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The Heady Days of J. R. and Landry Are History in Humbled Dallas [NY Times]
NY Times ^ | Dec 20, 2004 | RALPH BLUMENTHAL

Posted on 12/20/2004 8:12:25 PM PST by Tumbleweed_Connection

The losing Cowboys are fixing to defect again, the police chief and city manager were shown the door, a 350-pound gorilla made his own grand exit, and the hometown daily, former employer of the ex-reporter now ensconced in City Hall, is pinning Pulitzer Prize hopes on a pitiless exposé of everything gone wrong.

It has been that kind of year for Big D, Texas's second biggest - oops, third biggest - city; San Antonio gained a 6,000-person edge to slip in with just over 1.2 million, behind Dallas's longtime archrival, Houston.

"You know, I didn't like it," said Mayor Laura Miller, a once-fearsome investigative reporter who, as ex-colleagues joke, went over to the dark side. "I liked saying we're the eighth largest city in the nation. I don't like saying ninth."

The news hasn't been all bad, as Ms. Miller, 46, is quick to point out, reciting highlights of a $1.2 billion project - second biggest in the city's history (after the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport) and one she originally opposed - to create a new roadway, designer bridges and urban recreation area 10 times the size of Central Park along a derelict Trinity River that now regularly floods.

And she said, "I resent it when The Dallas Morning News says I fumbled the ball" just because the Cowboys, looking for favorable terms, are negotiating for a new football stadium in Arlington, having abandoned Dallas's historic Cotton Bowl in 1971 for fancier quarters in Irving. "I didn't want to play ball," she said.

But the tone may have been set in March when Jabari, a 13-year-old western lowland gorilla, apparently managed a flying leap over a 14-foot-wall at the Dallas Zoo and ran amok, mauling a toddler and his mother and a third visitor before being shot dead by the police.

The next month, The Morning News published a special 20-page section, "Dallas at the Tipping Point," a collaboration between a reporting team and consultants from Booz Allen Hamilton, examining every major parameter of city life and concluding: "Dallas calls itself 'the city that works.' Dallas is wrong." Dallas, it found, was a city in crisis, "and City Hall seems not to know."

Mayor Miller disputed the last part - "We're not in denial" - and said she didn't care for the lurid cover artwork depicting a storm over the city. But in all, she said, "It wasn't wrong."

Meanwhile, at Founders Plaza, a few steps from the haunting site of the Kennedy assassination, which remains Dallas's top tourist attraction, the county is considering moving the crude cedar cabin that may or may not have belonged to the city's first settler, John Neely Bryan, but that long seemed a remnant of Dallas's rugged pioneer past.

The city was humbled in other ways as well, watching sourly as conventioneers thronged Houston's budding entertainment district while Dallas struggled to begin a master plan study and select a flagship hotel for its own convention hopes, which it did at its final City Council meeting of the year on Wednesday, giving a provisional go-ahead to a developer for a 1,000-room Marriott. (In fairness, the Dallas Convention and Visitors Bureau may have been distracted, some of its executives having been found earlier wooing clients at topless bars.)

Based largely on a wave of property crimes, Dallas once again leads the F.B.I.'s list of high-crime big cities this year. Efforts to cope with a growing homeless population by making it illegal to take a shopping cart off the property of the store it belongs to did not solve the problem, but instead produced bizarre fleets of cannibalized baby strollers and shopping carts. The dramatically slanted City Hall that attracted architectural plaudits when it was completed in 1978 has become a magnet for derelicts.

Dallas officials also spent part of the year trying to figure out how a handful of police narcotics informants were able to plant some 330 kilograms of gypsum and other harmless substances on 30 innocents, mostly Spanish-speaking immigrants, to frame them on drug charges in 2001.

The scandal wounded Police Chief Terrell Bolton, a 24-year department veteran and an African-American. He was eventually fired in August, but not fast enough for an angry Mayor Miller. She and the City Council forced the retirement of the city manager, Ted Benavides, leaving the mayor and 14 other Council members a clearer field to attack each other, with racial tensions bubbling just below the surface. Mr. Bolton is now suing the city.

If it seems at times like Southfork, home of the feuding Ewing clan that enlivened the long-running television serial "Dallas," the action may only be getting started. Amid widespread dissatisfaction over pervasive problems from crime to education to development, a petition drive is aimed at putting a revolutionary change in city government to the voters in May.

The measure would create Dallas's first "strong mayor" government, replacing a system often described as weak-weak-weak - a weak mayor, weak city manager and weak City Council, imposed by a federal judge in 1990 as a remedy for the city's historic disregard of democratic niceties. Currently, the mayor is the only citywide elected official, presiding over a Council of 14 other members who are elected from neighborhood districts, some largely black, others predominately Hispanic and white.

The Council hires the city manager, who carries out policy - and need only please a majority of eight, not necessarily including the mayor. Meanwhile, the mayor, the only one elected to represent the whole city, is all but powerless to govern without a consensus, a challenge in the city's historically fractious racial and political climate.

Dallas's last mayor, Ron Kirk, the first African-American to hold the office, left it in 2002 to run what became a losing campaign for the United States Senate and is now a candidate to head the Democratic National Committee. As mayor, he was known for building coalitions and ending what he called City Hall's "blame game."

But the same success has often eluded Ms. Miller, who is white and filled Mr. Kirk's seat first in a special election and then won a four-year term of her own until 2007. She remains a polarizing figure saddled with the enemies she made as an investigative reporter, particularly as a columnist for The Dallas Observer, a freewheeling alternative weekly.

"One thing I did I can't change is I wrote about lots of people," she said, citing several black community figures she accused of wrongdoing. "There were no sacred cows," she said. One of them is now a regular visitor at Council meetings, denouncing her.

Ms. Miller credits her husband, Steve Wolens, who spent 24 years as a Democratic representative in the Texas House before retiring last December, with helping her understand the difference between journalism and politics.

"When you're a journalist, you're pure, you see things in black and white, you don't understand gray any more," Ms. Miller said. But as a politician, she said, she has learned to compromise and temper her famously sharp tongue, at least sometimes. As one visitor who once overheard her venting in a City Hall elevator said, "I've never heard anyone who looks like that talk like that."

Yet with all of that, Dallas, a city of middle-aged woes that still likes to think of itself as young, seems adrift. One remedy sparking debate is to give the mayor, or her successors, some real power.

The latest flashpoint is the petition drive, which collected 30,332 signatures and needed only 20,000 - to force the "strong mayor" measure onto the city ballot in May. The Council spent much of Wednesday's meeting trying to figure out ways of challenging the signatures, which need to be certified by the city secretary by Dec. 23.

"I think people want a discussion," said Mary Suhm, the acting city manager and a longtime municipal employee. "City services need to be revamped."

Darwin Payne, a historian, author and professor emeritus of journalism at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said the time was ripe for change. "People in Dallas are grasping for anything that would work," he said.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bigd; dallas; lauramiller; mayor

1 posted on 12/20/2004 8:12:25 PM PST by Tumbleweed_Connection
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection

I live in Fort Worth, Texas, and I don't have any use for Dallas, California.


2 posted on 12/20/2004 8:20:54 PM PST by Abcdefg
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection

Dem or Pubbie, how in the heck can you blame the Mayor for a damn ape jumping a fence to maul a patron?


3 posted on 12/20/2004 8:24:58 PM PST by lawdude (Leftists see what they believe. Conservatives believe what they see.)
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To: lawdude

Actually, I'm surprised they didn't say it's all Bush's fault!


4 posted on 12/20/2004 8:33:14 PM PST by Rummyfan
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection
Laura Miller is a fool. The Cowboys wanted to go back to their real roots in Dallas, the Cotton Bowl area, to build the stadium. Jerry Jones was going to put in something like $225,000,000 of his own money. His effort would have greatly expanded the new development emanating from the downtown high-rise apartments and business development heading towards Fair Park.

Mayor Miller wants instead to build 2 or 3 bridges over a river that ain't worth a crap to fish in, look at or even drive over.

Which plan would do the most for Dallas? A stadium that would be a major hub for surrounding development or a couple of bridges over an ugly river?

5 posted on 12/20/2004 8:35:16 PM PST by Slyfox
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection

Gee.."Dallas Sucks" says the ny slimes..gee what next.."US sucks says binladen"..only from the slimes..


6 posted on 12/20/2004 8:45:13 PM PST by BerniesFriend
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To: Tumbleweed_Connection

Dallas is as liberal a hell-hole as any "Northeastern" city. Take Boston and sprinkle in a couple hundred-thousand Mexicans. Political correctness rules the day there.


7 posted on 12/20/2004 8:47:54 PM PST by Lancey Howard
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To: lawdude
Dem or Pubbie, how in the heck can you blame the Mayor for a damn ape jumping a fence to maul a patron?

It's a zoo owned by the city isn't it? And the mayor runs the city right? The zoo administrator answers to the mayor. No other zoos keep their apes in fences that apes can jump. And police overreaction killed it. And shouldn't zoo employees have stopped the youth from taunting it to violence?

There's a lot she could have done.

8 posted on 12/20/2004 8:56:19 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: Slyfox

"Jerry Jones was going to put in something like $225,000,000 of his own money. His effort would have greatly expanded the new development emanating from the downtown high-rise apartments and business development heading towards Fair Park."

There is no way this was anything but corporate welfare for the Joneses.

The Trinity River Project (w/ bridges) is also a bunch of corporate welfare and a waste of taxpayer money.

Here's an idea for city hall... leave real estate investing to the private sector. Just fix the roads and make the neighborhoods safe...then fix the schools...when you get that done, you can watch TV. Until then, don't even ask.




9 posted on 12/20/2004 9:16:01 PM PST by cowtowney
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To: Abcdefg
"I live in Fort Worth, Texas, and I don't have any use for Dallas, California."

Them's fight'n words! Don't make me remind you of Jim Wright.
10 posted on 12/20/2004 9:33:10 PM PST by lame_internet_name
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To: Slyfox
I live just a few blocks from Fair Park, am a lifelong staunch Republican, know Laura Miller, and was absolutely opposed to that stupid eyesore stadium. Fair Park is now a beautifully-restored Art Deco district, and gentrified historic homes, nice restaurants, etc. are filling in around it. That stadium would've destroyed the park, turned the surrounding area into a giant concrete parking lot, created horrible traffic jams (as it does now around Texas Stadium) and given Jerry Jones carte blanche to ruin the neighborhood and loot the treasury. I could not have been happier when the suckers in Arlington agreed to hike their taxes to help out the billionaire because it meant he wouldn't be coming back here and targeting us again.

/rant

11 posted on 12/20/2004 9:44:13 PM PST by HHFi
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To: HHFi

Yeah but, what do you think of her bridge plans?


12 posted on 12/20/2004 10:08:01 PM PST by Slyfox
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To: Slyfox

I'm against them, too. There are too many major things that need fixing before spending a lot of money we don't have on big new projects. I live very near downtown, and all the streets around me, which are major streets, are like driving over a minefield. Resurface the ones we use before building a bunch of new ones we don't need.


13 posted on 12/20/2004 10:23:04 PM PST by HHFi
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To: FreedomCalls
And shouldn't zoo employees have stopped the youth from taunting it to violence?

And what did the youth do to provoke the ape? Did he tell the ape it looked like Michael Irvin? Nate Newton?

14 posted on 12/20/2004 10:26:38 PM PST by Tall_Texan (Let's REALLY Split The Country! (http://righteverytime3.blogspot.com))
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To: HHFi

P.S. -- We got the same song and dance about all the money that Perot Jr. was going to spend to redevelop the surrounding area when he got his sweetheart deal for the American Airlines Arena. I drove by there earlier today, and the only thing within two blocks of it was a Hooters. I imagine we'll pay taxes on rental cars and hotel rooms until doomsday and never see that promised development.


15 posted on 12/20/2004 10:29:10 PM PST by HHFi
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To: Tall_Texan
And what did the youth do to provoke the ape?

News reports said he was throwing stuff at it and yelling. You wouldn't do that to a Rottweiler and neither should you to a gorilla.

16 posted on 12/20/2004 10:54:28 PM PST by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: Abcdefg
You mean Dallas, NY — like the Big Apple, a city overrun by Yankees, feuding ethnic tribes, corrupt politicians, third worlders, and the Alternative Lifestyle gang. (The straight people and the middle class have decamped for the lily-white environs of Collin County, land of Giant Freeway Churches.)

As with New York, it's far past the time when a "strong mayor" could do any good In Dallas — nothing less than a military dictator with the power to summarily execute the Enemies of the People could put things right again. But of course we can't have that, so it's more chaos all around, folks, just like in NYC.

(Houston is L.A.— all freeways and smog. And Austin is San Francisco.)

I'm East Dallas born and raised, and I'll always have a nostalgic love for the old town, but the Dallas I knew and loved is gone, long gone. (Being from east Dallas in the '60s and '70s is like being from Brooklyn in the '40s and '50s — one never forgets.) I live in Tarrant County now. At least it's still Texas here.

I voted against the JerryDome, by the way. I may have to move again now that the Cowboys are coming to town. The idea of living in Irving South does not appeal to me.

17 posted on 12/20/2004 10:54:46 PM PST by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: Slyfox

i had no idea JJ was planning that...cool plan.


18 posted on 12/20/2004 11:05:37 PM PST by des
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