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WRITING ON THE WALL by Representative Dennis Kucinich
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| Rep. Dennis Kucinich |
Once they were as gods, but the deities of the American banking
system are now in ruins, plunged from their pedestals into the maw
of taxpayer largesse. Congress voted to give the banks $700 billion,
lifting them temporarily out of their sepulcher of debt, while revealing
a deep truth about the condition of Americas financial powers:
They never had the money they said they had as they constructed
their debt-based monetary system, which now lies in ruins. Their
decisions on behalf of depositors, shareholders and investors were
lacking in basic integrity and common sense. Green gods bailing
out with their golden parachutes. There was a time when their power
was real. Come with me to Cleveland 30 years ago today.
Dec. 15, 1978, Cleveland, Ohio
I awoke to find a curt payment demand that was dropped on my front
step by a grandfatherly man who supplemented his Social Security
delivering the morning newspaper. The headline plastered across
the front page:
Cleveland Trust: Pay Up. Bank would relent if Muny Light were
sold, Forbes believes.
One of Americas largest banks, Cleveland Trust, led local
banks in demanding immediate payment from the city by midnight,
Dec. 15, of $14.5 million in short-term loans.
I regarded the headline skeptically. Having lived in 21 different
places by the time I was 17, including a couple of cars, I had come
to an encyclopedic knowledge of dun letters, sent to my parents
by battalions of bill collectors seeking immediate payment for televisions,
cars and a variety of household appliances that never seemed to
work. I first came to regard these credit alarms with trepidation,
later with impassiveness, with the expectation that as our family
grew to two adults and seven children it would soon be on the move
again, incurring new delinquencies with each new address. Lack of
access to money, housing and credit seemed to be a permanent condition.
Now, having fought through a thicket of consequence to become Americas
youngest mayor, elected on a promise to stop the privatization of
the citys electric system, I was faced with paying off loans
taken out by the previous mayor, for the financing of municipal
projects of dubious value.
The banks refused to extend terms of payment and connived with City
Council members to block alternative payment plans, such as the
sale of city land or tax revenues. The banks knew the city couldnt
otherwise pay. They demanded instead the sale of the citys
electric system, Muny Light, to an investor-owned electric company,
the Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. (CEI). The president of
the Cleveland Council, George Forbes, had met with the head of Cleveland
Trust bank, who insisted on the sale of Muny Light as a precondition
for extending the city credit. This was a case of the bank blackmailing
the city, pure and simple.
The alternative to accepting the banks blackmail was default.
Cleveland could become the first city since the Depression to default
on its financial obligations. Cities rely on credit for everyday
operations and for meeting long-term financial obligations, such
as infrastructure improvements. If banks called in their loans,
the city would head toward dire straits. No one knew that better
than the law firm of Squire Sanders and Dempsey, which had served
as bond counsel for the city of Cleveland while the city entered
fiscal peril and was simultaneously, though not coincidentally,
the principal law firm for the Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co.
Through Squire Sanders and Dempsey, CEI had access to the intricacies
of the city of Clevelands financial records.
Under the previous administration, the city began using bond funds
for general operating purposes. As mayor, I inherited $40 million
worth of debt that had to be refinanced before the end of my first
year in office. Under my predecessor, the city had illegally spent
money it did not have, and yet it had the key to every bank in town
and the confidence of the bond rating houses, at precisely the same
time it was preparing for the sale of the municipal electric system
to CEI.
Cleveland Trust and another bank demanding the sale of Muny Light,
National City, were principal stock owners in CEI. Several members
of CEIs board sat on the boards of local banks as interlocking
directorates. There was a myriad of bank-utility business relations.
Cleveland Trust bank, which handled CEIs demand deposits,
pension funds and other assets, would directly profit from the sale
of Muny Light. In a way, the banks were the private utility. With
the sale, CEI would have an electricity monopoly in Cleveland and
would be able to name its price for electricity and get it. Everyone
in the Muny Light territory would receive at least a 20 percent
rate increase as the rates would be raised to CEIs levels.
The city was self-sufficient with Muny Light for many years. Muny
provided power to 46,000 homes with low electric rates, which contributed
to the economic growth of the city. That was until the late 1960s
and early 70s, when a series of suspicious mechanical failures
and power outages diminished the systems reliability. At that
time, under heavy lobbying from CEI, the Cleveland City Council
delayed the passage of legislation for $9.8 million in repairs to
Muny Lights generators, thereby forcing the city to purchase
power at a premium from its competitor, CEI. The city became increasingly
dependent on an interconnection between CEI and Muny Light, a high-voltage
line over which power could be transferred from CEI to the city,
to ensure reliability. The citys power system began to experience
more unexplained power failures. CEI began to make public overtures
to purchase Muny Light. The sale of Muny Light to CEI was soon supported
by most of Clevelands media, business, political and labor
interests.
In November 1976, the City Council passed legislation authorizing
the sale of Muny Light for a fraction of its value. I was clerk
of Clevelands Municipal Court at the time and I objected to
the sale. I was advised that there was no way to stop the sale,
but I saw it differently. Cleveland had a long history of municipal
power. I could sense a terrible injustice was being visited upon
the people of the city by its leading institutions, which were conspiring
to deprive the city of its public power system.
I organized a petition drive that attracted support from city neighborhoods
served by Muny Light. A full civic campaign was born with an intense
effort made under brutal weather conditions to gather the signatures
necessary to put the issue on the ballot. There was much at stake
besides the monetary value of the system: The peoples right
to own an electric system. And the historic position of Muny Light,
one of Americas first municipal electric utilities, founded
70 years earlier by Cleveland mayor Tom Johnson. Muny Light provided
electricity to about one-third of the homes and businesses in the
city at a peak savings of 20-30 percent over the rates charged by
CEI. Additionally, Muny Light provided millions of dollars annually
in savings to taxpayers by serving 76 city facilities. It also provided
Clevelands street lighting. High electric rates and higher
taxes would follow if Muny were sold. The private sector was forcing
the sale for its own profit at the expense of the community.
On January 4, 1977, the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board (ASLB),
in an antitrust review required of any company applying to operate
a nuclear power plant, ruled that CEI had conspired to put Muny
Light out of business. CEI tried to force Muny Light into price-fixing
and blocked Muny expansion, stopped the installation of Muny Light
pollution-abatement equipment and forced the city to buy power it
didnt need. In addition, the ASLB uncovered a CEI budget planning
report for 1971 that spoke of a five-year plan to reduce and
ultimately eliminate Muny Light.
The ASLB determined that CEI deliberately caused a Christmas season
blackout on the Muny Light system and sent salesmen into Muny Light
territory offering reliable CEI service. The private
utility illegally tripled the cost of purchased power, thereby driving
up Muny Lights operating costs. CEI illegally blocked Muny
Lights access to power from other companies, all in violation
of federal antitrust law. As a condition of receiving its license
to operate a nuclear power plant, CEI had to provide Muny Light
with access to cheap power. Documents showed that CEI executives
believed the purchase of Muny Light would increase CEIs earnings
by $2.732 a share, eliminate a competitive threat, and push the
companys growth rate to 10 percent, further enhancing investment.
Documents in the case also demonstrated CEIs successful attempts
to subvert media editorial policy through cunning use of the companys
large advertising budget. Over the years, several local reporters
lost their jobs after writing reports unfavorable to CEI, and CEI
bragged internally about placing verbatim company-written propaganda
as general media editorial content.
Confronted with the federal finding that bolstered a previously
filed $330 million antitrust damage suit, the Cleveland city administrations
response was incredible: Now CEI has to buy Muny Light!
At the same time the campaign to sell Muny Light accelerated, a
high-powered rifle shot ripped through my house, just missing my
head.
A cavalcade of media editorials commenced favoring the transfer
of Muny Light to CEI. During an ensuing legal battle over the validity
of the referendum petitions, I became a candidate for mayor. I promised
that if elected I would save the system. I won the election. My
first act in office was to cancel the sale of Muny Light. I next
had to pay off a $14 million CEI electricity bill that the previous
administration owed and wanted to satisfy through the sale of the
light system.
I had been in the mayors office barely a year, facing a municipal
horror story of huge snow storms, massive water main breaks and
a police strike. I had cut city spending by 10 percent through eliminating
corrupt contracts, payroll padding and attritional cutbacks. Through
the year, I struggled with a recall attempt for firing a police
chief. The recall was backed by banks, utility and real estate interests
with a last minute appeal printed by the Plain Dealer to sell Muny
Light. Credit rating agencies, which had looked the other way while
CEI was attempting to gain Muny Light in the previous administration,
downgraded the citys finances.
Another Muny Light-related attempted assassination was averted when
I was rushed to a hospital vomiting blood from a profusely bleeding
ulcer. Some years later, a congressional investigation produced
information from an undercover agent of the Maryland State Police
that the assassination attempt was to occur while I was the grand
marshal in a local parade. A local television investigative report
claimed the assassins services were purchased because I refused
to sell the electric system.
One month later, I was back at work trying to find a way to save
Muny Light. The utilitys financial difficulties, though contrived
largely through interference with the system by CEI, were depicted
as so overwhelming that only the sale of the electric system itself
would save the city from financial catastrophe. I held several meetings
with bank officials and it became clear we were heading for trouble
on the question of refinancing. The banks were going to try to force
me to sell the electric system. I went public with a plea for an
income tax increase to protect the citys solvency.
On December 15, I made a last-minute appeal to Cleveland Trust.
It was eight oclock in the morning. I met with Brock Weir,
the chairman of Cleveland Trust, council president Forbes and our
host, a local businessman. I had the intention of protecting Muny
Light and avoiding a default.
Theres just one thing youve got to do, said
the council president, who strongly favored the sale.
Weir, the bank CEO with the stern visage: If you sell Muny
Light, well roll over the notes. I can get you $50 million
in new financing. Wed get other banks to participate.
It was a bribe.
My thoughts went to the street just outside the boardroom. Some
20 years earlier, a few blocks from where this meeting was taking
place, I slept with my brothers and sister and parents in a car,
homeless. I remembered an apartment where my parents sat underneath
the pale yellow light of a kitchen wall lamp, counting their pennies
on an old porcelain-topped table. The pennies dropped, click, click,
click. Pennies to pay the utility bills.
It matters how much people pay for electricity. It matters if the
public owns its own system and has political and financial control
over rates. I could hear the pennies dropping, click, click, click,
as Mr. Weir insisted on the sale of Muny Light. I remembered my
family and the struggles of people like them. I couldnt do
it. I couldnt sell. Not for $50 million, not for anything.
Im not going to sell, even if it means my career,
I said, as council president Forbes looked on in surprise.
Why do you want to end your career? Sell the system. Get rid
of it! he said.
Is there some other way we can work this out? I asked
Brock Weir.
He shook his head No.
Throughout that day, every media outlet in Cleveland echoed the
sentiment of Cleveland Trusts chairman, including the morning
newspaper headline, with such depth of coverage and intensity that
it seemed the city itself would crumble unless I agreed to the sale,
which also included a provision dropping the $330 million antitrust
damage suit.
The objective condition of the citys finances received no
honest review. The sale of Muny Light was depicted as the only way
the city could avoid fiscal disaster. The majority leader of the
City Council held a news conference live on the six oclock
news. He declared that if I sold Muny Light, the chairman
of the Cleveland Trust bank has informed the council that his bank
will purchase $50 million worth of city bonds. So, in effect, we
have a plan sitting on the mayors desk that will absolutely
end the citys financial problems, if he will put his signature
on it.
The $50 million bribe had been brought out into the open in a manner
that now suggested it was a legitimate offer, a fake solution to
a fake crisis. I refused to sell.
As Cleveland television stations covered the event live, with a
countdown clock that looked like a twisted version of New Years
Eve, midnight struck. Television networks of several countries recorded
the grim event: The city of Cleveland became the first American
city to go into default since the Great Depression. The default
was over just $14.5 million dollars in credit.
When I called for a congressional investigation a few days later,
Cleveland Trust denied it wanted Muny Light, CEI denied it wanted
Muny Light, the council president denied the chairman of Cleveland
Trust wanted Muny Light, and the majority leader said he was mistaken
when he said live on the six oclock news that the bank chairman
offered $50 million in credit for Muny Light. Muny Light was no
longer the issue. It was the mayor and his obstinacy that caused
the crisis. So went the waltz into a netherworld devoid of truth,
justice, reality or morality.
Though the people of Cleveland supported keeping Muny Light by a
margin of two to one in a referendum a few months later, and passed
an income tax increase by the same margin in order for the city
to pay off the defaulted bond anticipation notes, the state of Ohio
intervened and put the city into fiscal receivership. I lost the
mayors race in 1979. The banks renegotiated the defaulted
notes, at a profit. The city lost its antitrust suit against CEI
in 1981, in a hung jury. An appeal failed.
I was out of major public office for almost 15 years until, in 1993,
Cleveland announced an expansion of Muny Light (now called Cleveland
Public Power). At that time, the City Council and others decided
that I had made the right decision in refusing to sell Muny Light.
The city and its residents had saved hundreds of millions of dollars
through Muny Lights reduced electric rates and the savings
the taxpayers enjoyed from Munys lower-cost power for street
lighting and city buildings.
I attempted another political comeback and this time succeeded,
getting elected to the state Senate with the motto: Because
he was right. My campaign literature showed a radiant light
bulb behind my name. Two years later, I was elected to Congress,
with the slogan Light up Congress. Today I am the chairman
of the House Government Oversight Domestic Policy Subcommittee,
which has broad jurisdiction over most government departments and
agencies, including the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and electric
utility matters generally.
The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. is now a subsidiary of First
Energy Co., which was fined by the NRC for various safety violations
and, a few years ago, was found to have primary responsibility for
the 2003 blackout that left 50 million people throughout the northeastern
United States without electricity.
Cleveland Trust no longer exists. No other bank involved in the
default survives, except for National City, which faces extinction
through shareholder approval of a takeover by PNC bank. I have spent
much time trying to save National City.
One newspaper, the Cleveland Press, which advocated that
CEI be Clevelands sole electricity provider, ceased publication.
The other strong proponent of the sale of Muny Light, the Plain
Dealer, struggles to survive.
The citys electric system endures and this past year celebrated
its 100th anniversary.
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