this was a win for OKC and for our future ... empty buildings do not density make ... and this will only help attract business to our city
Of course, the decision was made well before the meeting, it always has been and always will be the case everywhere, that is definitely not something unique to OKC. Those who have the money can buy influence, with influence you can get what you want. That is what happens on small town Main Street and all the way to Washington DC, just the way that it has always been...nothing is going to change. What happened today was what I expected from the start.
Probably swallowed up by a larger entity and moved to Houston as Sandridge is a small player in that business sector. They would be a big time player in some business sectors but not the one they are in.
Well...hell, let's just level all of downtown then if it's for the common good....
Wait, that was already tried 25-30 years ago.
Time to move on...
I'm sure Tom Ward is dancing a happy dance for showing up all of us "brick huggers." Maybe he can look at himself in the mirror and practice his free enterprise chant.
Not entirely true, although I guarantee you everyone on my row nearly rolled their eyes out when they heard him talking about this. I was hoping Tom would provide us some elevations, preliminary sketches, or just give us some picture of what "Phase 2" will be like. Truthfully, they are planning in the long-range (maybe a decade from now) to build an elongated office building lining Broadway for the entire block. The fact is that they just stenciled a ubiquitous rectangular shape toward that end and have done no planning and most likely won't get to building it for a very long time if at all. It's existence on the masterplan is almost just a mirage of density.
To be fair, most of their speakers did give very honest depictions. The India Temple DOES lack horizontal supports and as such would be earthquake prone, that's a fact..in the same way that probably 60% of structures in OK County are. I would also assume that Stan Lingo's cost estimates were accurate..as far as extreme high-end cost estimates go. I also don't doubt Ford Price's assessment of only a 4% return on investment on his pro forma, assuming that you were too busy to apply for a single tax credit. The building would qualify for the historic register AFTER it was restored but not before, ironically, but you can still get the tax credit, just can't get it guaranteed beforehand like you would for a building already on the register.
So there was truth in everything said, actually, and I appreciate their integrity enough to defend them on it. Except for some of Michael Dunn's comments, a lot of his comments are still puzzling to me. With Frank Hill sidelined, they also came across as much more sincere and concerned about their PR.
Spartan, I appreciate your assessment. I know you are disappointed and I sort of am too. This has been a very divisive and bitter discussion on this board. Let's now hope SR grows and we all breath easier in a couple of years.
Yeah, no problem. I just hope a huge amount of E.Coli suddenly flows through their pipelines, because otherwise I don't see anything-SandRidge growing as big as they hope. Maybe we just don't have the evil genius it takes to see the growth potential, but it's a fact that most people in Tom Ward's present situation go bust. I just don't feel good about this, I can't help it. Hope I'm wrong.
Well, I do have a good feeling about this. I've had a bad feeling about many projects in OKC, but not about this. To me, this isn't Pei in repeat. It's a seed being planted that looks bad to preservationists at first but in time will see its true vision. I am not going to apologize for that. It is what it is.
Continue the Renaissance!!!
If you haven't read Steve's last couple of postings on his blog at NewsOK you might want to read. Is a good and fair read.
I don't know about SR's future, but they are in an industry that can spur huge growth. I know a lot of people who have bet against Aubrey time and time again and have lost. Ward seems to be cut of similar cloth. But then again, many conservative and old line companies in this country have gone under or have been purchased and absorbed over the past couple of years. too. There are no guarantees that any company will be around in 10 years. Ask BP how fast it can change. Ask Conoco and Ponca City how fast. Ask any of the Big 8 accounting firms that used to be. So let's not wish SR its demise or count on it. Let's hope they are the hunter and not the hunted. Let's hope they grow and hire all kinds of people who want to live and play in downtown OKC and the developers respond with new living opportunities.
Did they intend to say that 85% of their workforce lives north of the Valiance Bank Tower or north of SandRidge Tower? They were giving a condensed timeline story...and I don't speak evil genius wildcatter, so my comprehension of Ward's schpeel is somewhat limited I guess.
I also got a little confused when Larry Nichols said he spent millions renovating The Colcord. I thought he bought it AFTER the renovation.
Just because it was allowed by a governing body doesn't automatically mean it was legal to do so. By the "plain and ordinary meaning" of the ordinance, it would appear to be a flagrant violation. Unfortunately, the only way to test the legality of the actions by the parties is to take it to the judicial system. Just as with the legality of the original MAPS and subsequent MAPS 3 ballots, they may or may not be legal but if no one challenges them, they will continue on in the same manner.
What is the point of even having the ordinance if it isn't going to be followed? Remove the board members who apparently don't wish to enforce the ordinances & replace them with someone who will. Or completely eliminate the Ordinance, the DDRC and the BoA and let every property owner do whatever they want.
Yes, we know how the "illegal" Maps programs have decreased the value of our city and destroyed the great momentum that was created before. These OKC businessmen and property owners downtown are just so stupid they supported a plan that will shoo off business and lower their property values.
Reports say they currently have 600 employees downtown. Rule of thumb is 1,000 square feet per employee and the current tower has at least 300,000.
So, they would have to grow by a factor of five before running out of space.
Of course that did happen with Devon and they ended up spread all over downtown necessitating their new tower.
Tom Ward lost half his net worth in 18 months. McClendon damn near lost everything during the same time-frame. Don't substitute intelligence for 'right place at the right time'. These are smart guys no doubt, but they probably aren't any smarter than most people - they are just willing to take risk. My wife is very smart, but she won't take a risk to save her life. I work with a woman that just got accepted into MENSA, but she is as ditzy as they come. Paris Hilton is rich and she is dumber than a bag of hammers.
One of my learning experiences that I may have gained from witnessing the Board of Adjustment proceedings in the SandRidge matter is stated in the updated blog article that I just made. It has more to do with naiveté than anything else. There, I said,
We live and we learn.
CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS. Although I'm 67 years of age, until sitting in on the Board of Adjustment proceedings on this matter, I've never closely followed any municipal proceeding before, so this was a new experience for me. Now that it is done, I'm reflecting on the process that I've witnessed — things that are important, things that are not, things that go on behind the scenes, the importance of procedure, the importance of power.
One thing that I've learned from this experience is that my background in the legal system — courtroom procedure, rules of evidence, rules pertaining to appeals, etc. — did not serve me well in providing expectations as to what would occur in a municipal procedural context. The contexts are completely dissimilar and the rules are not even remotely the same. More precisely, my conclusion is that there are no rules in the municipal appellate context. Anything goes. Because of my naiveté, I did not know what the municipal context was all about.
Appellate Context. In courts of law, except under very unusual circumstances, an appeal from a decision of a lower court is limited to the evidence presented in the lower court. Arguments during an appeal are generally based upon whether the lower court erred in its determination of the applicable law and/or whether the evidence presented in the lower court was sustained by the applicable measure of proof required — in most cases, by a "preponderance of the evidence," in others by "clear and convincing evidence," and in criminal proceedings, "beyond a reasonable doubt." New evidence is ordinarily not possible to be presented. I naively figured that an appeal from the Downtown Design Review Committee's decision would be fairly parallel to an appeal in a court of law.
In this proceeding, it quickly became evident that I was badly mistaken — this was much more like a trial de novo — effectively a separate and distinct trial — with old and new evidence submitted as the parties would care to present.
Trial Context — Surprise Evidence. In courts of law, in non-criminal cases at least, a pretrial conference will ordinarily occur. Before that conference occurs, each party is afforded the opportunity to conduct "discovery" (vastly oversimplified, the process of obtaining information from the other side or from witnesses other than the parties) and "discovery" will need to be completed prior to a pretrial conference hearing. At that pretrial hearing, parties are required to identify witnesses they may call to testify and documents they may offer for introduction as evidence during the trial. If witnesses or documents are not identified at this hearing, they are ordinarily precluded from being utilized during trial. A party cannot simply pop-up a new witness or a new document on the eve of trial and have a remote chance of it be received as evidence during trial unless no objection is presented by the other side. In this municipal proceeding, it was not only allowed but it was apparently the norm as may well be true for other municipal proceedings, I don't know. In this proceeding, an expert's written report as to structural and seismic integrity was filed four (4) days prior to yesterday's hearing and was part of the evidence considered by the Board of Adjustment.
During Barrett Williamson's remarks, above, he inquired, "Is the board considering this new information," and the reply from Chairman Wanzer was, "It's on the record," which was to say, "Yes." In other words, if a document is filed with the Clerk, or even presented during the hearing itself, that would be sufficient for it to be considered.
Hearsay. Hearsay evidence (oversimplifying greatly, evidence/testimony of what someone not present in court to testify, e.g., "Bob Blackburn told me that ... " when Mr. Blackburn is not a witness in the case) is generally disallowed if an objection is presented. Rampant hearsay was presented by both sides during these proceedings with nary an objection. One can only wonder what would have happened were such an objection to have been presented, but I have no doubt that it would have been overruled. That non-rule is part of the municipal procedure that I witnessed.
Out-of-Court Information. In courts of law, the "evidence" is that submitted by the parties during the course of trial. Non-procedural communications between judges, lawyers, witnesses, and others related to the pending matter which are not made during trial are strictly disallowed and may be the basis for bar association or judicial disciplinary proceedings if they do occur. During Barrett Williamson's remarks, above, one commission member interrupted him to remark and state as a fact that Park Harvey Apartments' occupancy rate had dropped from 92% to 49% before and after Devon acquired the municipal parking garage south of those apartments. Perhaps Mr. Tannenbaum testified to that in an earlier hearing although I have no such recollection and do not think that he did. If Tannenbaum did not so testify, what was the source of those statistics and how and by whom were they communicated to the commission member who made the remark?
Relevance of Evidence. In courts of law, evidence must be"relevant," i.e., under the law involved, it must be relevant to a fact decision to be made in the case. So, if a particular statute is involved which will decide the issue, the evidence needs to relate to the statutory language which is involved. In a municipal proceeding context, that is apparently not the case. At least, I'm not aware of anything involved with the municipal ordinances involved in this proceeding which make letters or e-mails (from either side) which extol the position of one side or another as being relevant as to whether ordinance requirements were being followed or not. Such things were abundant in this case, on both sides.
I could go on — such as the right to cross-examine witnesses (wouldn't it have been fun, for example, to inquire of Ralph McCalmont under oath how it was that he became involved in this proceeding, who (if anyone) contacted him to do so, his conversations with those who did, who he contacted and what he said, and so on — talk about a lawyer's field day!) — but the above is enough to make the point — courts of law are one thing and municipal proceedings are apparently quite another.
The teaching point, I suppose, is that one would be badly misguided into thinking, and planning as to how to proceed, in supposing that municipal hearings are reasonably akin to what occurs in a court of law. Quite possibly, in its naiveté, Preservation Oklahoma misjudged the "rules of the game" just as badly as I did myself.
Yes, I am quite sure that the only thing that separates the highly successful from all others is their luck. LOL. That is usually the excuse the less successful use for their failures.....I would be just like them but I am just unlucky.
There were multiple people with long track records of success who had significant skin in the game who supported SR. I guess it is just an amazing coincidence all these "lucky" people agreed.
By the way, there is smart risk and dumb risk. Just working with risk is not a measure. It is amazing how some people are consistently "lucky".
I believe there is also a difference between having a high IQ and being smart or wise or having good judgment.
That is absolutely correct. A court of law and a municipal board are two totally different animals and rules that govern courts are not applicable in municipal proceedings for obvious reasons. There are no rules of evidence and certainly no discovery in the municipal setting.
Luck? Luck is where opportunity and preparation intersect. Even Tom Ward agrees with this when he said you have to be prepared for growth because you don't know when it is going to happen. To put it another way, when opportunity knocks you have to be there to answer the door (you also have to take the risk of opening the door).
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