For Bell's the bell tolls
A Myspacer copies a plea for help from the owners of Bell's Amusement Park in Tulsa:
In case you haven't heard Bell's Amusement Park which has provided entertainment for Tulsan's and others in Oklahoma for fifty years is having hard times. The Bell's are close freinds and are good people who enjoy putting smiles on the faces of their patrons. If you like to give your support for Bells please read the following and send e-mails to those who can make a difference. Thankyou.There is an article in the Nov. 10 Tulsa World online in the Local Section if anyone wishes to know more.
To our Tulsa and Oklahoma friends: As you may know we were served with eviction papers for the park on Wednesday. They have given us 120 days to remove everything and return the land to its original state (bare dirt). If you want to help us we would appreciate e-mails to all of the poeple on this list, any friends, you have who might like to help and perhaps calls to the Fairgrounds. Thank you in advance should you choose to speak out in our behalf. Signed Sally Bell (Bell's Amusement Park)
The link above has a list of e-mail addresses for you to contact to express your concern.
Here's a link to the Whirled story. The story makes it clear that County Commissioner Randi Miller is the instigator of the eviction.
There are so many things wrong with this, it's hard to know where to begin.
First of all, the decision to evict a 55-year fairgrounds tenant should have been deferred until the two new members of the Tulsa County Public Facilities Authority, aka the Fair Board, are sworn in at the beginning of January. Those two new members are Fred Perry and John Smaligo, who will replace Bob Dick and Wilbert Collins on the County Commission and will be ex officio members of the Fair Board and several other boards and commissions. Miller is quoted as saying she'll wait until the new board members are on before deciding what to do with the land. Why not wait until Perry and Smaligo are on board before deciding on the eviction?
Second, what's the rush? Bell's won't be able to find a new location and pack up and move a roller coaster, a log ride, and countless other rides in a matter of four months in the middle of winter. Why not give them a full year or two to make arrangements to move? And why not give Tulsans a chance to say goodbye with a final season at the park?
Expo Square CEO Rick Bjorklund says this decision is in the best interest of the taxpayers. I have long complained that the County Commissioners and the Fair Board members are focused on maximizing revenues regardless of the impact on the community. I say that Expo Square is a public facility, to be managed in the public interest. While we want Expo Square to pay for itself, we don't have to maximize the revenue for every square inch of the place, any more than a you'd try to squeeze money out of every inch of a county park.
But Bell's does bring in money for Expo Square, a percentage of receipts. It won't cost the county any money to let them stay there one more year, but it will cost the county if Bell's is replaced with a parking lot.
Finally, and this is what really smells suspicious to me, by forcing Bell's to leave now, before any public discussion of a replacement for that space, the Fair Board is effectively disqualifying Bell's from any competition for the right to redevelop that space. Bell's isn't going to move out and then move back in. If the Fair Board were trying to be fair, they would put out a public request for proposals and allow Bell's and others to specify their plans for the space. The winning proposal would then be selected based on revenue, benefit to the community, neighborhood impact, and other intangibles.
But of course this is Tulsa County and, for about six more weeks anyway, it's dominated by County Commissioners who love making insider, exclusive, non-competitive deals with their pals for the use of public land.
I suspect the eviction of Bell's is part of such an insider deal. You'll recall that a Loretta Murphy gave $5,000 to the Randi Miller for Mayor campaign. Loretta Murphy owns Big Splash water park, another Expo Square tenant. Her husband Jerry Murphy owns Murphy Brothers. Shortly after Loretta's donation to Miller, the Fair Board awarded Murphy Brothers a non-competitive 10-year contract to provide the Tulsa State Fair's midway. Murphy Brothers might be happy just to have Bell's gone, so that all the State Fair-goers will have to ride their midway rides. Miller and the other Fair Board members need to disclose every contact with Murphy Brothers or any other private entity concerning plans for Bell's location.
Like a lot of midtown neighborhood leaders, I supported Sunrise Terrace as they attempted to keep the County from letting Bell's build a new roller coaster closer to their neighborhood, violating the area's comprehensive plan. But the neighbors, with a few exceptions, weren't trying to get Bell's shut down or to prevent their expansion. Most neighbors would have been happy to let Bell's build a roller coaster in toward the center of Expo Square and away from surrounding neighborhoods, but the county was reserving the land north of the Expo (IPE) Building for their landscaping and parking master plans.
Call your County Commissioner (current and future) and call Rick Bjorkland at Expo Square and register your concern. Insist that all dealings involving Bell's location be made public. Insist that Bell's be given a reasonable time to move.
UPDATE:
Techie Vampire has happy memories of Bell's from her youth and is angry that her son won't get to share in those memories.
Jeff Shaw puts the eviction of Bell's into the broader perspective -- the growing list of "Things Not in Tulsa Anymore":
I’m not opposed to economic development. To the contrary. But economic development can happen in conjunction with the preservation of historical aspects of the city.Here is what I see is happening: all these historical and cultural “intangibles†are being or have already been razed, and there is nothing left of “Tulsaâ€. After a few years, and after the life has been sucked out of our city, we get people coming along with “bold new projects†in order to create something exciting. The reason: there’s nothing in Tulsa that will bring people in.
My response to that reason: Its because all the reasons that people have to love Tulsa, have been destroyed - in the name of development.
I'd go as far as saying historic preservation can be an engine of economic development.
Dave, the Oklahomilist, has been following the Bell's eviction story from the beginning. His initial entry asks how it's possible that a parking lot could be more profitable for Expo Square than an amusement park that pays $135,000 a year in rent. That same entry has an account of KRMG's Joe Kelley asking Randi Miller the same question, followed by a vigorous discussion in the comments, including this letter from Craig Adams to the Fair Board regarding their assertions that Bell's isn't viable:
Mr. Bell secured a bank loan of 3/4 million dollars to build a new wooden roller coaster contengent on a lease approval from the fair board. Banks do not lend that kind of money to companies which are insolvent or on shaky financial grounds. Just doesn't happen.Mr. Bell has consistantly reinvested in the business the past several years in new equipment and rides to keep attacting new business and to retain current customers.
Despite being closed for 20 days to repair storm damage this past summer the park has had record business and on several occasions had to turn away customers because the park was too full. Doesn't sound like a failing business to me.
By the way, I think I've figured out the connection between the RV park and reduced foot traffic through Bell's. It sounds like work on the RV park reduced the amount of parking on the west side of Expo Square. People who normally would have parked in that open grassy area had to park on the east side of Expo Square and would have entered on the east, possibly spending all their ride money on the Murphy Brothers midway before ever reaching Bell's.
Randi Miller is now saying publicly that she'd be willing to give Bell's more time if they ask for it. Keep the pressure on, folks, and let's insist on full disclosure. Miller and the other members of the Fair Board should disclose all communications they have had about future use of the property, whether among themselves or with potential tenants such as Murphy Brothers.
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I woke up this morning shivering and sweating (don’t ask) and came in to read a bit and cruise over and find at Batesline a post that makes me heartsick. The park has been around for over 50 years and now it’s being evicted from it’s... Read More
i've heard that jenks is offering bell's big incentives to move to the river walk...
and i would hate to see it move out south. that would be the worst.
There must be an insider deal. Any use of the land by Bells would seem to offer more return than a parking lot. But hey, if Tulsa can't get this sort of stuff right, we'll be glad to have Bells come to Jenks (the Driller's are welcome too).
The noise from Bells has been a major problem for the surrounding neighborhoods. Police have had to come several times to deal with unruly crowds. I do not think Bells is worth the trouble it causes. Turning the area into a parking lot would solve the fairgounds's overflow parking problem. As it stands, the overflow blocks neighborhood streets, creates paid parking lots in residential yards and may eventually result in injury to someone walking or driving on residential two-lane streets which have cars parked bumper to bumper on both sides. Sweetheart deals should be avoided and a parking lot is a valid use for the area.
If you look up the population of Tulsa County--Not the combined county population with adjoining counties. Just the population of tulsa County it is about 539,000 people.
Bell's sits on county land and pays rent to the county. In past proposals when Bell's was trying to expand they projected their earnings based rent(after the expansion) would be around $550,000 per year. Since the Bell's lease, we do not pay taxes on their equipment or its maintenance. So, that amount would have been like the Bell's Family giving one dollar to every person, old and young, of every houshold in Tulsa County, every year. Just for the pleasure of doing business with us. For a family of 4 that is $4 bucks back to them.
For $550,000 dollars a year the fairboard could have bought 3 to 4 houses per year in this neighborhood and in 5 to 10 years owned the houses of the few protesters and parked the cars there.
I, like anyone, hates backdoor shady politics. That is exactly what the Murphy family seems to have done here. Bell's is competition clear and simple. I know MANY families that won't ride the midway and prefer to ONLY ride BELL'S at the Tulsa State Fair, mostly because the rides look cleaner, safer and the operators are more attentive and kind. I say lets hit them where it hurts - Let's stage some sort of Tulsa State Fair 2007 protest. Bell's is just as much a part of the Fair as Murphy will ever try to be. Can we all agree to not ride a single ride - or even better yet not even GO!?
I wish the Bell family all the success in the world. In my 29 years, there hasn't been a single one that hasn't visited that park at least once. I was looking forward to passing these memories on to my children. They are just getting to the "ride" size for the little kids. If they move to Jenks, I wish them success and promise them my business. Don't throw the towel in yet - Tulsa wants another 50 from you!
As it stands, come 2007 fair, if there isn't a Bell's, then my family will not visit. Good bye deep-fried twinkies and gyros - we will miss you but I cannot bring myself to spend a single dollar on a company that can toss it's own people that have helped pad their wallets, out on their hineys without so much as a kind warning or even ample time.
Wrong is wrong. Plain and simple.