Martin: Cordish Is Drunk on Power
The Power and Light District's developers fight the neighborhoods right to party.
By DAVID MARTIN
Published: February 14, 2008
The company thats developing Kansas Citys new downtown entertainment district wants to keep the good times from rolling in other neighborhoods.
The issue is beer. And its the latest example of how Cordish Co., the East Coast developer of the Power and Light District, has shown its ungratefulness to a city at the breaking point of its generosity.
A few weeks ago, state Sen. Jolie Justus of Kansas City introduced a bill that would allow merchants associations for Westport, 39th Street, Martin City and other neighborhoods to apply for festival liquor permits. When the business owners in these unique parts of town want to put up barricades and hold an art fair or, hell, just a simple street party, these special-event licenses would let customers carry drinks into common areas and from venue to venue.
On February 6, Jon Engelman, the executive director of the Westport Regional Business League, went to Jefferson City to speak on behalf of the bill. As he and his attorney, Charles Renner, made the rounds, they discovered that a Cordish rep and his attorney were also paying visits to legislators.
The Cordish guys were trying to kill the festival bill.
Cordish, it appears, doesnt want Waldo, 18th and Vine or Zona Rosa to enjoy the same sorts of privileges it won on an earlier trip to the capitol. Back in 2005, state lawmakers passed legislation making drinks portable in certain entertainment districts. The law was written in such a way that only the Power and Light District would qualify for the exemption.
The Power and Light District is itself a creature of state law. Former Mayor Kay Barnes spent weeks in Jefferson City lobbying for a bill that would let some downtown redevelopment projects capture state tax revenue. Passed in 2003, the legislation paved the way for the retail-and-restaurant funporium now taking shape along downtowns once-grim south loop.
But whats good for Cordish isnt good for Westport or anywhere else. Cordish opposes the new festival bill even though its less permissive than the 2005 law passed on Cordishs behalf. The 2005 law lets Cordish decide the rules on carrying and consuming alcohol in the Power and Light District, whereas the proposed neighborhood festival permits require approval from City Hall. The plan has a lot of city oversight, Engelman tells me.
Renner, the lawyer working for Engelmans group and other neighborhood associations, says Cordish is the only one opposing the festival bill. The company wants to protect its competitive advantage. Addressing the Senate committee considering the festival bill, Cordish reps acknowledged that the 2005 law gave the Power and Light District an edge, Renner says. (Neither Cordish nor its Jefferson City lawyer responded to my phone calls and e-mails.)
Short of desecrating the grave of Buck ONeil, its hard to think of anything more appalling than Cordish trying to stop local merchants from getting just some of the rights that the Power and Light District will enjoy once construction is complete.
After all, Cordish is getting an extraordinary amount of public assistance. The city issued bonds to pay for the land, prepare the site and help fill the buildings with tenants such as Teds Montana Grill. The debt will require an astounding $506 million in public money. If bison burger sales fall short of projections, taxpayers are on the hook.
Engelman stresses to me that hes not anti-Cordish. I support the entertainment district fully, he says. A successful Power and Light District can benefit the small business around town, Engelman says, and vice versa.
By contrast, Cordish seems to believe that entertainment is a zero-sum game.
In fighting the festival bill, Cordish has even broken rank with City Hall. The bill appears on the list of the citys legislative priorities. Greg Williams, a former Barnes aide who now works under City Manager Wayne Cauthen, spoke in favor of the bill in Jefferson City.
Barnes and Cauthen did not respond to my interview requests. Neither of them enjoys talking to me. But if I had to guess, I think theyd be more embarrassed by Cordishs behavior than annoyed with this newspaper.
Cordishs unwillingness to share relaxed liquor rules is only the latest bit of discouraging news. Originally scheduled to open last October, significant pieces of the Power and Light District will still be dark when the Big 12 basketball tournaments come to town next month. Last November, Cordish announced that it wanted to charge $2 for parking in garages that were supposed to be free (The Dance, November 22, 2007).
City officials knew that the Cordish deal was risky. Forecasts showed the Power and Light District producing just enough revenue to cover the bond payments. But those projections may have been optimistic. The Cordish debt will cost the city $14 million in the 2009 fiscal year. Councilwoman Deb Hermann, the chair of the citys Finance Committee, has said recently that she expects the city will have to reach into the general fund to satisfy the project's creditors.
Sigh.
To be sure, Cordish wants to see its investment protected.
Traffic along Grand Boulevard makes a kwunk-kwunk sound when it reaches the Power and Light District. The noise comes from driving not over metal plates but buried pylons. Workers have built retractable bollards into Grand at 13th Street and Truman Road. The bollards will close Grand to traffic whenever Cordish wants to throw a hot, booze-in-the-streets party.
The bollards are spaced about three feet apart. I imagine that, once deployed, they might resemble middle fingers to folks in Westport or Martin City.

