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Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

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  • Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

    Portland, the Paulsons, and Bye Bye Baseball

    Dave Zirin and Jules Boykoff | November 1, 2010

    In Portland, Oregon, professional baseball has become the latest casualty in a two-year-long battle with the local sports franchise bosses over whether the Rose City would become the latest locale to pay for a massive, publicly funded stadium. The people said no so the owners shamefully sold the minor league Portland Beavers to an out of state buyer. Greed may have killed baseball in Portland. But these aren’t just any ordinary owners. They’re Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and his 30-something son Merritt who parachuted into Portland in 2007. The son is 80 percent owner while the father—the Bush cabinet official who infamously flung a 3-page TARP proposal [1]in front of Congress that was “non-reviewable...by any court of law or any administrative agency”—holds the rest.

    The Paulsons still hold sway over the Portland Timbers soccer team, but they’ve sold the baseball Beavers [2]—to a group led by San Diego Padres owner Jeff Moorad. The local media didn’t blame the Paulsons for selling out baseball from the city, but the people of Portland for not supporting the socializing of stadium debt. John Canzano, the lead sports columnist for the Oregonian, ranted that city leaders “sat in the shadows, shrugging at one another, afraid to ask Portland to act like a major city…What kind of city does Portland want to be?”

    Put simply, it’s a city that should be emulated across a country that has been soaked by public-funding stadium scams. Canzano’s yipping aside, the real story about how the city turned the Paulsons back, should be shouted from the hills.

    In the Rose City, citizens banded together and stopped the shakedown. When boosters tried to foist the baseball stadium on the working-class neighborhood of Lents, residents across the political spectrum formed Friends of Lents [3], a group that heckled Paulson Jr. at public meetings and eventually scuttled the absurd proposal to divert already allocated scarce urban renewal funds to multi-millionaires.

    After the citizens of Lents turned them back, Portland Mayor Sam Adams suggested tearing down the Memorial Coliseum, but war vets protested vociferously alongside angry architects who wanted to preserve the building’s unique glass frame as a “modernist marvel.” (Architects of Portland, unite! You have nothing to lose but your pocket protectors!). Then the Paulsons attempted to put the baseball team in suburban Beaverton where community organizers, local business owners, and elected officials turned them away.

    As the process unfolded, Merritt Paulson changed his company’s name from Shortstop LLC to Peregrine LLC. If you’re not an ornithologist you should know that the peregrine falcon is a cosmopolitan bird of prey that swoops in and feasts on unsuspecting everyday birds like ducks and pigeons. Fortunately for Portland, activists have refused to play the role of sitting ducks.

    What’s more, activists accomplished this in the face of unflinching pro-Paulson boosterism from the local newspaper, the Oregonian. While Merritt Paulson challenged critics “to find a better deal out there for the city,” the Oregonian chastised those who took up the challenge as “shortsighted.” The editorial board wrote condescendingly [4], “Portlanders have a bad habit of thinking small.” Even with the mainstream mass-media deck stacked against them, activists, their allies, and the independent media, pressed ahead, ultimately reducing the Paulsons’ audacious $85 million ask to $11.9 million in city loans that that will be repaid through a “spectator fund” comprised of parking and ticket revenue from NBA and MLS games. This money will go toward the new soccer stadium only as the baseball team is now tragically gone.

    That’s not to say it was a total victory. Taxpayers are still doling out nearly $12 million to the super-rich rather than putting that revenue toward social services, mass transit, or the dilapidated infrastructure. In Portland, the Sellwood Bridge [5] recently earned a National Bridge Inventory safety rating of two (out of one hundred), while the I-35W bridge that collapsed in 2007 scored a fifty. The true cost of such priorities was seen in Minneapolis/St. Paul in 2008, when the Mississippi River bridge collapsed the same week a $300 million public stadium was due to break ground.

    Portland did not have to lose its baseball team. The Paulsons didn’t need the taxpayer to become their sugar daddy when Daddy Paulson is worth $700 million.

    And thanks to a loophole in the tax code, Paulson saved a whopping $100 million when he moved from Goldman Sachs to head the Treasury Department in 2006. By simply scoring a “certificate of divestiture” from the Office of Government Ethics, Paulson was free to sell [6] off his 3.23 million Goldman shares—valued at approximately $484 million—without paying a penny of taxes. This gargantuan tax break alone would have covered the entire stadium-building scheme from start to finish without any public financing whatsoever. Clearly, they could have afforded land for their stadium-building venture, but going this route would have meant paying for the project themselves. That would have meant breaking the unwritten code of domino theory in owner-land. If you pay your own way, others might be pushed to do the same.

    The Paulsons sold the Beavers down the Willamette River and out of Portland. We have to raise more options than either forking over tax dollars to aristocrats or losing the team. It’s time to start looking at what it would mean to press for public ownership if billionaires won’t play ball. What better city to start with than Portland? And who better to start with, than the Paulsons?

    http://www.thenation.com/print/blog/...e-bye-baseball

  • #2
    Re: Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

    Meanwhile, on the other coast...

    "For Nets fans, the arrival of a 6-foot-8-inch bachelor billionaire, last seen on “60 Minutes” bantering with models in a Moscow disco and brandishing a Kalashnikov at home, seemed too good to be true."

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/31/ma...rov-t.html?hpw

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    • #3
      Re: Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

      LOL! Good for Portland.

      The entire $85MM price tag is only about 8% of dad's fortune, but they'd rather get taxpayers to foot the bill. Brazen.
      I looked up young Merritt's bio. College and Harvard MBA, then a quick job in the marketing department of the NBA, then a stint at HBO.
      Now he somehow has $16 million for a sports team of his very own.
      It's GOOD to be an oligarch, even if the poor little fella has to buy his own stadium.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

        Originally posted by don View Post
        ...What’s more, activists accomplished this in the face of unflinching pro-Paulson boosterism from the local newspaper, the Oregonian. While Merritt Paulson challenged critics “to find a better deal out there for the city,” the Oregonian chastised those who took up the challenge as “shortsighted.” The editorial board wrote condescendingly [4], “Portlanders have a bad habit of thinking small.”...

        One of the early owners of the Oregonian newspaper was Portland lumber magnate Henry Lewis Pittock. Nobody could accuse him of "thinking small"...

        The mansion is open to the public and is worth a visit if you find yourself in Portland with time on your hands - now that there's no baseball to watch.

        [Can't help but note that it took the Pittocks almost as long to build this thing as I am taking to complete the bunker ]

        "...Pittock Mansion was built high above the city on Imperial Heights in the West Hills of Portland. Built by Henry and Georgiana Pittock between 1909 and 1914, the mansion's bright, red-tiled roof can be seen from many points in the metropolitan area, and is, according to Classic Houses of Portland, “the most beloved…of all the great houses of Portland….It typifies the success of the nineteenth-century American entrepreneurial spirit.”

        The Pittocks were among Portland's most influential, respected, and wealthiest citizens at the turn of the twentieth century. Henry Pittock was the owner of the Oregonian, and Georgiana Burton Pittock was engaged in many community projects and was a founder of the Portland Rose Festival. In 1909, when he was seventy-three years old and she was sixty-four, they hired Oregon-born architect Edward T. Foulkes from San Francisco to design a 16,000-square-foot home on the 46-acre wooded estate, a thousand feet above sea level. The Pittocks moved into their new home in 1914, only a few years before both died, she in 1918 and he a year later.

        The exterior of the mansion is French Renaissance, but the interior is a collection of styles, from the oak-paneled and carved Jacobethan library with an elaborate plastered ceiling to the French-style oval drawing room with oak parquet-bordered floor, friezes, and capped cornice at the ceiling. Adjoining is a round Turkish smoking room with a painted ceiling and Tiffany glazes, created by artist Harry Wentz, and a formal Edwardian dining room with rich mahogany-paneled built-in cabinets. A mirror on the west wall is positioned to show a reflection of Mt. Hood, giving everyone sitting around the table a view of the mountain.

        The most prominent interior feature is the central stairwell, which occupies one-third of the mansion space and connects three stories. The floors are marble, and the railing is made of eucalyptus. The bronze grillwork required 200 different castings because of its twists and turns, and the bronze light fixture is equipped with electric lights and gas jets for emergencies..."
        Last edited by GRG55; November 02, 2010, 12:56 AM.

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        • #5
          Re: Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

          Thanks GRG55, you caused me to look him up.
          Old Pittcock arrived in Portland broke at the age of 17 and built his fortune through a lifetime of hard work and smart determination.
          He seems like more of a newspaper man and paper mill magnate to me, but self-made rich man either way.
          Apparently a cantankerous hard-core conservative, he built businesses that employed many thousands of people and helped build Portland into an important city.

          I'd much rather spend an afternoon admiring his home and his achievements than sitting in the ballpark of a young pampered poodle aristocrat.

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          • #6
            Re: Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

            I'm not a sports fan, so of course I was opposed to this stadium from the beginning. It's unfortunate that the minor league team was lost in the process though.

            We have a pro basketball team, the Trail Blazers, and as far as I know their games are well-attended. The former minor league soccer team Timbers is being reconfigured as a pro team next year. This is not a huge metropolis; I'm not sure there are enough interested fans to support more than two professional sports teams along with junior league hockey and various collegiate teams. Seattle's pro baseball stadium is less than three hours away... well, once you make it past the I-5 gridlock at the Columbia River bridge.

            There are numerous infrastructure projects which I feel would be a better use of public funds than a pro baseball stadium, such as the sketchy Sellwood bridge mentioned.

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            • #7
              Re: Portland Beats Off a Pair of Paulsons

              Originally posted by zoog View Post
              We have a pro basketball team, the Trail Blazers, and as far as I know their games are well-attended.
              They might have been title contenders for a decade if they had taken Durant instead of Oden....

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