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The Ballpark Village Nightmare

Published: Monday, August 25, 2008 3:41 PM PDT



In case you missed it, here was my column from Friday. I'm back, slowly but surely, into the writing thing. The column's theme was pretty simple: The very existence of CCDC -- the taxpayer-funded nonprofit that directs redevelopment activities downtown -- is in question and was before the scandal regarding its president emerged. Now, the scandal could very well be the bowling ball that breaks this camel's back.

But I hadn't had a chance to digest Thursday's news that the Ballpark Village development may be caught up in this mess now that it's been revealed that the former president, Nancy Graham, and one of the main partners in the Village -- Lennar -- had an ongoing financial relationship as she was negotiating the Village.

This is huge. You cannot overstate just how big of a deal the Ballpark Village is. It is 7.1 acres of proposed housing, office, retail and a hotel. Actually, not just "a hotel," a 1,900-room megotel. It's touted as the largest Marriott Hotel on the West Coast. And as the U-T noted before this latest furor, it displays pretty underwhelming architecture as well.

But dial back and remember this deal. In 2005, as this project was getting its first approval. An angry controversy had arisen between community groups, labor and the developers of the project. And then, poof! The acrimony was gone after a series of secret meetings.

So now the question becomes: If Graham's conflict of interest was enough to scuttle or delay the development of one condo project on 7th and Market Streets, how would an equally offensive conflict with one of the developers of the Ballpark Village not endanger that project as well?

As reporter Rob Davis revealed last week, Graham's involvement in the Ballpark Village negotiations is undisputed:

While at CCDC, Graham was extensively involved in a process to modify the Ballpark Village project, which was originally approved shortly before she took office in 2005. Her personal calendars show numerous meetings with the project's developers, a team that includes JMI Realty, a development company controlled by Padres owner John Moores. Steve Peace, a Moores advisor, said Graham had been "totally involved" in the modifications to include a large Marriott hotel.

Peace, special advisor to Moores, said JMI Realty was unaware of any Ballpark Village-related contracts with CCDC during Graham's tenure. However, he said some may exist and called on CCDC to act quickly to redo anything that Graham may have influenced so the project could advance on schedule. The City Council is set in October to consider modifications to the project, Peace said, which is planning to add a 1,929-room Marriott hotel, slated to be the largest on the West Coast.

"We want them to take an abundance of caution," he said. "Obviously, we don't want to go forward with a contract that's potentially challengeable downstream."


Obviously. There are a lot of people very worried that Graham's little penchant for non-disclosure will somehow sabotage this project. If they're not, they should be.

-- SCOTT LEWIS




4 Comments so far on this story...

If I were to attempt to spin this into a positive for the city - I would write: "With so many unsold and undersold units and empty commercial ‘store fronts’ in San Diego (and the number seems to be growing every day) it would seem that only by holding those developers/redevelop to their contracts will the city realized any development/redevelo It is not just San Diego - the economy of the United States appears to have reached its credit expansion limits; DOW average below it year 2000 highs even after poorly performing contributors were replaced and without taking the devaluations of the dollar into account. Those who seemed to have gotten ‘sweet deals’ from groups such as CCDC and SEDC perhaps should be held to filling their contracts; this is, perhaps, the only way the City can realize any positives - in a negative economic environment."

Posted by Gregory | reply to this comment
August 25, 2008 3:22 pm

When you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. So-called redevelopment has become a sham. Instead of development serving San Diego, our city has become a tool for the enrichment of developers. Especially those developers like JMI that can hire political hacks like Steve Peace or Jack McGrory to do the dirty work. We've seen the damage. Downtown is a mess of ugly vacant buildings owned by out-of-towners who got sweetheart deals. CCDC lied to us all, and only now do we start getting the truth. Abolish CCDC and start over.

Posted by Fred Williams | reply to this comment
August 27, 2008 5:31 am

Look at that - one seems to have already crawfished on their plans to participate in future San Diego redeveloment. link Better move fast to get the others in a fixed and signed contract before we lose all those good downtown construction industry jobs and our City's average earned wage incomes and employment numbers really tank.

Posted by Gregory | reply to this comment
September 2, 2008 1:54 pm

Great article, maybe someday you will report how involved the Madigan's were in this mess.

Posted by jim | reply to this comment
August 27, 2008 9:27 am


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Scott Lewis on Politics

The Scott Lewis on Politics blog, abbreviated cleverly as SLOP, is a collection of observations, insights and the occasional scoop on public affairs in San Diego. Please feel free to e-mail Scott at scott.lewis@voiceofsandiego.org.


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