Archive for May, 2011

Komedy for Kidneys Comedy Show @ Brothers Lounge

Tue 5/31 @ 8PM

Laugh it up with comedians Mike Farrel, Mike Polk, Bill Squire and Josh Womack at the Komedy for Kidneys Comedy Show @ Brothers Lounge. Tix are $12 with half of each ticket going to the 2011 Cleveland Kidney Walk, presented by the Cleveland Gladiators.

Brothers Lounge – 11609 Detroit Ave. – Cle

http://BrothersLounge.com

 

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Dangerously Authentic Youth Fashion Show

Sat 5/28 @ 6PM

Fifteen middle and high school students have worked hard to bring you the 2nd Annual Dangerously Authentic Youth Fashion Show on Sat 5/28. Presented by DOSIR, this fashion show celebrates the creativity, poise and grace of these young women. The show is a positive force in East Cleveland, showcasing talent in an area that’s too easily written off. The show will feature a number of styles, including handmade fashions created out of household items. Plus: singing, poetry and dance choreography all performed by youth participants. This is much more than your average fashion show.

Some background on DOSIR and the vital role it plays for youth in East Cle:

“Founded in 2009 by young adults who where unsatisfied with the activities available to youth in their community, DOSIR was created to allow youth the space to freely express themselves through their artistic abilities in the form of dance, poetry, fashion design and modeling. Participants met weekly after school to practice for their day in the spotlight, learning about modeling, poise, and ‘the walk.’ More importantly, these weekly sessions offered a safe place for the youth to express themselves while learning how to become confident young women. Guest speakers led in-depth discussions that focused on self esteem, education, career choices, teen pregnancy, and more.”

MLK Civic Center – 14801 Shaw Ave. – East Cleveland

For more info email Odell_MorganATyahoo.com.

Tickets are $10 and can be purchased in advanced at Hair Fetish and Nail Salon – 12405 Superior Ave. Cle, Just Posh Hair & Nails – 3944 Mayfield Rd. Cleveland Hts, and MLK Civic Center – East Cleveland.

 

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Berea Mayfest: Art & music on Coe Lake

Sat 5/28 @ 10AM – 5PM

Summer is here! Bring on the art fests. Kick the season off on Sat 5/28 with the Berea Mayfest, a juried outdoor Fine Arts Festival on beautiful Coe Lake. Entertainment, food and lotsa art. Music includes a performance by Victor Samalot [pictured] who’s in the midst of releasing a self-titled CD.

Coe Lake Park – Berea

http://BereaArts.org

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VIDEO: Type City Cleveland Displayed at Hopkins

VIDEO: Type City Cleveland

CIA Students Render NEO Landmarks, One Character at a Time

Have you seen the new gallery spaces in Cleveland Hopkins International Airport? The first exhibit features large, black-and-white images of NEO landmarks which are dynamically rendered in font characters whose style is consistent with the structures they build.

Listen as Jacqueline Muhammad, Community Relations Manager for Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, explains the mayor’s city-wide arts initiative and describes the various spaces within the airport set aside as galleries.

Watch as Chris Ramsay of Ramsay Creative, and also a Communication Design Instructor at Cleveland Institute of Art. shows us some of his students work on display in one of the airport’s gallery spaces which is on the RTA level. The large format printing of the student’s works that are on display were generously provided by Image Lab Media.

If you don’t want to wait for your next flight to see the exhibit, you can also view the artwork on line at www.TypeCityCleveland.com. This display will be in place at least through the fall of 2011, and maybe to the end of the year.

Watch the video here.

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ROLDO: Adding Insult to Injury

Adding Insult to Injury

Don’t know if you noticed but there’s a little dispute between the Cleveland Browns and the Cleveland-Cuyahoga County Port Authority.

Very interesting.

The issue is the cost of parking. Presently, the cost to the Browns of parking facilities owned by the Port Authority is $225,000 a year in rent. The Browns want a $25,000 reduction, and a $20,000 a game discount in case of a pro football strike.

Port officials thus far rightly decline the Browns offer to pay less. Bet that won’t last.

Here’s my thought. Did anyone think it strange that the Browns pay $225,000 a year for parking facilities around Browns Stadium.

Yet, the Browns pay only $250,000 for the use of the city’s entire 73,000 seat stadium, including loges and food and other sales. That’s a cheap price that doesn’t increase over the 30-year lease. What a sweetheart deal.

Furthermore, the football stadium sits on city lakefront land that is valued at $15 million. Each year the taxes on the land are some $400,000 (2009 figure). Who pays? Not the Browns. The city pays. The land, unlike the stadium, is not tax exempt.

I guess neither the PD nor the FBI was interested enough to examine why Diane Downing and Fred Nance – both worked with the Mike White administration on the stadium deal – later went to work for, yes, Lerner & the Browns, possessors of the sweetheart deal.

Once again no one at the Plain Dealer – editorial writers, columnists or other writers – seems to notice the massive piracy. More brainwashing, editors? Or does it just come naturally by now. I guess.

Isn’t there a single Council member – or even Mayor Frank Jackson – alert and courageous enough to call Randy Lerner to a committee hearing to ask: Why don’t you pay your taxes, Mr. Rich Guy?

It’s time someone put some pressure on Lerner.

Here’s one way. Why not insist on naming rights for the stadium with all proceeds going to the Cleveland school system. Or do we just rob from the Cleveland schools? That could earn the schools tens of millions of dollars over the rest of the 30 years.

Does anyone expect that to happen? Not me.

Here’s my advice:

Teachers, firefighters, police tighten your belts.

Randy, loosen your belt another notch. Isn’t that fair?

 

Roldo Bartimole celebrates 50 years of news reporting this year. He published and wrote Point of View, a newsletter about Cleveland, for 32 years. He worked for the Plain Dealer and Wall Street Journal in the 1960s.

He was a 2004 Cleveland Journalism Hall of Fame recipient and won the national Joe Callaway Award for Civic Courage in 1991. [Photo by Todd Bartimole.]

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ROLDO: The Rape of Community by Business

The Rape of Community by Business

While Republican politicians, many civic leaders and the news media are zeroing in on the “greed” of public employees, the big theft of public dollars is quietly being done by our major corporations.

It’s just business being business-like. Or a robbery in progress.

School teachers, firefighters, police and other public workers are fair game. Overly wealthy business people, well, we’ll leave them alone. Just look the other way.

The robbery of public funds is taking place right before our eyes. Yet there is no outcry. You hear not a whimper of opposition from politicians, civic leaders or the news media.

We’ve been trained to let it all go by. There is no countervailing power to corporate greed. Certainly not in our obedient news media. Kowtowers all.

And while the Plain Dealer centers attention on the Board of Revision (rightly to some extent), other government bodies are giving away tons of public dollars. A good deal of it from the very public institutions in dire trouble – public schools.

A good example is the rapacious American Greetings Corp. The company has played government off against each other to get major subsidies. Gimme more.

Where will they move? Where they get the best deal – and the ability to help themselves at Crocker Park where they have a financial interest. Isn’t that corporate responsibility as defined by corporate guys?

One subsidy is particularly destructive. Tax Incremental Financing. It uses property taxes to fund American Greetings escape from Brooklyn, which has help nurture them for more than half a century, into a more exclusive neighborhood in Westlake.

So much for loyalty. So much for past favors. Fifty years or more may be a long time, but so long it’s been good to know you.

The tax incremental financing is only a small part of the largess bestowed upon the wealthy owners of the card company. (By the way, I’ll be checking my card purchases to see they’re not American Greetings.)

The Plain Dealer last week outlined all the generosity our politicians have given to American Greetings.

It’s astounding.

Atop a 75 percent property tax diversion for 30 years, according to the Plain Dealer, American Greetings also gets a 15-year tax credit on its income taxes. The PD says that on $155 million annual payroll, “that credit would be worth about $775,000 a year – or $11.6 million over the full 15 years.” Or maybe until they ask for more.

Don’t rest now. The state offers an additional $93.5 million package of subsidies over the same 15 years.

When it comes to corporate welfare, the sky’s the limit. This one beats them all.

Maybe you missed the PD editorial blasting this massive gift of public funds to a private business. You did miss the spanking?

No, you didn’t. It didn’t happen. And don’t expect it ever to be seen or read.

Nor did I hear of any politician making hay of this massive gift-giving by government. Where’s the against-all-welfare Tea Party? Nor did I notice any labor leader outrage.

The silence is deafening.

The PD actually encourages such corporate blackmail.

The coverage is so unbalanced that it must be purposely done or they’ve brainwashed themselves.

And nobody even tries to assess the loss to community of constantly subsidizing new building and leaving the old to fester and die. What a community loss.

“Let’s face it – when a major employer even hints that it might be thinking about moving – especially to another state – it’s in the driver’s seat,” a PD editorial said when Gov. John Kasich signed the deal for millions of subsidies to American Greetings. Isn’t that a plea to accept blackmail?

“Credit Kasich for correctly reading the need for a decisive move,” the PD wrote.

How about some forthright talk about the blackmail and hostage-taking by corporations which take tens of millions of dollars from the public. That’s from each of us. We pay more when they pay less.

Shouldn’t these blackmailers at least get an editorial slap on the wrist?

Instead, they get encouragement from the PD editorial board.

The PD has been totting up lots of misdeeds in government.

However, it apparently hasn’t the energy to tote up how much in public funds – via tax abatement and tax incremental financing – the schools, cities, counties and library systems lose to corporate greed.

It’s not nice to tell the emperors they have no clothes.

Property taxes from the Terminal Tower projects are still going to help pay off the debt on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The hall has been there since the mid-1990s. That’s just one of many such sweet deals that divert tax money to private interests.

The neglect of this kind of civic corruption by the news media can be called the hypocrisy of conventional journalism. Reporters and editors see plenty of dishonesty in the public sector but are totally blind to the private graft.

Private wealth automatically gets the blind eye.

 

Roldo Bartimole celebrates 50 years of news reporting this year. He published and wrote Point of View, a newsletter about Cleveland, for 32 years. He worked for the Plain Dealer and Wall Street Journal in the 1960s.

He was a 2004 Cleveland Journalism Hall of Fame recipient and won the national Joe Callaway Award for Civic Courage in 1991. [Photo by Todd Bartimole.]

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MANSFIELD: Tearing Down the Blue Wall

Tearing Down the Blue Wall

In what can only be characterized as a desperate attempt to exculpate the four officers accused of brutalizing Edward Henderson on New Year’s Day, Cleveland Police Patrolman’s Association president, Steve Loomis, is vaulting over the legendary and long-standing “Blue Wall of Silence.” Similar to the Mafia code of Omertá, police officers historically protect wrongdoing by fellow officers with tacit silence, if not outright support. Those who even think of breaking The Code will find themselves without backup on the street. So, The Code allows officers — even those who are known by other members of the force to be trigger-happy — to remain on the streets. Sadly, some of these cowboys even get labeled “Supercops.”

But Loomis, who hasn’t worked the street in years, wants to shift the blame to senior officers, claiming that if they had been present at Henderson’s arrest (as he claims now they should have been), nothing untoward would have happened to the mentally-ill man as he lay handcuffed, face down on the ground. In Loomis’ version, the fault lays with the weak command structure at the police department… an allegation that, based on past performance, actually has somewhat of a ring of truth to it.

So, if I’m following his logic correctly, a jury in a federal civil rights case is supposed to believe that a sergeant, lieutenant, or captain should have magically appeared at the scene of the arrest of Henderson and said to the patrol officers “Stop, don’t kick that handcuffed man’s head like it’s a football!” Everything would then have gone by the book, at least in Loomis’ mind. Please. Should it have taken a senior officer to tell patrolmen that allegedly standing on a suspect’s neck and then kicking him in the head is not a nice thing to do?

Indeed, Loomis might succeed in getting the F.B.I. to look closely at the Cleveland police department’s command structure (which is probably just as weak at the top as many others across the country) but that in no way is going to mean the four accused officers should get a pass on their alleged brutality by saying they weren’t properly supervised. While a failure of supervision as Loomis claims might exist, his move will most likely backfire and put more senior officers — indeed, the entire system — under the federal microscope.

If federal civil rights investigators really want something else to look at in Cleveland, maybe they should listen to some members of the bar who are documenting that someone in the department’s Internal Investigations Unit or Office of Professional Standards (OPS) is breaching protocol by sharing information with Loomis. They are suggesting strong evidence exists that when a citizen files a formal complaint against an officer, information about the content of the complaint is available to police union officials and therefore the Cleveland Police Patrolman’s Association itself (a private entity) — who should not be privy to it. Two things follow from this alleged custom and practice: The officer(s) identified in the Complaint are notified directly or indirectly so they can get their cover-up stories together, and second, sometimes the person(s) who actually filed the compliant is intimidated by being charged with a crime. If there is a shred of truth to these allegations by the civil rights bar, rest assured the feds will get to the bottom of them.

The feds might also want to investigate the accusation that if someone graduates from a certain near-west side high school and is desirous of becoming a Cleveland police officer, they are prepped for the Civil Service exam by a certain police captain who all but gives them the answers to the questions. The attorney providing this information said that only the graduates of this certain high school need apply. Interesting.

Locals are often too provincial; they don’t get the “big picture.” Anyone who has read one of Attorney General Eric Holder’s speeches should realize what’s going on: The fact the local U.S. Attorney’s Office took over this case (instead of waiting to see if the city and county could handle it in an unbiased and professional manner) is clear: The Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice has at long-last been reinvigorated. It was gutted under the eight years of Bush’s tenure. But AG Holder has been saying for some time now that how justice is meted out in this country needs to be reexamined, and he’s saying it for one main reason: Nationally, the number of reported cases of alleged police brutality has been on the rise for far too long. Some rogue cops around the country have been serving up ass-whippings like lunch, and it’s way past time for this brutality on the part of a select few officers to stop.

When the feds want to send a message, they look around the country and find a particularly egregious case (when the video of this incident is finally made public it will be abundantly clear why this case was selected) of brutality and zero in on it. The timing, for these four officers, could not have been worse. If convicted, they’re going to be used as examples for the rest of the country. And any union officials who think they are clever enough to somehow rig or circumvent (because they have always been able to in the past) are in for a rude awaking. That knock on the door just might be the F.B.I.

One thing is abundantly clear, Loomis is not publicly reciting the mandate of their Use of Force Policy, 2.1.01 which applies to patrol officers and supervisors. This policy states:

                At the scene of a police incident, many officers of the
                Division may be present and some officers may
                not be directly involved in taking police actions.
                However, this does not relieve any officer present
                of the obligation to ensure that the requirements
                of the law and Divisional regulations are complied
                with.  Officers of the Division of Police are required
                to maintain control if the use of force against a
                subject clearly becomes excessive.

Clearly the duties and obligations of officers were not met in the Henderson case, and they remain silent in other cases. The moral of this story is that the Code is alive and thriving in Cleveland, and Loomis and certain police officers will never stop invoking it if the feds fail to follow through with their mission, their duty, their effective prosecution.

 

From Cool Cleveland correspondent Mansfield B. Frazier mansfieldfATgmail.com. Frazier’s From Behind The Wall: Commentary on Crime, Punishment, Race and the Underclass by a Prison Inmate is available again in hardback. Snag your copy and have it signed by the author by visiting http://www.neighborhoodsolutionsinc.com.

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CD REVIEW: The Demo by Debussi

CD REVIEW: The Demo
Debussi

It may only be a debut demo, but The Demo, put out by Cleveland’s Debussi is arguably much more and clearly nothing less. The three songs are fit for LP release, with enough consistency to keep you listening and enough variation to make you want more. The Cleveland four-piece is not difficult to find in Ohio, with several shows lined up. Your next opportunity? Sun 5/29 at the Beachland Ballroom opening for NY natives The Bottom Dollars.

Starting with “Replaced,” the songs are polished, featuring smatterings of piano, electric guitar, and subtle drums and cymbal. “Replaced” is a soothing song, although not so much when you start tuning in to the lyrics: “The Demons that I face now that I’ve been replaced.” The end of the song is rounded out with violin. Everything melds well together — the range of instruments, from piano to violin, mesh seamlessly with the vocals. It is an alt pop sort of feel, each song keeping a fairly consistent rhythm and tempo. “Event Horizon (Those Eyes)” is the song you’ll walk away singing, with memorable vocals and catchy hooks: “Those eyes are killing me. I still daydream the nightmare I put myself through, but that doesn’t stop my chasing, my chasing after you.” The three songs are all about love and loss of love; you’ll be able to relate in some aspect.

Despite the clean cut sound of The Demo, it is their debut. All that means is you have MORE TO LOOK FORWARD TO; they’re shooting for an EP release this fall. How do you get a copy? I’d recommend either streaming online at http://Debussi.net or going to their show, where they’ll give you a copy for free.

Debussi’s next show is Sun 5/29 @ the Beachland Ballroom where they’ll be the opening act for New York’s The Bottom Dollars. CONSIDER IT.

In a band/know a band/see a band? Email Laurie at ClevelandSoundsATgmail.com!

 

Laurie Wanninger is a Cleveland convert, having lived in Pittsburgh for 20 years. After attending John Carroll University, she was sold on the city and now lives, works and breathes Cleveland. Spare time is spent DJing Music for Your Laundry List at WJCU 88.7, bicycling, going to local concerts and dreaming of microbrews and National Parks.

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Urban Bright

Thu 5/26 @ 4PM

You’re invited to join Art House on Thu 5/26 to celebrate the artistic accomplishments of Cleveland Municipal School students and resident artists. The Urban Bright exhibition will leave you thinking that yes, the kids are alright (talented, too!).

[Artwork by Amber, 8th grade]

Art House – 3119 Denison Ave. – Cle

http://ArtHouseInc.org

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Ctownartparty presents LIVE ART: Music & Arts Festival

Sat 5/28 – Sun 5/29 @ 12 – 10PM

Say “yo wat up” to the biggest, newest summer festival to hit Cleveland this year. Of course we’re talking about LIVE ART: Music and Arts Festival presented by ctownartparty. Head over to a revamped meat packaging plant in Ohio City for two days of pure artsy goodness featuring a slew of local artists, crafters, vendors, non-profits, filmmakers, food truck, musicians, fire eaters, DJs and entertainers. This fest is new and it’s hotHOThot!

The Hildebrandt Building – 3700 Clark Ave. – Cle

http://Ctownartparty.com

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