| By Doug Hissom Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Doug Hissom |
| Last updated July 16, 2007 at 3:15 p.m. |
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The Milwaukee Catholic Archdiocese has accepted an offer to sell the Cousins Center to commercial interests who will look first at commercial development of the sprawling complex of buildings and land which is also known as archdiocese HQ, according to sources close to the action. The Archdiocese of Milwaukee, however, denies any accepted offer.
"The Archdiocese of Milwaukee has not accepted an offer to sell the Archbishop Cousins Catholic Center," said Kathleen Hohl, communications director for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee.
The archdiocese put the 415,000-sq. ft. building and the surrounding 44 acres at 3200 S. Shore Dr. in St. Francis up for sale last year.
The Milwaukee Archdiocese has agreed to a $17 million settlement with 10 people who sued the archdiocese after claims of sexual abuse by priests. The place is also home to the Milwaukee Bucks training facility.
As for the Seminary Woods, which is 37 acres of pristine forest next to the Cousins Center, also owned by the archdiocese, questions abound. A group of preservationists from St. Francis recently found out that they struck out on their three options for raising money to buy and preserve the woods. They also found out that the archdiocese wants about $8 million for that land.
A state land conservation fund dropped an effort to buy the woods after being unable to raise $3 million to $4 million in matching funds. A gamble to use Metropolitan Milwaukee Sewerage District preservation money failed after it was discovered the drainage basin doesn't qualify.
A developer proposed last fall a project that includes 24 homes in a horseshoe shape to abut the woods. Finding it sold to other residential or commercial interests could foil his plans quickly. People concerned about preserving the woods viewed that project as an immediate threat.
But now they have to regroup to find someone else to buy the woods and save it. A spokesperson for the archdiocese last fall said the church wants to sell the land only to buyers interested in preserving the space. That doesn't appear for certain at this time, according to sources. They say the church has indicated that it no longer wants to limit its choices to preservation.
"The City of St. Francis has to step up," says one source close to the real estate discussions. "We need to get community people concerned."
The city had applied for a $200,000 Coastal Grant late last year to chip to an offer.
Under the Wisconsin Eye: Some notes from the couch after watching the first day's coverage of the state Assembly on Wisconsin Eye, the new cable channel devoted to watching our state lawmakers at work (channel 163 on your Time Warner digital dial). The producers had foresight or were lucky enough to go one the air while the Assembly was debating the state budget, because there was certainly enough drama about the Capitol despite everyone knowing that the Republicans were going to pass their version of the budget, since they control the house by a comfortable 52-47 margin.
The Consultant's Life: Former Private Industry Council CEO Gerard Randall is adapting well to his life as a consultant these days. Randall was removed from his post after Mayor Tom Barrett's office took over the job training functions for Milwaukee County. He was kept on as a consultant for the next six months to the tune of $61,000. Lately though, he's got the stereotypical consultant's role down, glad handing his friends in the halls while not really showing up for office work at all. He lost his office space to incoming CEO Don Sykes and maybe they haven't found a desk for him yet.
His presence could stave off what some insiders say is needed -- a complete audit of Randall's 9-year tenure at PIC. For starters, it's posited that a probe should be taken into the hiring of people by using what's called "carry-over" money, cash from contracts that were not fulfilled and used to hire cronies.
Word is that staffers who raised questions about the practice were let go in favor of those who kept their mouths shut. Meanwhile, Randall's lieutenant, Dave Wilson, has surprisingly been left out of key staff meetings, leading to suggestions that it might be wise he start to brush off his resume.
And, despite promises that all the financial pressures would change come July 1, no money is yet to be found still for job training or for bus tickets, needed badly for job seekers to get to and fro.
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1 comment about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by ChateauDweller on July 13, 2007 at 9:32 a.m. (report)
Disgusting. Why don't you talk about the rest of the Gerard Randall story? Why don't you mention that Barrett took over the PIC because he was frustrated that a Thompson-supporter was running the show? Why don't you talk about how many believe that he was railroaded out of his job because of politics, not performance? The Milwaukee Left love to talk about creating "opportunities" for minorities, but when a conservative minority holds a powerful position, they do anything to take the person down. OMC, stop paying this guy. His articles do not cover "politics," they are liberal op-ed columns disguised as news. At the least, you should hire a conservative to write op-ed's as well. You are on the verge of alienated half of your readers.
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