Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Part 2 of “If I Supported a Baseball Stadium...”

Yesterday, I started a three-part article about what MCC might do to regain public trust in order to get support for the baseball stadium that four of its board members (George Lowe, Barbara Walters, Mary Miller and Carol Larson) desire so ardently.

With the public relations disaster that McHenry County College has managed to create, it seems to me that the board has to start from scratch.

That's what I told Northwest Herald General Manager and Executive Editor Chris Krug before the McHenry County Economic Development Corporation's dinner last Thursday night.

Admit that the college will be irreparably harmed if it proceeds without starting the process over.

Everyone who thinks the college can pass a referendum, please raise your hand.

Anyone who thinks Mary Miller is not going to be challenged if she runs for re-election next spring, let me know.

And, if you want to run, let me know.

Needless to say, people are organizing to support some opponent of this consistent baseball stadium supporter. In laying her hands on the goodness of the baseball stadium, Miller touted her credentials as a CPA.

Now I know why we don't let CPA's run government.

Earning the designation obviously does not guarantee analytical ability on public policy issues.

Here's how Miller was quoted in the April 26, 2006, board minutes:
“Ms. Miller(‘s) refer(ring) to her CPA standing and stat(ing) that all the figures are in order for us to go ahead with this.”
So, why was a re-do of the numbers necessary after Economics Research Associates savaged Mark Houser's EquityOne presentation she avowed was ”in order?”

In a Freedom of Information request, I asked for any documentation to back up her professional judgment.

Needless to say, there was none.

I was told to look at an analysis of construction costs by PMA Consultants, the same outfit that advised Huntley School District 158 that it needed a 55-cent tax rate hike.

PMA's analysis of construction costs speaks not one sentence about whether the baseball team receipts will pay off the cost of the bonds to build the stadium.

And, that, of course, is the real issue in this fight.

Show me a written analysis of the numbers and maybe I might regain the respect I used to have for the designation “C.P.A.”

So, start the process over.

What does this mean?

Do you know there were two baseball promoters who wanted to build a stadium in Crystal Lake?

One was making real progress in Harvard until the McHenry County College Board decided to ink a sweetheart deal with Pete Heitman, a buddy of Equity One's Mark Houser.

A fresh starts demands that competing promoters be given a fair shot.

Such presentations should be at public hearings, where both the public and the board get to ask questions.

We can hear how much money each group is willing to put up.

How does each propose to pay for the stadium?

What will the amount of public subsidy be, if any?

Harvard's group, by the way, plans to pay for its own stadium; Heitman's wants us to bet on the success of his scheme.

There's absolutely no reason for secrecy.

And, speaking of secrecy, the public has a right to know who the investors are.

When I was at the Crystal Lake City Council meeting looking at the staff reports on various proposals, you know what I found?

Petitioners must reveal everyone who has a beneficial interest in their properties.

The college must demand the same information from those with whom it signs leases.

I was pleased that Krug agreed.

Part 3 tomorrow.

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Friday, January 11, 2008

Algonquin CPA Rich Evans Launches Write-In Campaign for County Auditor

McHenry County Blog has received the following email from Algonquin resident Rich Evans, a CPA who applied for appointment as McHenry County Auditor when Ruth Rooney decided to retire.

Rooney's deputy, Pam Palmer, was appointed by the McHenry County Board and selected by the McHenry County Republican Central Committee to appear on the fall 2006 ballot.

Palmer is being challenged in the GOP primary election on the ballot by Richard Kelly, Jr.

Here is the email I received:
Dear Members of Illinois Office Holders, Workers, Candidates and Citizens:

I would like to announce a Write In campaign for the position of McHenry County Auditor.

The selection process involved seven candidates who interviewed with the County Board before an appointment was made. The process was manipulated so that there would not be any real vote or complete review to select a CPA for this important position.

So now we have an election on February 5th and I would appreciate your support in the quick campaign and somewhat uphill battle of a Write In Campaign.

Best regards,

Rich Evans CPA
815-347-6377
He has a leaflet that contains the following information:

VOTE Write In

February 5, 2008

Richard Evans CPA

for

McHenry County Auditor

Write In

CPA, Risk Manager and Insurance Auditor

Over 20 years of experience doing operational & financial audits

Record of recovering funds due according to purchase contracts

Experience in claims, risk management process

Willing to hold the line on taxes and spending

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Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Scholarly Studies on the Economic Impact of Baseball Stadiums

I learned something new about Google over the weekend.

There is a search engine for scholarly articles.

Want to guess what subject held my interest?

It’s whether baseball stadiums are all that McHenry County College officials have cracked them up to be.

Here’s the link to “local government” and “minor league baseball."

And, take a look at this one, too. Its search items are “minor league baseball” and “investment.”

Do you think in doing the “due diligence” that MCC board members attorney Scott Summers and Mary Miller, http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=18132518&postID=5170660480287301800 a Crystal Lake CPA, read any of them?

Think the supposedly academically-minded college staff examined any?

(I’ve got an idea? I’ll ask them?)

MCC also refused to release a supposed “due diligence” review by an outfit called PMA. They were the folks paid by Huntley School District 158 to tell it that an unneeded referendum was necessary.

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