Friday, July 28, 2006

BRADY STREET ARTISAN FOOD FESTIVAL

For the third year, Brady Street will be closed off this Sunday for the annual Brady Street Artisan Food Festival. This year, a Ferris wheel will be erected west of N. Humboldt Av., at the east side thoroughfare's highest point. As always, there will be cheese for sale.
The cheese comes from the American Cheese Society Conference, held last weekend in Portland, Oregon. Cheese judges only need to use a small amount of the product for their evaluation, and 1,400 pounds of the rest was bought by the folks on Brady Street where it will be offered for sale in one-pound portions for the bargain price of $7 a pound.
I was there at St. Rita's Church kitchen yesterday afternoon when the cheese arrived after its journey from Portland, and a brief stay in the Patrick Cudahy coolers. Dozens of varieties of cheese emerged from insulated boxes, while volunteers sliced and diced them. They will be offered for sale on Sunday beginning at 10 a.m. Last year, the stuff sold out in hours.
The idea of the event is to reconnect urban folk with the source of their food. Wisconsin is well positioned in this area, since the state is increasingly being recognized as being in the forefront of sustainable agriculture and innovative artisan food products. For example, state cheesemakers took 69 awards at the cheese society conference, more than any other state.
I've spent years of my recent life moving from one apartment to another in the Brady Street neighborhood, usually just ahead of the remodeling contractors. I have seen Brady Street festivals evolve from hippie utopia dream-ins about returning to nature to today's reality, where connecting with our food suppliers and our neighbors is increasingly a mainstream concern.
For more information, you can check out www.bradyst.com
--Michael Horne

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

WHOSE SCANDAL IS IT, ANYWAY?

REPUBLICANS TRY, FAIL, TO SHIFT BLAME TO DEMS ON KENILWORTH PROJECT


By Michael Horne

"Legislator may profit from UWM project." That was the headline in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel for this article that appeared in the December 23rd, 2003 edition. The legislator, Rep. Curt Gielow (R-Mequon), was a limited partner and consultant to Prism Development Co., the firm chosen to redevelop the Kenilworth Building for UWM. Gielow became involved in the project while he was serving on the board of the UWM Foundation, (he was once president) yet before he ran for the assembly.
Prism was awarded the contract, but the award was later rescinded once the Doyle administration took office, in part due to publicity regarding Gielow's involvement with the project. This seems to have been forgotten in the most recent spate of J/S articles about the Kenilworth, and bears examination.
Prism has since sued former Doyle Secretary of Administration Marc Marotta, saying he was inappropriately involved with the selection process that ultimately led to the choice of Weas Development for the 500,000 sq. ft. project, which is nearing completion on E. Kenilworth Pl., between N. Farwell and N. Prospect avenues. Weas was chosen in a second round, after the initial proposals were rejected.
The Prism suit is now in the headlines of the paper, which has apparently completely forgotten that this scandal was inherited by the Doyle administration from its predecessor Republican administration of Scott McCallum.
If anything, the Prism contract award was by far the scandalous event, although no prosecution took place.
Now, we have the Democratic Attorney General, Peggy A. Lautenschlager, informing the public that her office is investigating Doyle, her predecessor, for the contract award.

One person key to the events is Jim Plaisted, the executive director of the East Side Business Improvement District #20.

His recollections are deposition-worthy, and show a much different picture of the negotiations for the project than appear in the newspaper. The BID was created in 1998; Plaisted has been involved in the project from the beginning. As early in 1999, the master plan for the neighborhood identified the Kenilworth Building (formerly a Ford Motor Company plant) as a catalyst for the redevelopment of the area.
Plaisted served on a committee in 2000 to discuss the redevelopment of the property. In line with his responsibilities to the neighborhood, Plaisted sought community input and involvement in the project.
In 2002, when the project was finally ready for bids,"I contacted UWM and asked them for a chance to review the RFP (request for proposal) before it went out, and was rebuffed," Plaisted said. Nonetheless, the project went out for bid and Prism, the firm with connections to now-Rep. Gielow, was selected.
"The RFP was poorly drafted, bureaucratic in nature and offered no review role for the neighborhoods involved or the City of Milwaukee for that matter. ... Several responders mentioned how poorly the RFP was constructed, and only two offered serious proposals: Prism Development and Cullen/Scion," Plaisted says.
Plaisted says he offered to alert the bidders to his concerns during the review process, but was told by UWM officials that there "was no room for negotiating the details of their proposal before the State awarded the development contract to Prism."
[In fact, it has since been documented that Prism officials indeed were able to make their own revisions to the proposal during the State review. This is significant, since changes during State review was a significant factor in the controversy involving the State travel contract awarded to Adelman Travel.]
Plaisted says there were problems with both proposals, since each included student housing levels of over 400 units, an amount that would be unacceptable to the neighborhoods in the vicinity.
Plaisted, with his BID, the Water Tower Landmark Trust and city officials, then contacted the state legislators for the area, Rep. Jon Richards and Sen. Jeff Plale, and expressed their concerns that the development was "dead in the water if it comes before the community as proposed, and that the process was flawed from the beginning by not taking into account neighborhood and City perspectives." Not to mention the Gielow / Prism connection.
Plaisted then attended a meeting in Richards' office with Marotta, UWM officials, Plale, and Alderman Michael S. D'Amato.
The state officials and UWM then agreed to advise the State Building Commission to reissue the RFP, thus angering the Prism officials, who had assumed the contract would be theirs. "I'm assuming the community concerns were the straw that broke the camel's back," Plaisted says.
The project was rebid in 2003, this time with community input, and the result is the Weas project, which seems destined to receive many awards when it opens later this year. Weas, Plaisted says, was open to working with the neighborhood groups. The process, he says, "was conducted in an above-board manner with community stakeholders at the table."
As far as Marotta's involvement, which is the subject of Prism's politically-motivated suit, Plaisted says, "I don't recall one instance [during the process] where anyone in the room mentioned talking to Secretary Marotta or having to consult with him. The only time I ever talked to him was in the meeting in Rep. Richard's office."
"What is interesting to note from my perspective and in light of Spivak & Bice's premise [expressed in their columns about the Prism v. Marotta lawsuit] is that the very flawed and secretive first RFP process was started by the Republican administration of Scott McCallum and awarded to a future Republican lawmaker. It doesn't appear that this first RFP is up for the same scrutiny from Spivak & Bice. Why?"

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