developer James Sosan to offer use of the former West Side YMCA’s gym, pool and locker room to the community. Block Club Chair Bill Merriman said Sosan, who recently purchased the building from the YMCA, offered the use of those facilities if the community could come up with an operator.
 

At an earlier meeting of the block club, block club members and some former members of the Save the Y Committee discussed possible operators for the facility. Some of the proposals included asking the Boys and Girls Club to run the facility or hiring former YMCA director Mike Hudek to run the recreation area as part of a private club. Merriman says he recently learned from the developer that he would need an answer soon as to what their plans are. Merriman says Sosan told him his funders want a plan as to what he will do with the remaining parts of the facility. Merriman said Sosan told him he must get a commitment within the next three months on the operation of the recreational portion of the facility or come up with another plan for that portion of the building.
 

According to an April 3rd article by Stan Bullard in Crain’s Cleveland Business “New to the Neighborhood: Developer lands former West Side YMCA, plans condo, townhouse revitalization”, Sosan plans to build condos in the YMCA facility and townhouses on the grounds. The Crain’s article said the YMCA building and adjoining lot were purchased by Sosan through a company called Franklin Lofts Condominium, LLC for $550,000 on March 20th. The article notes that Sosan previous development experience includes the Metro Loft apartments on Scranton and the Detroit Lofts at 2820 Detroit Avenue. (From the June 2006 issue of The Plain Press)

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Free Times Article On Catholic Worker Community

Volume 14, Issue 30, Free Times
Published November 15th, 2006
Risking the Cross
Jesus Got Arrested For Serving God. Why Shouldn't His Followers?
By Michael Gill

http://www.freetimes.com/stories/14/30/risking-the-cross


Before dawn on a recent Thursday, Joe Mueller and Peter Quilligan park their pickup in front of the Ameritemps office, across from the CSU Convocation Center. Seagulls teem like flakes in a snow globe above the building, their bellies shining white in the ground light, as Quilligan and Mueller unload a rickety aluminum card table, a cooler full of pastry, an urn of coffee and a pot of soup. Then they wait.
Soon day laborers make their way outside and head for the table. Some express thanks for the food, but most have little to say and Mueller and Quilligan don't try to make small talk. They just give away food, self-serve.
An hour later, after about 50 day laborers have been fed, Quilligan and Mueller pack up the truck and head back home, Whitman House in Ohio City, a Catholic Worker community where anarchy mixes with Catholicism.
Quilligan and Mueller explain the Catholic Worker philosophy by comparing it to a three-legged table: One leg is hospitality; the second is prayer; the third is resistance. It's that third leg — their wrench in the machine of government and hierarchical Catholic dogma — that sets them apart from others of the same faith. It also gets them into trouble.
Back at the house, Mueller attends Thursday morning prayer at 8 a.m. Stained glass windows give the room the look of a chapel, but other signs are scarce; no Stations of the Cross mark off the life of Jesus on the walls. Pictures of residents and guests cover one corner with a visual history of the house and its extended family. A couple of bicycles are stored in another corner. There are couches and a low coffee table, and an old piano.
Mueller, fellow Worker Chris Knestrick and a guest are the only ones in attendance this morning. Knestrick taps a brass bowl with a smooth wooden stick. When the single clear note of the bowl rings into silence, they begin reading from Jesus the Rebel, a book by the radical Jesuit Father John Dear:
"To engage in the nonviolent revolution that Jesus begins is to risk the cross. Like Jesus we face hostility and opposition, even from our own religious communities, and from the Church itself. We may even undergo harassment, ostracism, alienation, arrest, imprisonment, and death. But if we do, we will have the consolation of knowing that we served the mission of Jesus."
It takes about half an hour to read the whole chapter. In the short silence that follows, it's hard not to apply that text to Mueller and Knestrick and the other volunteers who live at the house. They take literally the calling to dedicate their lives to peace and social justice, and in the process they lead a rebellious life. Members of the Whitman House community have been arrested twice this year — while praying during a protest at the Armed Forces Recruiting Center in Lakewood, and during a protest at the Cleveland International Air Show.
After the short silence, Knestrick taps the brass bowl again, and the service is over. They thank each other and get on with the day.
THE CATHOLIC WORKER is a nationwide radical movement founded on both Catholic and anarchist ideals: not only prayer and service to God and the poor, but also rejection of hierarchy, and an embrace of personal responsibility. People who live at Whitman House come from various political perspectives, mostly leaning hard to the left, but Knestrick says that, in political terms, he thinks of the Catholic Worker ideology as more right than left, at least in that philosophical sense.
"We don't generally advocate building systems to deal with society's problems," he says.
The movement's founder, Dorothy Day, was born in New York in 1897. She saw Catholicism as the faith of the poor and immigrants, and converted. She had dabbled in communism as she worked for newspapers and wrote a novel, but she became critical of those ideals. In 1932 she met Peter Maurin, a Frenchman and former Christian Brother. Together they would found the Catholic Worker newspaper, selling it for a penny a copy, and spreading radical ideas about social justice. One of Day's best known lines is quoted on a poster in the Whitman house dining room: "Our problems stem from our acceptance of this filthy, rotten system."

BREAKING BREAD The Catholic Workers live on donated communal meals.
Soon the Catholic Worker ideas and passion crystallized into an ideological movement of lay people, not priests, brothers or nuns. They would have no formal leaders, and no official connection to the institutional Catholic church; just a network of decentralized communities, people giving away food and shelter, living in voluntary poverty on farms and in houses across the country, each of them bucking the oppression of corporations and government as they saw fit.
The farms didn't work out, but the houses flourished. An online directory says there are 185 Catholic Worker Communities in the world, with 168 of them in the U.S. (though Knestrick says that count is incomplete). It lists three in Cleveland, including Casa San Jose and St. Herman's House of Hospitality, but of the three, only Whitman House is propelled along by the urge to call the government and the institutional church on the carpet.
"The character of the movement is that people come and go," says Joe Lehner, who in the mid-'80s was a founder of the local Catholic Worker community and Whitman House. Lehner remains involved supporting the community, but he can't risk getting arrested in protest these days.
He says four or five years ago the future of the house was uncertain because no volunteers were living there. Then for a couple of years it was just one. But in 2004, three new volunteers moved in — Quilligan, Mueller and Knestrick — bringing with them energy that has grown. These days there are five volunteers living at the house, four men and one woman, and their hospitality programs are flourishing. Most of the guest beds are filled by people who might otherwise not have a place to sleep. A drop-in center in a Lorain Avenue storefront has operated since the '80s, and remains open and busy five nights a week. They've been taking food to the day laborers for two years now. They're collecting books to build a lending program for prisoners.
And as for the resistance, they're keeping that up quite nicely, too.
ABOUT 30 MEMBERS of the Catholic Worker extended community marked the third anniversary of the invasion of Iraq with a retreat at St. Coleman's Church the weekend of March 17. That same weekend, President Bush promised to "finish the mission" in Iraq with "complete victory," and Time Magazine reported that U.S. Marines had massacred at least 15 unarmed Iraqi civilians in the town of Haditha. After three years the number of U.S. troops killed was approaching 2,500, while estimates of the number of Iraqi civilian deaths were running above 30,000.
The retreat ended on the anniversary itself, a Sunday morning, and participants were looking for something to do with their resolve against the continuing violence. The crowd made its way to the Armed Forces Recruiting Center on Detroit Avenue in Lakewood. They brought banners, reading "Grief from America and Iraq," and "Let Us Repent of War," and a costume like the dark robes the prisoners at Abu Grahib wore. They read the names of Americans and Iraqis killed.
For most of the protesters, raising a little commotion on the street was enough. Knestrick and Mueller, however, had come prepared to be arrested. They went up to the storefront office, with its Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine banners and insignia, and they tried the door. It was open. They went inside to see if there was anyone to talk to.
The lights were on, but no one was home. They found stacks of recruitment flyers, decided that local kids didn't need to fall under the influence of that propaganda, and so put them in bags. They found a business card on a desk for Staff Sergeant Kimberly Middleton. They decided to give her a call.
"I asked her to come down so that we could talk about the war, and about shutting down the recruiting center," Knestrick says. While they waited, they sat down to pray.
Instead of coming down, Middleton called her supervisor, who called the Lakewood police. A police report doesn't differ much from the protesters' account: When Patrolmen Deucher and Fioritto arrived, they saw the protesters on the sidewalk, the front door open, and the two men sitting inside on the floor. Knestrick and Mueller told the officers they were waiting for Sergeant Middleton, so the police called her. She told them the protesters didn't have permission to be inside. The police told the Catholic Workers several times that if they didn't leave they would be arrested for trespassing. They had come prepared for that. They were in jail for less than two hours before they bonded out.
They were also prepared to take the trespassing charges all the way to jury trial, during which they would attempt to put the war on trial instead.
"We freely admitted to all the facts," Knestrick says. "We just didn't think we should be held criminally responsible."

A CHANNEL OF YOUR PEACE Megan Wilson, interrupting the flow.
Their lawyer, Scott Hurley, argued that they had to be there because their consciences compelled them. He reminded the court that the door was left unlocked, and that lights were on in the basement. He pointed out that journalist Carl Monday is often seen on camera being told repeatedly and emphatically to leave offices and stores.
Knestrick and Mueller did their best to put the war on trial. In the end they were found guilty of criminal trespassing. Judge Pat Carroll fined them $100, plus court costs, plus 50 hours of community service and a year's probation each.
NOT ALL THEIR BUCKING of the system is so dramatic.
Like most Catholic Worker houses, Whitman House has its own newspaper. Last winter they used it to write an open letter to Bishop Anthony Pilla, asking him for a meeting so that they could talk about his and the U.S. Catholic Bishops' failure to speak out strongly against the war. The letter noted that Pope John Paul II said "No to war," calling it "always a defeat for humanity," but that U.S. bishops hadn't been so clear. They cited a statement from Archbishop Edwin O'Brien, head of the military Archdiocese of the United States: "It was the opinion of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops that given the complexity of the countless elements and arguments on either side, people of good faith could arrive at differing conclusions as to the moral justification of our armed interventions."
The letter got them a meeting with Bishop Pilla, but Mueller says he spent most of the time talking about the importance of going through proper channels. Pilla, who no longer heads the Cleveland diocese, never spoke publicly in direct opposition to the war.
Last summer, they sent another letter, this one mailed to Pilla's successor Bishop Lennon, co-signed by Father Ben Jimenez, SJ. That letter got no response at all.
Robert Tayek, spokesman for the Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, responded by e-mail to the Free Times' query about the Catholic Workers' activism and diocesan views of the war: "The Church encourages all Christians to take seriously the Gospel call to be peacemakers," he writes.
Further, he says the Cleveland diocese held educational forums and prayer vigils "before the outbreak" of the war in Iraq. Those efforts involved "making better known the Church's teaching on war and peace, as well as the specific moral objections to any preemptive invasion of Iraq by the United States voiced by Pope John Paul II and then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI)."
He points out that on the eve of the war, then-Bishop Pilla led a crowd, including more than 700 Catholic high school students, in a prayer service for peace at St. John the Evangelist Cathedral. Since the war started, the Diocese Social Action Commission has continued to hold education forums and prayer vigils for peace, and in memory of all those who have been killed.
"We continue to encourage Christians and all people of good will to make a serious commitment to working for peace and with justice for all," Tayek concluded.
But how exactly does a Catholic work for peace and justice, when elected officials continue to wage war? Does the work end with believing in peace and praying on it?
While the effects of the post-election power shift in Washington have yet to play out, Knestrick and Mueller don't put much faith in the vote. Knestrick says he has never cast a ballot in his life, and Mueller says he has voted only occasionally.
"If you do vote," Knestrick says, "you can't complain about the system, because you've helped empower someone to make these decisions for us."

FR. BEN JIMINEZ, SJ. Keeping it legal, for now.
FATHER BEN JIMENEZ, a Jesuit priest who lives in the Jesuit residence at St. Ignatius High School and is pastor of St. Augustine Church in Tremont, is part of the Catholic Worker extended community. He was with Knestrick and three other members of the community when they were arrested in September during a protest of the Cleveland International Air Show. Beneath the wing of an A-10 Warthog fighter jet — a plane which, as Knestrick noted in the Whitman House newspaper, "is able to spew out three to four thousand depleted-uranium rounds of ammunition per minute" — Knestrick and Megan Wilson held a banner that read, "War is not entertainment. These Planes kill." Jim Schlect knelt, as if to pray. Tim Musser and Father Jimenez lay on the ground, as if dead. And they sang the Prayer of St. Francis, which begins, "Make me a channel of your peace."
Jimenez described the bewildered, puzzled and uncomfortable faces of the air show visitors, especially families with children as they would stop to look for a few seconds and then move on before the kids could ask questions. He described air show officials approaching in golf carts, speaking into walkie-talkies and moving on. Then came the police, arresting all five. They took them away from an event that pulled in thousands of people, and charged them with "unlawful congregation." A Cleveland police report on the incident says the five were "blocking the visitors, as well as air show workers, from moving freely around the event."
Father Jimenez says he thinks it's because of Catholic families who have soldiers in the war that the U.S. bishops haven't spoken out more strongly. He says he's not aware of any public denunciation of the war by a U.S. Catholic bishop, including Pilla and Lennon, since the atrocities began.
"If there was," he says, "I would know about it."
Jimenez has repeatedly put his liberty on the line in the name of peace, and not only as it relates to the war in Iraq. He says the Gospels make it clear that rebellion against an unjust system is not only justified, but part of what Jesus calls us by example to do, beginning with the day he kicked the money changers out of the temple.
Every year since 2001, Jimenez has joined the InterReligious Task Force on Central America in an annual protest at the School of the Americas at Fort Benning, Georgia — a U.S. training ground for Latin American military personnel. The School of the Americas protests began in 1990, the year after six Jesuit priests and two women were murdered by SOA-trained military personnel in San Salvador. Among the school's alumni are at least 11 Latin American dictators, including deposed Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega. The SOA was officially "closed" at the end of 2000, but reopened just a few weeks later under a new name, the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. According to School of the Americas Watch, the change has been entirely cosmetic. War training goes on, and so do the protests.
Two years ago, Jimenez's actions got him arrested and earned him two months in jail on trespassing charges. Next weekend, he and several members of the local Catholic Worker community plan to join the IRTF for the annual bus trip to Georgia. He's not planning on getting arrested this time. He's on probation.
THE CLEVELAND CATHOLIC Worker community's longest running program isn't about risking jail, and it probably has the effect of keeping some other people out.
A drop-in center — which people at Whitman House call "the Drop" — has held an open door to Lorain Avenue five nights a week since 1984. Last Friday night brought what Quilligan described as a modest turnout from the streets and shelters. About 25 people filled the room, with a half dozen out front smoking. The stress of poverty was visible on their faces, and audible in their voices. An apparently intoxicated woman lay by herself on a couch. Several people played cards, or sat around tables talking. There was a woman with her grandchild. Someone played an old-school funk CD on a boom box.
The Catholic Workers share the routine tasks of keeping the place open with several different groups, including the Interreligious Task Force on Central America, and students from John Carroll University, but most nights it's members of the Catholic Worker house who keep the peace. They talk people down from arguments, and get in between when it looks like they might get violent.
Ryan Seal, a Catholic Worker in fraying pants, a sweatshirt and knit cap, responds to Quilligan's call for help with some commotion outside. An apparently intoxicated man is arguing with a woman who can't seem to stop provoking him. She's with a second man, and the first seems to be trying to tell him something about her. They say "Motherfucking" a lot, and periodically the loud man whispers in the boyfriend's ear. Apparently the loud one was arrested and released earlier in the day, and he blames the woman for it. Quilligan and Ryan keep their hands in their pockets and keep their voices calm as they urge the people to just let their differences go. It's just another night at the Drop.
"Whatever they're talking about," Seal says, "that's not why they're fighting. These people are frustrated, and abused by the system. They're just taking it out on each other."
mgill@freetimes.com

 


 

 

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