Interesting News Clips from the week thus far!

City owned Webster Block, currently a parking lot across the street from the First Niagara Stadium, is on the market. A Request for Proposals was sent out a few weeks ago, due back in in June.

The question is…

Is there any relationship between that RFP and this timely and generous donation by the Sabres. This is some of the first “real” private investment in the waterfront since the planning began, but based on the history of the relationships and investment, it’s possible that the investment is predicated on a future return.

The land that the Sabres have donated money towards for redevelopment is owned by the city.

The surprise “gift” surely must raise some questions

 

 

In better news, the Partnership for the Public Good, and other allies spoke powerfully on the “green” opportunities down on Canal Side.  Green operations and design have always been a critical part of the community benefits for canal side expressed in the current Waterfront Consensus Agreement, negotiated between the ECHDC and the Canal Side Community Alliance.

Here’s the article from the event yesterday! 

Outer Harbor land has all of sudden come into play as well. Stay tuned for that fight, and make sure you get out to ALL public meetings and continue to voice your opinion on how your money should be spent and on what.

What could that outer harbor look like and what could it do for Buffalo?

Please feel free to post your comments and reactions below.

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City keeps control of Webster Block, begins RFP process.

In February, Mayor Brown announced that his plans to keep the Webster block under the control of the city, as opposed to transferring the valuable land to the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corporation.

*the Webster Block is the block directly in front of the Sabres Arena downtown. It is currently a parking lot*

This past weekend, the Mayors office released an RFP (request for proposal) in an effort to draw in a multi-season attraction for residents and tourists.

The Canal Side Community Alliance continues to contend that any development on the waterfront needs to be follow high road economic development principles, like those set out in a community benefits agreement or negotiated agreement, including (but not limited to) green design and operations, quality jobs, opportunities for women and minority workers and businesses and local and independent business. Our tax dollars should be spent on sustainable communities that build reliable local economies.

We will urge the Mayor to challenge antiquated development models that will waste pressure public dollars, and identify development projects that truly reflect the unique needs and wants of our community, not of the developer.

Below are a few articles from the weekend that better describe the process for releasing the RFP and express the hopes of some elite stakeholders.

http://www.bizjournals.com/buffalo/news/2012/04/02/echdc-prez-expects-lots-of-webster.html?ana=e_du_pub&s=article_du&ed=2012-04-02

http://www.wgrz.com/news/article/163582/37/City-To-Open-Bidding-For-Webster-Block

If you had the money….what would you build on the Webster Block?

 

 

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Bass Pro money re-purposed for replica canals at Canalside-Buffalo NY

By Tom Precious

NEWS ALBANY BUREAU

Published:March 28, 2012, 1:35 PM

Updated: March 28, 2012, 1:35 PM

ALBANY — The Canalside project to build replica canals this summer in Buffalo will go forward after Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver today gave the final, needed consent for the construction effort at the former Memorial Auditorium site.

The Democratic leader approved spending $21 million on a contract awarded to DiPizio Construction Co. to build the historically aligned canals, as well as an ice skating rink and other features. Work is set to be started within months.

The project, which has a total pricetag of more than $23 million, was approved in December by the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corp. But the exact funding source had not been approved in advance by state officials.

The $21 million in state money for the project is coming from a pot of funds that has had at least a couple of previous lives for development deals in Buffalo that never materialized.

Most recently, the money had been earmarked for since-scuttled plans by Bass Pro Shops to build a mega-store in Buffalo. When that deal collapsed, the appropriated money sat in an unused state account awaiting a future direction.

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos recently approved a memorandum of understanding permitting the Bass Pro money to be redirected to the Canalside project.

But Silver did not sign it at first because Assembly officials said the issue was not raised until two weeks ago during the middle of sensitive negotiations on a series of major and unrelated policy matters. The Manhattan Democrat asked for the administration to provide information about the Canalside project before he would sign off on the deal. That led the administration to get a contract extension with DiPizio until April 5 for the memorandum of understanding to be signed.

“At some point there was a breakdown in communication where we were waiting for more information to arrive,” said Assemblyman Sean Ryan, a Buffalo Democrat. “But even though we’re in the middle of the budget, everyone in the Assembly recognized the importance of this project to Western New York.

“It’s very good news,” Ryan said of a construction project he said will employ a couple hundred people and be a key component of Canalside.

The Bass Pro funding memorandum was signed in May 2006 by Silver, former Gov. George E. Pataki and former Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno.

tprecious@buffnews.com

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Envisioning a Canal Side with Intelligent Development Principles/Canal Side Community Alliance meeting rescheduled!

Not everyone dreams of development principles and their impact. But for a moment lets close our eyes and picture what our waterfront would look like if public dollars were more wisely spent on creating a vibrant waterfront with family sustaining jobs, innovative green design, local businesses, and local hiring programs. Imagine a waterfront where people gather, not strictly to consume, but to commune, with one another and the water, and to gain a new vantage point of this wise old city.

This is what a Community Benefits Agreement is meant to do- Help us reach that vision.

Trying something new takes a visionary, and it takes a lot of work.  People need to be bought into that vision, and sometimes that’s extremely complicated given that changing how we do business is so difficult. But strong development principles, innovative economic development tools, and informed,dedicated, and active communities can shift how decisions are made, who makes those decisions, and ultimately who’s vision we build with public dollars.

A prime example of this is Bass Pro.  It was only after many people made their visions seen and heard that decision makers began to rethink how public subsidies should be spent. Bass Pro was not what residents felt represented their waterfront. Only through years of law suits, actions, rallies, letters to the editor, visits with elected officials, did the Bass Pro deal sink. But it took a long time and it took a lot of woman and man power.

All this to say that if we envision a waterfront that maximizes our public dollars through creating public goods, it can seem to move at a glacial pace because it’s new.  But it makes no less important. Turning away from corporations because they don’t have our community’s best interests in mind is  simply a new way to do business.

Here in Buffalo we should all be proud of the work that we’ve done, the courage that we’ve had to think differently, to operate with people, the planet and profit in mind rather than a single bottom line, and to have a vision for our waterfront.

Enough pontificating! In other news!

1.) The Canal Side Community Alliance will be having a meeting on Wednesday March 28th at 4:30pm. We had to reschedule due to some scheduling conflicts,namely the crash of a google calendar!   Please call Micaela at the Coalition for Economic Justice for more details, to RSVP or if you have any questions.

2.) 3 new board members were named to the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corporation this past week. Here are a few press clips. Sam Hoyt will temporarily act as the chair of the ECHDC, however we expect a permanent chair to be announced in the coming weeks.

As we posted before, the transition boasts new opportunities for the community and the waterfront. As long we continue to make our voices heard, our visions will become a reality!

http://www.speakupwny.com/ERIECANAL_DEVELOPMENT_.shtml

http://jamestown.ynn.com/content/all_news/575542/erie-canal-harbor-development-corp–chairman-resigns/

http://www.wivb.com/dpp/news/buffalo/levy-steps-down-as-chairman-of-echdc

http://wnymedia.net/2012/03/echdc-board-appointments/

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Erie Canal Harbor Development Corporation Board Meeting and Canal Side Alliance open meeting

On Monday, March 12th at 10:30am, the ECHDC will have their monthly board meeting at their offices-95 Perry on the 5th floor. The ECHDC is a public authority which means that they are subject to open meetings law, which means anyone and everyone is allowed to attend.

The board meetings have in the past, been short. Most important decisions seem to have been made prior to the meeting. But, as we stated in our last entry, the resignation of Jordan Levy as chair, should prove to be a new opportunity for a new board that embraces a more accountable and transparent process. To ensure this, we the public, the affected communities, residents of Western New York must be diligent and inquisitive, and demand answers so that we can fully understand where are money is being invested, why, and what the outcomes will be. These pools of public funding are not slush funds for developers or well connected business people. These dollars, now more than ever must be used to create quality jobs and a waterfront we can all be proud of.

I’d encourage you to attend the next meeting to see first hand how the ECHDC will respond to the changing environment and landscape.

In case you’re wondering what ever happened to Larry Quinn, check out the new blog-Investigative Post for a 2 part interview with Larry, former Erie Canal Harbor Development Corp board member. Larry reflects on the canal side project, his personal health and where the Billion 4 Buffalo should go.

Interested in how the negotiations process is going with the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corporation? Want a say how we proceed forward with the Community Benefits Agreement and our shared fight for a more viable, sustainable and equitable waterfront? Are you a member of the Canal Side Community Alliance?  (if you aren’t you should become one!)  Our next meeting is on March 22nd at 4:30.  We are close to settling this and prove that community voices heard will impact projects and will repurpose public funds towards projects that make sense for Buffalo.

 

Please give me a call at 892.5877 at the Coalition for Economic Justice for more details.

-Micaela

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Canal Side Community Alliance Responds to Levy Resignation from ECHDC Board

For Immediate Release

Contact-Micaela Shapiro-Shellaby
cell-518.879.6162
work-716.892.5877

Resignation marks new opportunities for Canal Side

 

Buffalo, NY- The resignation of Jordan Levy as the chairman of the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corporation (ECHDC) board creates a new opportunity for Buffalo waterfront development that benefits the entire community.

The Canal Side Community Alliance(CSCA),  a broad-based alliance of community, faith, and worker groups working towards economic development on the waterfront that creates opportunities for quality local jobs and local businesses,  views this transition as an opportunity to realize a  more accountable, transparent and  representative Erie Canal Harbor Development Board of Directors.  The Alliance has long advocated for direct community representation, not just business representation on the Board of directors.  There are currently three seats open on the ECHDC Board, leaving only four voting members and three non-voting members

“This is an opportunity to construct a board that will direct public funds towards the unique and fundamental needs of our community, rather than act as a funnel for well connected business interests,” said Micaela Shapiro-Shellaby, chair of the Canal Side Community Alliance and organizer with the Coalition for Economic Justice.  We look forward to continuing to work with the ECHDC to use smart growth development principles to create a highly sustainable and accessible waterfront for the people of Buffalo.”

“The 49 organizations of the Canal Side Community Alliance and the 109 partners of the Partnership for the Public Good call on Governor Cuomo to appoint new members of the ECHDC board who will represent the rich diversity of our community in the development of our prime public asset,” said Lou Jean Fleron, Co-Director of the Partnership for the Public Good, a key partner in the CSCA.

The Canal Side Community Alliance negotiated terms for Community Benefits Agreement with the ECHDC that would provide a framework to ensure the creation of quality jobs, green development and operations, prioritization for local and independent business, access for minorities to temporary and permanent jobs and public access to our most prized natural resource – our waterfront.

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The Living Wage Debate Continues….

For Canal Side Community Alliance members, the idea that subsidized businesses should pay living wages continues to be an imperative. Not only a moral imperative in that a job should lift an individual out of poverty, not keep them in it, but one that makes sense.Living wages are not the end all be all. Living wage policies are but one  piece of a broader vision  for a more equitable society, and accountable and transparent economic development.

The Fair Wages for New Yorkers Act, a bill before the NYC City Council would ensure that any developer or retailer who receives $1 million or more in subsidies to promote economic development pay a living wage for any jobs that are created. This bill, which has been altered greatly at the behest of Mayor Bloomberg and City Council President, Christine Quinn, has sparked a lively debate regarding the value and the impact of living wages on individuals, communities, and the market. At the heart of the debate is 1 fundamental issue ; the system of dolling out subsidies is broken-both sides of the debate seem to agree on this.

If corporations and developers want public money, then they MUST abide by certain ground rules. Otherwise, we are destined to continue the cycle that the Occupy movement has highlighted-the rich will continue to get richer, while the poor not only get poorer, but SUBSIDIZE the wealthy. This principle applies to Canal Side and its development. Bass Pro was a prime example of the poor subsidizing the rich. Johnny Morris and Bass Pro were making a profit even during the recession, and still demanded $35 Million in unrestricted funding and still  more in parking and other infrastructure.  It was not the elected officials that pulled the plug on this, it was the pressure from community activists that forced Bass Pro to leave the bait and find another city to exploit.

Ultimately, living wage policies should be accepted as what they are-a powerful response to a broken subsidy system and paralysis of policy makers. Such policies are not meant to repair the systems, but rather lessen the devastating impacts on the communities that corporate greed, neglect, and exploitation have.

Here are a few articles of interest regarding the debate around living wages and the Fair Wages for New Yorkers Act.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/20/nyregion/in-gilded-city-living-wage-plan-still-stirs-fears.html?_r=2

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/26/opinion/a-living-wage-long-overdue.html

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Letter to the Editor on Local Business and Canalside!

Below is the letter to editor written by Jeanenne Petri of West Side Stories. Jeanenne and West Side Stories are members of Buffalo First! a powerful partner in the Canal Side Community Alliance.

Thanks Jeanenne for your powerful works on the need for local business to anchor the development of our historic waterfront.

__________________________________________________________________

When plans for the redevelopment of Buffalo’s historic waterfront were first introduced to the public, the priority was given to a subsidized mega-retailer to serve as an anchor. This retailer often received significant public funding, while consistently failing to deliver on its economic responsibilities that justified the subsidies in the first place.

Since that time, we have seen the plans modified, but not entirely devoid of the prospect of a mega-retailer. However, through good-faith negotiations, the Canalside Community Alliance has pushed the Erie Canal Harbor Development Corp. to think local first.

When a community agreement is finalized, there will be provisions in place that make local business the backbone of real economic development at Canalside. First, the goal for locally owned businesses at Canalside will be set at 50 percent. Next, mechanisms will be put in place to monitor compliance with local hiring and minority and women-owned business enterprise goals. And, lastly, an individual will be hired to perform outreach with local and MWBE firms to ensure that they have the tools necessary to bid directly on ESDC contracts.

As a business owner on the West Side who knows firsthand how a neighbor-hood prospers from the investment of local business, I support the provisions. They embody the desire to see our tax dollars used for the purpose of real economic development—a local economy built on hard work, not subsidies, by those who live in the community, not outside of it, for the good of all, not just a few.

Local business and the entrepreneurial spirit should be the cornerstone on which all other development rests. I urge the ECHDC to swiftly negotiate an agreement that will make local business the anchor tenant at Canalside.

Jeanenne Petri

Owner, Westside Stories Used Books

Buffalo

Make local business anchor at Canalside

http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial-page/from-our-readers/letters-to-the-editor/article661604.ece

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5 Key Rules of Thumb for a “Good Deal”

Madeline Janis, co-founder and current director of LAANE (Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy), shares her thoughts on the 5 key criteria for publicly subsidized economic development projects in her latest blog post.

LAANE has won tremendous victories around high road economic development projects and won standards that have changes the lives of tens of thousands of people in the Los Angeles, California are. They are a leader in policy, research and innovative development models that are reshaping how we think about a new economy. They have paved the way for Alliances like the Canal Side Community Alliance and continue to build dynamic and robust alliances in order to create quality jobs, green infrastructure, a healthy environment and sustainable communities.

See Madeline’s blog post below, or at her blog, Frying Pan News.

“Best Laid Plans: Getting the Biggest Bang for Tax Bucks!”

by Madeline Janis

I have been a member of the L.A. Community Redevelopment Agency board of commissioners for nine years. That means I’m one of seven decision-makers overseeing the work of the city’s multimillion dollar economic development agency. All of my experience from those nine years can be summarized in the answer to one question:   What is a “good deal?”

When is the investment of scarce taxpayer dollars in private development projects a good idea? I know that the answer for some is “never.” That is not – and has never — been my view, (which is why I have been derided by some as a “redevelopment thug.”Fundamentally, the question of the investment worthiness of private economic development projects is one about good government, and how our government should interact with the private market.

I bring this up now because public subsidies to private industry were in the news again recently.  According to the New York Times on Saturday, November 12, the federal government has given billions of dollars to renewable energy projects over the past few years without asking for a lot in return. While the article made it sound as though the government wasted billions of taxpayer dollars, the article brought to mind the same question that I regularly ask myself: Was this federal program designed to catalyze new investment in renewable energy production “worthy” of precious federal dollars?

In the past nine years, I have come to believe that there are five key rules of thumb for crafting a good deal and making sure that  shrinking public resources are invested wisely. While the first two of these rules are clearly the most important and ones that I weigh most heavily, skipping a single one of these rules can result in bad things happening.

1. Know what you want for the program or the project. Do you want to create affordable housing, parks, sustainable energy? If you don’t know the answer to this question, you’ll probably support something that the public doesn’t want or need. In the case of the renewable energy program, the goals seem to be clearly articulated. High marks on this one.

2. Act like an investor, with taxpayers as your shareholders. This actually means two things, in my experience:

a. have underwriting guidelines like a bank does. This means both the basic financial things like ensuring that the proposed recipient is credit worthy and has a good plan, but also that there is real criteria around “a return on investment.” Concrete things like the creation of good jobs, more sustainable industries, affordable housing, grocery stores in food deserts, etc. In exchange for the public subsidy, government expects private industry to create certain community benefits in return.

b. drive a hard bargain. This means negotiating with the subsidy applicant like he or she is on the other side of the table, not on the same side. Recognize that the applicant may have shared goals, like the creation of renewable energy capacity, but the interest of a private company is to make money and the interest of the public investor is to create public good.

Without examining the documents, it’s hard to know whether the federal officials had good underwriting guidelines and drove a hard bargain. Having clear criteria about results is a big part of the puzzle, however.

3. Imagine the worst and write the agreement from that perspective. Just like in the private sector, deals go bad and thought needs to be put into protecting the public investment as much as possible. Meaning, the agreement needs to be enforceable and clear, with concrete remedies just in case the company does not follow through with its commitments. I am constantly surprised at the number of developers who put forward – with a straight face – proposed agreements that call for “commercially reasonable efforts” to create jobs or comply with core elements of the project proposal. This is what I always say: “commercially reasonable” or “best efforts” or “good faith effort” is the same to me as times zero, meaning worthless.

4. Make sure that everything is signed, sealed and delivered before final public approval. I am also surprised at how many times a developer will emphasize the “urgent” nature of the project and insist that the final public approval be done (meaning a vote by the board or the decision-making body) before all of the “details” have been worked out. If I don’t see a finalized agreement with all blanks filled in and a signature on the document from the private company getting the money, I vote No. I have learned from experience that human memory is short and if the final “agreement” is not signed, sealed and delivered, multiple drafts will miraculously “appear” later on with significantly different terms.

5. Be sure that the systems are in place to monitor compliance with the agreement and to evaluate results of the investment.

While it’s difficult to know whether federal officials cited in the N.Y. Times piece met the criteria in three through five, it’s important to recognize that good government is a difficult balancing act. Well-intentioned people can disagree as to whether it makes sense to invest scarce public resources in general or in a particular project. But having criteria, being committed to an open public process and ongoing evaluation, will guarantee better long-term results that are more reflective of our values as a society than what we would get if we left things up to the invisible hand of the market.

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Some interesting clips from the Buffalo News

Good Morning!

Another week, another challenging piece of news. The Buffalo News released a story on Friday describing the challenges African Americans are facing in the current economic crisis and found that twice as many blacks were unemployed as whites. And the situation is getting more severe.

The complications around employment are complex.  Transportation, experience, the US’s economic crisis, are only a few of the identified impediments to to employment. There are workforce development programs to help build out skill sets, but some of their funding has been cut, which leaves people with few other options.

Rethinking economic development will address skyrocketing unemployment and fiscal instability. It’s so fundamentally clear that handing out government subsidies and cash to developers or the private sector, without clear standards and a process by which they must operate has not worked. It’s reached the point of foolishness, or insanity. Benjamin Franklin defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. And this is what we have been doing-Adopting the same policies entrenched in a flawed system. While Congress fought over the debt ceiling and Obama continued his (failed?) attempts to bring the two parties together, more people lost their jobs, and unemployment continued to strangle families and communities.

So, what’s the solution? There clearly does not exist one singular solution to job creation and corporate accountability, however there are significant changes we can make or encourage our elected officials to make. We need standards for development projects funded by public money. The Canal Side Community Alliance as always stated that public money should create public goods. We need accountability and clawback measures. If recipients of public money do not perform in the way they committed, the money they receive should be returned. In any other scenario, a faulty product is taken back, and a refund is for the most part, mandatory. We need to be confident in how our money is being spent and there must be guarantees that provide us this confidence.

If there was any time to focus intently on job creation and maximizing public expenditures, it is now. Putting people to work now, in good playing jobs, will rebuild our struggling economy. And it will ONLY happen, if we demand it.

A Community Benefits Agreement is only the start. Hopefully someday, such standards that have negotiated into CBA’s will just be standard practice.  Hopefully this standard practice incorporates mechanisms for building out skill sets for the unemployed or underemployed, inspired by the objective observation that we  cannot succeed as country, without focusing on those that are struggling the most. Ignoring the problem and feeding the fat cats, will only encourage recessions, disillusionment, and alienation.

Growing unemployment in this era is unacceptable. New leadership and new visioning is essential.  As Kevin Connor, Executive Director of the Public Accountability Initiative, noted in his most recent editorial in the Buffalo News, new leadership in the ECHDC is necessary to protect the common good. The Board has opened the door to the public a bit wider after loud calls for inclusion and transparency were made, and bringing in community members and new fresh voices can only perpetuate these changes in policy.

We continue our negotiations with the ECHDC. No one said this would be easy or fast, and while its been arduous, it’s never been dull. There has been a shift in the power dynamics that is  hard to ignore. We have a real seat at the decision making table adn we fully intend to make the most of it….not just for this project, but as a model for future publicly subsidized projects in WNY and elsewhere.

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