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Cleveland Public Meetings Report – The week of May 8
Meeting coverage by Cleveland Documenters | Compiled by Signal Cleveland’s Doug Breehl-Pitorak and Anastazia Vanisko | Edited by Rachel Dissell and Mary Ellen Huesken
Here’s what happened last week in local public government meetings covered by Cleveland Documenters.
Residents ask Cleveland City Council to support accessible housing.
Accessible and affordable senior housing: Two public commenters spoke to City Council about the need for affordable, age-friendly housing. Diana Cyganovich and Marge Misak belong to Cleveland Westside Village, a volunteer community that aims to help people age in their homes. They urged City Council to raise accessibility standards in the city’s housing code. “Cleveland is an age-friendly city according to AARP [American Association of Retired Persons] and the World Health Organization, but are we really?” Cyganovich asked. Accessible housing should include at least one entrance with no steps and first-floor living, she said.
Curious about housing accessibility in Cleveland? Illustrator John G. and Documenter Nat Ziegler take on the issue in this comic series.
Cleveland City Council talks community benefits of new construction
Covered by Documenter Keith Yurgionas
The ABCs of CBAs: City Council members discussed a proposed law that would set city requirements for Community Benefits Agreements (CBAs). In this context, CBAs are contracts intended to make sure publicly funded construction projects benefit the community. The city has used CBAs for 10-plus years. This legislation “sets the legal framework for how Community Benefits Agreements are developed,” said Jennifer Heinert O’Leary, a City Council lawyer.
Equity and opportunity: If the city gives a project $250,000 or more in funding or financial incentives, here are some things developers would have to do:
- Meet the city’s diversity goals with vendors (O’Leary said there is room for improvement, noting that in 2021, only 6.5% of the city’s contracts went directly to minority-owned businesses)
- Mentor minority- and women-owned businesses and Cleveland small businesses
- Offer pathways to jobs for Cleveland adults and Cleveland high school students
- Improving neighborhoods with street paving, greenspace, bike paths, and more
- Offering affordable housing or putting money into a fund for it
- Giving job opportunities to people who were formerly incarcerated
Officials also discussed a community survey about new construction. City Council launched it last December. As of May 6, 350-plus people had taken it. Take the survey.
Violence interrupters urge committee to support new safety fund
Covered by Documenters Monica Doyle and Gennifer Harding-Gosnell
Fighting for the last word: The legislation would give the Cleveland Foundation the final say on who receives grants. Council Member Richard Starr argued that City Council should be doing that. An advisory committee including council members would recommend grantees to the foundation, but the foundation would not have to fund them. Council members voted to increase the number of council reps on the advisory committee. They also voted to require that those council appointees report back quarterly. Starr was the only committee member to vote against the changes, saying, “It doesn’t solve anything.” City Council’s Finance, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee was set to review the proposal at its May 15 meeting.
Note: The Cleveland Foundation is one of Signal Cleveland’s funders.
Bookmark our Meeting Briefs page for more short summaries, and visit Documenters.org for all Documenters coverage.
Committee learns about plans for vacant school buildings
Covered by Documenters Carolyn Cooper and Nicholas Ventura
School redevelopment: The city is set to transfer two vacant Cleveland schools to developers for renovation. The developers will pay up to $110,000 total for the two properties. According to city official Trudy Andrzejewski, some Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) properties have been vacant for more than 10 years. The two projects—Empire School in Ward 9 and Nathaniel Hawthorne School in Ward 16—will include new housing. The Empire School redevelopment will include affordable housing for seniors.