[This commentary was originally published in
Michigan Messenger.]
The corporate giant's plan to privatize a
poor town's waterside park provokes citizen opposition.
Julie Weiss had returned to Benton
Harbor from Chicago
to look after her parents and was walking on the beach at Jean Klock Park
in September 2006 when she came upon a sign that said, “18th
tee.”
That's when the 54-year-old musician and former
financial services worker learned that part of the city's Lake
Michigan dune park is slated to be absorbed by a controversial
private golf course and luxury home development sponsored by
Whirlpool Corp., the local manufacturing giant. The state has
approved $120 million in tax incentives for the project, known
as Harbor Shores.
The 73-acre park was given to the city of Benton Harbor in 1917 by owners John and Carrie Klock to be used
as a public park and bathing beach, in memory of a daughter
who died as an infant. The park contains a half mile of Lake Michigan shoreline and is popular with picnickers, swimmers and
wedding parties. It is home to a population of the threatened
plant species Rose-pink and features dunes, marsh and interdunal
wetland. It has become precious public real estate for Benton Harbor, where four residents in 10
live below the poverty line and 92 percent are black.
Now in a David-vs.-Goliath struggle, Weiss and
a small group calling itself the Friends of Jean Klock Park
are seeking to block a corporate and political juggernaut pushing
an economic development project that supporters say will create
hundreds of jobs. The controversy in Benton Harbor illuminates the tensions between corporate economic development
and public community interests.
Weiss
is an amateur historian whose father was a Benton Harbor city commissioner for decades starting in the 1970s. She watched
the once-proud city descend into disrepair and desperation.
When she learned that the state's plan for the area involved
massive subsidies for a luxury development and the virtual giveaway
of the city's beachfront, she got angry and began to ask questions.
“While Whirlpool has offered much to the community
historically, the public should not abdicate its citizenship
role in favor of private-sector decision making,” she told Michigan
Messenger. “Once the public is eliminated from the planning
process, because these public-private partnerships lack transparency
... the community, our constitutional democracy, in fact, becomes
weaker and weaker.”
Harbor
Shores is slated to cover 530 acres
and include 860 units of luxury housing, a 350-room hotel and
conference center with a 60,000-square-foot indoor water park.
The centerpiece of the project is a 110-acre, 18-hole Jack Nicklaus
Signature golf course that requires stunning lake views and
must be sited on 22 acres of Jean
Klock Park, according to developers.
Whirlpool is used to getting its way in Benton Harbor. It was founded here in 1911
by Fredrick Upton, grandfather of Fred Upton, the Republican
congressman who represents the region. Now the largest home
appliance manufacturer in the world, the company has annual
sales of approximately $19 billion per year. Whirlpool has outsourced
most of its manufacturing, but still runs its corporate offices
from Benton Harbor.
So when Whirlpool and a coalition of local nonprofits
and quasi-public economic development authorities began to tout
the project, Gov. Jennifer Granholm paid attention. In a May
2006 letter to Whirlpool CEO Jeff Fettig, Granholm promised
that the state would provide “technical assistance” in the matter
of permit approvals for the project, which she called “a wonderful
example of sustainable development.”
The
Michigan Economic Development Corporation promised more than
$120 million in economic incentives. Most of the state support
comes from tax incentive programs that will allow the developers
to pay environmental cleanup and infrastructure development
costs instead of paying taxes on the increase in value of the
property as it goes from empty land to luxury development. While
supporters of the Harbor Shores
project claim that the project will increase the tax base in
Benton Harbor, according to the Berrien
County Community Development Department the state's tax incentive
program allows the developer to avoid increased tax payments
for 30 years.
In October 2006, Benton Harbor's city commissioners and the
Michigan Natural Resources Trust Fund signed off on the project
and approved the transfer of parkland to developers without
much public debate.
But in October 2007, the National Park Service
unexpectedly refused to sign off on the transfer. The Park Service
has a stake in Jean
Klock Park because it once gave the city
a grant to build a bathhouse there. In a letter rejecting the
land transfer proposal, the Park Service said that the deal
appeared to transfer the entire city park to private developers
in perpetuity and the proposal replacement parcels were not
of equal recreational value.
“We can find no evidence that the public was
accorded a minimum 30-day period during which they could provide
comments specific to the environmental analysis of the subject
conversion and replacement proposals,” wrote Ernest Quintana,
the Park Service's regional director.
The Park Service's action has given Friends of
Jean Klock Park time to research, network and strategize. Opponents
of the project have launched recall campaigns against three
city commissioners who approved the Harbor Shores development, and have demanded the city find independent legal
counsel to advise on the deal.
“It's borderline criminal what they are doing”
in trying to rush through the land transfer, said Juanita Henry,
the lone dissenter on the commission. Harbor
Shores is “all about helping the real
estate developers,” she charged.
Wendy Dant Chesser, spokeswoman for Harbor Shores, told Michigan Messenger that
although some aspects of the project have been revised - there
have been no takers on developing the water park, which was
once cited as a unique draw for tourists and essential to the
project - the basic idea of building a luxury develo pment around
a golf course remains.
“We have five hotel operators that are interested
in this project, and they are working on proposals for us,”
she said. In response to a question about the advisability of
offering luxury housing in a bleak real estate market, Chesser
said the market for second homes in the area has been less affected
by the economic downturn.
Chesser
said Harbor Shores
developers have submitted a new park lease proposal to the Benton
Harbor City Commission as part of a new attempt at winning National
Park Service approval for their plan. The new lease proposal
raises the portion of maintenance jobs promised to Benton
Harbor residents from 25 percent to 40 percent. It also adds language
to make clear that Benton Harbor residents can still use the
beach, and it states that during the wintertime they will be
permitted to use the whole park for activities such as sledding,
she said.
Opponents are not persuaded. Armin Schlieffarth,
a 25-year-old political science graduate who has made researching
the Harbor Shores project his full-time hobby, says the jobs
that Harbor Shores claims it will create are relatively low-paid
service positions.
Golf is also a risky bet as economic development,
the opponents say, because Berrien County and Michigan as a
whole are full of golf courses, and even elite Jack Nicklaus
Signature golf courses are failing in places with better weather
and longer golfing seasons, according to news
reports.
Schlieffarth points out that the economic impact
study for the Harbor
Shores project - which was produced by the Upjohn Institute, a nonprofit
employment research group, and included in the proposal made
to the Park Service - was based on outdated figures from the
developers. In recognition of this, this month the Upjohn Institute
released an updated and more modest jobs projection with a new
disclaimer stating that the report is not a feasibility study
and that the group has no opinion on the land transfer involving
the park.
“They are taking away land that was given in
memory of a child, taking it away from other children who can't
vote, and who won't be able to use it,” Schlieffarth says.
Friends of Jean
Klock Park
has petitioned Granholm, asking her to withdraw her support
for the project, without success. They also appealed to the
Department of Environmental Quality and the Department of Natural
Resources, asking for an environmental impact study of the Harbor
Shores project. This request was also
rejected.
The Benton Harbor City Commission has opened
a public comment period on Harbor Shores' revised proposal for Jean Klock Park
and scheduled a public hearing for Thursday.
The state remains committed to the project. Liz
Boyd, a spokeswoman for Granholm, told Michigan Messenger, “Our
goal is to work with all of the parties to make sure that this
project can go forward.”
Friends of the park are still opposed.
“Beautiful, though tattered, public spaces like
Jean Klock Park
should be protected from any encroachment by tender loving care,”
said Weiss, who discovered the golf sign in the park and who
is now working on a history of Jean Klock Park.
“Less-affluent people and communities should not have to sacrifice
dunes or any special public land for part-time, seasonal jobs.”
If the development is not successful, she said,
“the destruction would all have been for nothing.”
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator,
Eartha Jane Melzer, reports for www.michiganmessenger.com.
Click here to contact Ms. Melzer.