Councilman Zack Reed tries to explain Council’s maneuvering to members of GCC, when referendum petitions were denied on 5/22/17. Credit: Sam Allard / Scene
Cleveland City Council met Wednesday afternoon. It was the legislative body’s final meeting before September 18, but four councilpeople — Mike Polensek, Zack Reed, Jeff Johnson, and Kevin Conwell — had written a letter to Council President Kevin Kelley earlier in the week asking that the next meeting be moved up.

If the next meeting were held on or before Sep. 6, the letter said, council would have an opportunity to vote to have the Q Deal referendum on the November ballot (provided, of course, that the petition signatures had been certified by the Board of Elections). This would eliminate the need for a costly special election in 2018.

“By doing so,” read the letter, “the Democratic process is respected, and the citizens’ right to vote is upheld. In addition, it will save the city of Cleveland over $700,000 for the cost of a special election, which would only anger the citizens even more than they are already over this matter.”

But the issues addressed in the letter did not come up at the council meeting. Council passed a series of other pieces of legislation — including a big spending package targeted at neighborhood development — but if Mike Polensek and Jeff Johnson hadn’t made comments during the meeting’s “miscellaneous” portion, the Q Deal referendum would’ve gone ignored.

“I asked them if they were Democrats,” Polensek told Scene in a phone call after the meeting. “Do you believe in democratic principles? Because I’m looking at this body and I don’t recognize it anymore. What’s the point of City Council if you’re just going to do what the rich and powerful want done in this city?”

Polensek objected to what he viewed as deliberate stalling tactics by city leadership, and said that council meeting dates have been changed in the past.

“Who are they kidding?” Polensek said. “They might be fooling the newbies, but I was Council President. We’ve changed dates before, if there was a death in the family or another emergency. As long as everyone gets advance notice, you can set the date whenever you want with the concurrence of council.”

Kelley, who did not respond to the councilman’s comments at the time, had reportedly opened the meeting with remarks about Donald Trump and leadership. He’d issued a statement earlier in the week denouncing white supremacy in the wake of the violence in Charlottesville. Polensek said Kelley and council should use this opportunity to distance themselves from Donald Trump.

“Show real leadership,” Polensek said, growing agitated on the phone. “Send a message that we stand with the people. How many ridiculous arguments are you going to make? How many roadblocks are going to throw in front of the citizens? It’s embarrassing.”

Kevin Kelley, when reached by Scene, said that even though Mike Polensek might no longer recognize the body, he recognized a council that “appropriated millions of dollars to invest in neighborhoods that have been largely abandoned by the private sector in an effort to leverage additional private sector investment; a Council that appropriated over $2 million to the Cleveland/Cuyahoga Office of Homeless Services; and a Council that passed legislation to further our efforts to attack the opiate crisis.”

Regarding the Q Deal, Kelley said there was nothing to comment on until the submitted petitions have been certified, “other than that we will follow the directive of the court and the provisions of the Charter.”  

Polensek held that the directive of the Ohio Supreme Court was already clear — the citizens have a right to vote, and council should facilitate that vote in the most efficient, fiscally responsible way. But he said he’s expecting leadership to ignore the issue.

“They’re going to put [the Q Deal] on the ballot in the dead of friggin’ winter,” he said. “They’re hoping the snow is three feet deep and you’ll have to ride a friggin’ dog sled to get to the polls. This is a wonderful bunch.” 

Sam Allard is a former senior writer at Scene.

3 replies on “Weary Polensek Grills Council, But November Q Deal Referendum Unlikely”

  1. Kevin Kelley may believe that he will be the prohibitive mayoral front-runner when Frank Jackson rides away on a dirt bike and into retirement, but he better do some heavy analysis of George Forbes….as George Voinovich was preparing to pave a path southbound to take his talents to the governor’s office.

  2. second verse…same as the first
    This issue is the absurdity of absurdities. Let me get this straight: the
    purpose of the Sin Tax is to gouge those who purchase alcohol and cigarettes
    not because anyone is trying to discourage consumption but rather so the
    County can use that money to pay for sports stadiums that do not produce
    anything but a fleeting moment witnessing the passing of a football, the
    dribbling of a basketball and the throwing of a baseball so that such a minute
    tidbit of diversion can be enjoyed by all. The stupidity of this proposition is
    enough to make your head spin even though the spin doctors advocating
    passage of this nonsense are already doing a pretty good job of hypnotizing
    the voters to actually consider supporting it. At least the Robber Barons
    of the previous centuries provided something tangible such as oil, steel,
    railroads etcetera. These team owners do not even provide one tangible thing
    that could ever be considered with the term value added. Almost everyone
    discusses this enterprise as though it is the same thing as industry {which
    it is not}. The price of admission is essentially a voluntary tax paid by those
    who can afford it to pay those who dont need it. If this isnt a transfer of
    wealth I dont know what is.

    The real outrage here is the fact that taxes on alcohol and cigarettes will
    not be used to aid in the reduction of addiction {hence the reference to sin}
    but rather to stuff the pockets of all three teams who could easily afford to
    pay for the repairs themselves. The vote was rammed through the last time
    {under somewhat suspicious circumstances} and hear we go again. But this
    time…not so fast!!! We the voters of Cuyahoga County are going to fight the
    proponents on this one and we don’t care if the teams up and go somewhere
    else {please see my views on entertainment below} because quite frankly there
    are simply more important things than sports and the unearned money that
    comes with it. Those in public office who are too stupid and lazy to find other
    ways to grow a major American city need to resign and leave their self-seeking
    political ambitions on the scrapheap of history. Dont ever let it be said that
    this was time when the tide ran out on Cuyahoga County but rather was the
    time when the voters rose up to welcome the rising tide of change and rebuked
    this pathetic paradigm our previous elected leaders embraced.
    Let the battle be joined.

    And now to the real underlying issue at hand:

    One of the most disturbing facts about our capitalist nation is the
    misappropriation of funds directed to the salaries of entertainers.
    Everyone should agree that the value an athlete, movie star, talk-show host,
    team-owner, etcetera brings to the average citizen is very small. Granted,
    they do offer a minuscule of diversion from our daily trials and
    tribulations as did the jesters in the king’s court during the middle ages.
    But to allow these entertainers to horde such great amounts of wealth at the
    expense of more benevolent societal programs is unacceptable.
    They do not provide a product or a service so why are they rewarded as such?

    Our society is also subjected to the “profound wisdom” of these people
    because it equates wealth with influence. Perhaps a solution to this
    problem and a alternative to defeated school levies, crumbling
    infrastructures, as well as all the programs established to help feed,
    clothe and shelter those who cannot help themselves would be to tax this
    undeserved wealth. Entertainers could keep 1% of the gross earnings reaped
    from their endeavor and 99% could be deposited into the public coffers.

    The old ideas of the redistribution of wealth have failed, and it is time to
    adapt to modern-day preferences. People put their money into entertainment
    above everything else; isn’t it time to tap that wealth? Does anyone think
    this will reduce the quality of entertainment? It seems to me that when
    entertainers received less income, the quality was much higher.

  3. The Men Behind The Curtain will most assuredly be willing to come up with the funds for a special election in the dead of winter…After all, the cost represents less than one percent of the $80 million they wish to siphon off the local tax base (in addition, of course, to sin tax receipts) for Mr. Gilbert’s Personal Xanadu…an amount that can easily be recovered through the inevitable cost overruns for the project…

    And they NEED a special election…The way they plan to get Frank Jackson re-elected is to pump up voter turnout in the African-American community for the November election…These are precisely the same folks who are currently most likely to oppose the Q deal…Placing the issue on the November ballot thus presents them with a problem: an open election might not yield the results they want…A special election in February or March would make it MUCH easier to suppress turnout and manipulate the process…

    (I must admit, though…to read of Council members’ sudden interest in the cost to taxpayers, given their utter capitulation to the oligarchs, seems as quaint as it is unintentionally ironic…to me, anyway)…

Comments are closed.