A picture of Public Utilities Director Martin Keane talking about a contract to buy chemicals to disinfect city water.
Public Utilities Director Martin Keane, left, talks about a contract to buy chemicals to disinfect city water. Credit: City of Cleveland YouTube

Covered by Documenter Dan McLaughlin (live-tweet thread)

Board approves Cleveland Land Bank lot transfers

The board approved the transfer of 17 properties from the Cleveland Land Bank, most of them for $200 for people to expand their yards. Eight parcels in the Glenville neighborhood were sold for $51,500 to Evergreen Cooperative Laundry, a worker-owned commercial facility, to use for parking. Evergreen has operated in the neighborhood since 2009.

Another property was sold for $4,000 to a resident who plans to build a single-family home on Parkridge, near the Cleveland Metroparks Brookside Reservation.

Law Director Mark Griffin asked if the sale price for the lots sold to Evergreen was fair market value. Community Development Director Alyssa Hernandez said the city is using a new method to calculate the sale price for lots and “that is why you have seen us not give away lots anymore but to actually get fair market value when we are helping to support for-profit industry.” 

Search for lots in the Cleveland Land Bank using this map.

Cleveland spends millions to keep water clean

The Board of Control approved a $2.25 million contract for sodium hypochlorite, a chemical commonly called bleach. Cleveland Water uses it in large quantities to disinfect the city’s water supply. Delivery of such a large amount of the chemical is heavily regulated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which makes it hard to find a qualified supplier for large quantities on short notice, Public Utilities Director Martin Keane said. 

Public has new, clearer view of Board of Control meeting

New cameras in City Hall’s Red Room mean Cleveland Documenters – and residents – have a clearer picture of what’s happening at the Board of Control, where city officials discuss and approve contracts large and small. Documenter Dan McLaughlin, who covered many fuzzy and slightly muffled meetings, lauded the clarity and the multiple camera angles. 

Read the live-tweet thread from Documenter Dan McLaughlin:

Managing Editor (she/her)
I foster civic and accountability reporting that is inspired by and responsive to community questions, curiosity and demand so Clevelanders have the opportunities they deserve to understand and participate in local democracy and build power.

Cleveland Documenters pays and trains people to cover public meetings where government officials discuss important issues and decide how to spend taxpayer money.