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Dallas, TX
Dallas Park Board President wants complete reset at Fair Park. Will Fair Park First stay?
Dallas Park Board President Arun Agarwal says he wants a “100% reset” of the organizations managing Fair Park and wants a public process to deliberate if Fair Park First, the nonprofit that raised about $60 million for a long-promised community park and refurbishing a collection of historic buildings at the 277-acre complex, should retain its fundraising role.
“We will do everything to make sure donor confidence is not compromised,” Agarwal told The Dallas Morning News on Friday, adding that a public process was necessary to reverse perceptions of malfeasance in the park’s finances.
Nearly $6 million in restricted donor funds were misspent on park operations, according to a report released last year. The nonprofit and venue management company are still negotiating a pathway to recoup the misspent dollars.
While that’s still underway, the city announced Wednesday it would terminate its contract with the nonprofit and its subcontractor Oak View Group. The contract gave Oak View Group the authority to control financial decisions and set up bank accounts, though the venue management company contends it was acting under the nonprofit’s direction.
While noting the need for a fundraiser, the city’s announcement was silent on whether Fair Park First would continue the work of raising funds, managing community engagement and overseeing the construction of the park.
Veletta Forsythe Lill, Fair Park First’s board chair, said the nonprofit was moving into a conservancy model and was committed to constructing a park to make amends to nearby communities that had been razed using eminent domain in favor of building parking lots.
Lill has been emphatic about the nonprofit’s perspective and has said the goal to tweak the contract was to stabilize and give the organization ability to oversee its own operations.
“Fair Park First, in its narrow prescribed operations over the last six years, has done what it was supposed to do in terms of raising money, engaging the community and doing community programming,” Lill said.
The burning concern is how the recent developments might influence donor confidence. “All of the grants are direct contracts with Fair Park First, not others,” she said. “Those are the contracts that have to be honored in the building of the park.”
The city has not entered a new contract with the nonprofit, though at least one elected official, council member Adam Bazaldua, has said in a previous statement that he looked forward to working with Fair Park First.
Ryan O’Connor, a top park official who oversees partnerships and strategic initiatives, said the Park Board and the City Council will still need to vote on a contract with a nonprofit organization to perform fundraising and other related services.
The nonprofit will also sign a development agreement to give the entity the right to develop the community park, though the organization would still need city approval for design and other related services.
“From my experience with the city, both being involved with them for many, many decades and being on City Council, I believe that it will have to be an open, competitive process,” said Ron Natinsky, executive director at the Texas Discovery Gardens, which is also a tenant in Fair Park.
The Texas Discovery Gardens have been struggling with nearly a million dollars worth of repairs that have come out of the nonprofit’s rainy day fund and was meant to be overseen by the Oak View Group.
“I’m actually fairly confident with the city’s plan to move forward,” Natinsky said. “The part that would give me some pause would be if indeed the same nonprofit was left in charge as they have been previously.”
From Fair Park First’s perspective, the nonprofit has had limited control over financial decisions at the park. The nonprofit since then has separated donor funds and collaborated with Dallas Foundation, another nonprofit that specializes in helping philanthropic initiatives. They also expect to hire a new CEO later this year.
Former council member Lee Kleinman, who was on the City Council when officials were deliberating the public-private partnership, said the model was envisioned to oversee three components: fundraising and advocacy management, concession stands and building a park.
“If we can say OK, [Fair Park First] did OK at fundraising, let’s keep them there,” Kleinman said, adding that the parks department could oversee the management of the concessionaire and build the park for South Dallas.
The Dallas Park and Recreation Department, he said, “has built almost a billion dollars worth of park and park amenities in the last 20 years. So let’s give it to the people who can do the job, and that would be, to me, a good outcome.”
Dallas, TX
Dallas City Council approves resolution to explore leaving Dallas City Hall
DALLAS – Dallas City Council members approved a measure to explore options for leaving Dallas City Hall while, but left the door open to staying in the iconic building.
Resolution to explore leaving City Hall passes
What we know:
The resolution approved will explore options to buy or lease a new City Hall building. It was amended to include a plan to pay for repairs to the current building that would be compared side by side to the options to leave.
Dallas City Council approved the resolution by a 9-6 vote. The vote came around 1 a.m. Thursday morning after 14 hours of debate.
Councilman Chad West told FOX 4’s Lori Brown that if the city decides to stay or leave City Hall, the resolution includes proposals to redevelop the land around the building.
“We still should be looking at redevelopment options to tie it into the convention center later on, because otherwise it just equals ghost town, which is what we have now,” West said. “And of course, if we decide to move and City Hall itself gets repurposed or demolished and something gets built there, we need to have a projected plan for what that could look like as well.”
Debate on City Hall’s future
Local perspective:
Around 100 residents spoke about their desire to keep the current Dallas City Hall, the historic structure designed by architect I.M. Pei.
“The thought of losing this land to private hands is disheartening. A paid-off asset, unfair to taxpayers, built on what is here,” Meredith Jones, a Dallas resident, said.
“The decision belongs to the people, not the city council,” David Boss, the former manager of Dallas City Hall, said.
Several questioned why the price tag for a repair is public knowledge, but the cost for a move isn’t.
“The public deserves to know the value of the land we are giving up. Dallas deserves a careful decision, not a rushed one,” resident Azael Alvarez said.
Future Mavs arena looms large
Dallas City Council went back and forth on the resolution, amending it before it finally passed. Much of the conversation revolved around the Dallas Mavericks’ potential interest in the site for a new arena.
Mayor Eric Johnson lamented that conversation revolved around the Mavs’ future and not City Hall itself.
“A conversation about a particular sports team and where you want them should never have been part of the conversation because that was not what was infront of us,” Johnson said. “I’ve never seen such vehement opposition to gathering more information.”
Councilwoman Cara Mendelsohn wore a Mavericks T-shirt to a recent hearing due to the continued conversation around them.
“We’re talking a lot about the Mavs. They’re the elephant in the room, but they’re actually not here, so let’s at least let them have a seat at the horseshoe,” Mendelsohn said on Monday.
Residents were also upset at the idea of City Hall being bulldozed to make way for a new Mavs arena.
“The Mavericks were ridiculed nationally, and still are. Worst trade in the history of the NBA,” one resident said Monday. “The decision to knock this building down without all the facts and allowing the people to make the decision is your Luka Dončić trade.”
A potential 10-digit repair cost
The backstory:
Experts who assessed Dallas City Hall said the 47-year-old building’s mechanical, plumbing, heating, air conditioning, and electrical systems don’t meet modern standards.
It put a $906 million to $1.4 billion price tag on keeping the iconic building, which was designed by the famous Chinese architect I.M. Pei, for another 20 years.
Downtown Dallas Inc., an advocacy group for Downtown Dallas, said last week they support leaving the current City Hall site.
“We believe Dallas City Hall is no longer serving its intended purpose. The important functions that happen and must continue to be evolved and innovated within our city government are inefficient and truly stymied in that space,” said Jennifer Scripps, President and CEO of Downtown Dallas Inc. told the crowd. “Our board called a special called meeting and voted unanimously in support of pursuing options to relocate City Hall and redevelop the site. We were we feel that the opportunity is huge.”
The Source: Information in this story came from FOX 4 reporting.
Dallas, TX
Study says the real value of a $100K salary in Dallas is…less than that
How much do you earn? And how far does that paycheck really go?
In Dallas, a $100,000 salary is a figure that’s more than double the area’s individual median income, but nevertheless a useful benchmark for the region’s burgeoning business community. However — once taxes and the local cost of living is factored in — it has the effective purchasing power of around $80,000 according to a new financial report.
Consumer-focused fintech site SmartAsset worked the numbers on the country’s 69 largest cities, determining the “estimated true value of $100,000 in annual income” in each location by measuring federal, state and local taxes as well as local cost of living data, including on housing, groceries and utilities.
It used its own proprietary figures, as well as information from the Council for Community and Economic Research.
Despite recent research suggesting North Texas has lately been losing some of its famous economic advantage — a major factor behind the region’s explosive growth — Dallas actually fared relatively well in SmartAsset’s analysis. Of the 69 cities, Dallas’ effective purchasing power, of $80,103 on the $100,000 salary, tied with Nashville to rank 22nd highest.
Like many cities in the report, Dallas also actually saw a year-over-year effective salary bump, likely because of slightly lower effective tax rates and living costs that have hewed closer to the national average. In 2024, the value of a $100,000 salary in Dallas came out to $77,197.
Other large Texas cities fared even better than Dallas. El Paso, where SmartAsset calculated the effective value of the $100,000 salary at nearly $90,300, ranked third highest overall.
San Antonio, where the effective value was around $86,400, ranked eighth. Houston, where the figure was around $84,800, ranked 10th, and Austin, where the figure was $82,400, ranked 17th.
Oklahoma City topped SmartAsset’s value ranking, with an effective salary of around $91,900, and Manhattan, which the website considered as its own city, came in with the lowest value, at around $29,400.
Dallas’ relatively strong effective value score won’t necessarily translate to the good life: Another financial report, published in November by the website Upgraded Points, determined that even a single adult with no kids needs a pre-tax salary of at least $107,000 to live “comfortably” in the Metroplex.
Dallas, TX
Public frustration grows as Dallas leaders debate billion‑dollar City Hall fix or relocation
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