The Performing Arts Center; Broken Promises

Easily the Crown Jewel of Mayor James C. Brainard’s reign the Palladium was a project run amuck from its beginnings in the 20th Century.

Transparency and rising costs were the issue from 1999 forward.

It has produced more noise than music.

The noise began in earnest in 2000 when the source of the errors of coordination and communication was isolated and fully understood.

Below are the notes from the December 2000 CRC Meeting

Olds, who is the O in CSO Architects, and in 2004 took the reins of the Carmel Redevelopment Commission. CSO is the Architectural firm that was being discussed. They were doing City work without having a contract in place.

By 2005 we were ready to raise funds and we were told the exact cost so a bond with a Special Benefit Tax attached was issued.

 

 

Costs mounted and the Mayor piled on embellishment after embellishment till the cost overrun reached twice the City Council’s original financial commitment.

 

“This is going to be the Carnegie Hall of this part of the Country for the next 500 years.”

     Jim Brainard – October 18, 2006

 

https://documentcloud.adobe.com/link/track?uri=urn%3Aaaid%3Ascds%3AUS%3A10e08c13-ea27-40c5-96c5-8a41c79d3677

The Mayor steps up and takes responsibility for Performing Arts Center cost overruns

 

Questions of impropriety surrounding the Performing Arts Center soon began dogging the Mayor and his political cronies.

August 9, 2009

Sunday, August 9, 2009 |

Carmel Politics Take on an Indianapolis’ Flavor; The Use of Non-Profit Corporations to Avoid Accountability and Public Scrutiny

The front page of the Indianapolis Star has a story entitled “A Little Too Cozy in Carmel?” . To summarize the story, recently the Carmel Redevelopment Commission approved giving $400,000 in taxpayer money to the Carmel Performing Arts Foundation, Inc., so the foundation can do various things, including hiring a new artistic director for the Performing Arts Center in Carmel.

When asked how much the new aristic director, Michael Feinstein, was going to make, Foundation Director Nancy Heck responded that it was none of the public’s business – even though as the Star points out, Feinstein would be paid with public money.

A troublesome twist to this public-private setup is that Carmel Mayor James Brainard is one of the founding directors and an officer in the Carmel Performing Arts Foundation. Heck, also a founding member, is the City’s spokesperson. A third officer/founding member is Douglas Haney, who is Carmel’s attorney. Heck and Haney both receive their positions through appointment by Mayor Brainard, as do a majority of members of the Carmel Redevelopment Commission.

Those familiar with how Indianapolis City-County government operates would not bat an eye at the use of a non-profit to distribute Carmel taxpayer money. There is a whole set of non-profit corporations who do just that her in Indianapolis and which enjoy a very cozy relationship with the city’s government. The distribution network works like this: the Mayor and Council take taxpayer money and give it to the non-profits for distribution to their customers. The directors and officers of those non-profits, pay themselves, the other officers ,and top employees, lavish salaries and benefits. Those folks kick back money to the elected officials in the form of political contributions. The non-profits also hire politically-connected law firms which also kick back money to the politicians, which campaign contributions originated as, you guessed it, taxpayer money. The non-profits also provide job for ex-politicians and administration members. With the relationship between public and private greased by political contributions and the hiring of ex-politicos, this elite power structure remains in place regardless of whether the City is headed by Democrats or Republicans.

Using non-profits instead of government to distribute taxpayer money, opens the door to the misuse of our tax dollars. These non-profits are not subject to the same scrutiny as a government entity would have. While government workers receive modest salaries to distribute grant money, the nonprofits corporations, despite their name, have no such limitation and often pay their directors and top employees extremely well as has been reported repeatedly on this blog. Even though organizations like the Arts Council of Indianapolis, Indianapolis Downtown, Inc., and the Children’s Choir brag about the service they provide to their clients (which they often call “stakeholders”) the fact is only a small percentage of tax money filter down through the non-profits to those the nonprofits claim to be helping. Their number one client is themselves and the fact is demonstrated by tax returns which show the incredible administrative costs (including salaries and benefits) these nonprofits pay. Several, such as the Arts Council, also have millions of tax dollars stashed away in securities and other investments rather than spend the money on helping out their clients.

While the situation with the Carmel Performing Arts Foundation is minor compared to the network of Indianapolis non-profits which siphon off millions of taxpayer dollars, certainly the conflict of interest involved is no minor matter. It is astonishing that Mayor Brainard sees no conflict of interest in the setup and that Heck, a Carmel City spokesperson in addition to being the director of the foundation, would make the crack that it is none of the public’s business how much taxpayer money is used to pay Feinstein.

While Heck thinks the salaries of top employees of the non-profit Carmel Performing Arts Foundation should not be publicly disclosed, Congress and the Internal Revenue Service holds a different position. In its next tax return, which is public record, the foundation will have to report Feinstein’s salary.

In its 2007 tax return, the Carmel Performing Arts Foundation noted that it received $136,500 from government and spent $166,937 on professional fundraising fees, including $110,200 to the Arts Consulting Group, Inc. of New York for “consulting fees.”

As I have said before, Carmel Mayor Jim Brainard’s big spending ways and ill-advised projects are going to put Carmel deeply in debt for generations to come. That’s bad enough. But Brainard is also playing deaf and dumb when it comes to the very legitimate complaints that the structure of the Carmel Performing Arts Center and its relationship with the City creates an intolerable conflict of interest. Carmel residents should make this Brainard’s last term in office. Hopefully it will go quickly.

       Mayor Brainard’s careful accounting of Performing Arts Center costs.
1

Read the beginning of the ‘Sound of Money’ as  Mayor Brainard claims the Palladium ‘will last two maybe three thousand years’.

Carmel’s Center for Performing Arts plan vs. reality:

miles apart

The Center for the Performing Arts that Carmel taxpayers bought is not the one they were originally sold.

Somewhere between the 2005 sales pitch and its 2011 opening, the $80 million facility became a $175 million one. A $309,000 worst-case scenario government subsidy turned into more than $2 million a year in taxpayer assistance, according to an examination of the center’s finances by The Indianapolis Star. And the $40 million endowment that was supposed to be the center’s financial lifeblood hasn’t materialized, three years after its first show took center stage.

Some of the unmet expectations can be explained by the recession and a nationally struggling arts industry, others by the sheer difficulty of predicting a budget that was then six years away. But mostly, the plan simply changed — and few were told.

For the rest of this outstanding article see attached link:

https://www.indystar.com/story/news/local/hamilton-county/2014/04/05/carmels-center-performing-arts-plan-vs-reality-miles-apart/7332637/

Carmel robbed roads, maintenance funds as development costs mounted

Struggling to pay both debt and ongoing costs associated with one of the nation’s most sustained suburban building booms, Carmel has systemically been reaching for money or limiting budgets intended for city services.

An Indianapolis Star review of budget documents reveals that in the last five years the city has slashed funding meant to repair and repave crumbling roads, diverted money intended to pay for sewer work, and delayed plans to extend Illinois Street and fix public amenities such as the reflecting pool at City Center.

“We, on the council, call it a shell game,” said Councilman Rick Sharp. “The city is moving money from one area to pay for another and at the same time saying there has been no tax increase.”

Carmel, though, is only about halfway through the massive redevelopment of its urban core. And now, 16 years into the reconstruction, Mayor Jim Brainard needs even more money, and the council’s help to move forward.

For the first time, Brainard will ask the council to pass potentially tens of millions in bonds backed by the full faith of the city for use by a private developer. He believes commercial property taxes paid over time and other financial guarantees from the developer will cover the expenses. If those funds fall short, however, property taxes ultimately will back the bonds.

Carmel-based Pedcor, the city’s main redevelopment partner, is asking for the bonds to build a parking garage and other infrastructure for a $100 million continuation of City Center. And, to the north, Old Town Development is considering a similar financing proposal to build a parking garage and public plaza in a $150 million project at Midtown.

Brainard wants to complete the vision he started so many years ago.

“We have made tremendous progress in Carmel building a walkable, bicycle friendly, urban core,” Brainard said. “But we have yet to finish it.”

Call Star reporter Chris Sikich at (317) 444-6036. Follow him on Twitter: @ChrisSikich.

Read more, it is an excellent story at link below

Not all was lost. Mayor Brainard has a creative  new plan to make up for the spending overruns.

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One thought to “The Performing Arts Center; Broken Promises”

  1. Sales of tickets like “Sting” go on sale to 501c donors of the Palladium first.

    Show is “sold out” when offered to the public. Public can buy a ticket on the secondary market for a mark-up from $700 to $2500 from a Palladium performing Art’s Center member at 10:05 a.m. when the tickets went on sale to non-members at 10 a.m.

    Smells funny to me, abuse of 501c privledge.

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