Showing posts with label Tim Love Woodshed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Love Woodshed. Show all posts
Sunday, April 1, 2012
In case you missed it
Durango had lots of fun with the Woodshed blabbering in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "Like shooting fish in a barrel."
Don't miss his Alice in Wonderland explanation either. YOU can't afford to.
Labels:
boondoggles,
Granger,
Tim Love Woodshed,
Trinity River Vision
Monday, January 30, 2012
Occupy Wood Shed 6%
If you want to see what YOUR tax dollars paid for, you're invited to come out to the Woodshed Wednesday afternoon. We hear there will be a big group taking a look before the boycott starts Thursday. We're also told they'll be going to eat bar-b-que at Pappa's on the Trinity River after they occupy. So, no tent needed to make a statement.
DFW.com just did an article on the repeatedly delayed opening. Wonder why they didn't do one of the flooded Wakeboard park?
Love and the Trinity River Vision Authority have taken some heat because the TRVA signed a 10-year lease with Love without open bidding. But Love says he hopes the restaurant, located just west of University Drive not far from Hoffbrau Steaks, will help open the door for other restaurants along the river.
"I've gotten beat up a little bit in the last couple of months," he continues. "But I'm trying to make [the river area] better. When I did the lease, I said, 'I want to do something for the river.' Somehow that backfired on me. I thought people would be excited about the fact that they could come here and drink a beer and 6 percent of it goes back to the [district]. I mean, that's pretty cool."
DFW.com just did an article on the repeatedly delayed opening. Wonder why they didn't do one of the flooded Wakeboard park?
Love and the Trinity River Vision Authority have taken some heat because the TRVA signed a 10-year lease with Love without open bidding. But Love says he hopes the restaurant, located just west of University Drive not far from Hoffbrau Steaks, will help open the door for other restaurants along the river.
"I've gotten beat up a little bit in the last couple of months," he continues. "But I'm trying to make [the river area] better. When I did the lease, I said, 'I want to do something for the river.' Somehow that backfired on me. I thought people would be excited about the fact that they could come here and drink a beer and 6 percent of it goes back to the [district]. I mean, that's pretty cool."
Friday, December 23, 2011
WHO's involved?
WHO bought the Fort Worth Cats?
WHO do you think?
Trinity Vision Partners Llc.
WHO are THEY??
Read the article in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. And check out what the Dallas Observer had to say. Yeah, Dallas is watching too.
We 'll hold off on saying, we told you so.
Owner Carl Bell has agreed to sell the baseball team to a group led by John Bryant and Byron Pierce, co-founders of United League Baseball.
The Cats will be the fifth independent team owned by Bryant and Pierce. Former Texas Rangers President Mike Stone is also part of the ownership group, Trinity Vision Partners Llc., and will be the team's chairman.
Financial terms were not disclosed, although Bell said he did not profit from the sale. The costs of independent teams vary depending on financial conditions, attendance and other factors.LaGrave Reconstruction Co., which Bell runs, still owns LaGrave Field and the surrounding 131/2 acres.
Bell felt that the proper business decision was to split the two entities. Most professional teams are tenants of the stadiums they play in, and the Cats have a 20-year lease at LaGrave.
Observer:
That said, "I really don't care who our landlord is," Stone says. "We have a 20-year lease. We bought the Cats, the property, the right to do business as the Cats, and that's what crucial to us." When it comes to the land, he explains, "It's a complicated process, a complicated transaction. The Tarrant Regional Water District is involved. Carl is involved. Amegy Bank is involved. We're involved. The bottom line is we end up owning the Cats and the right to play ball as the Cats."
WHO do you think?
Trinity Vision Partners Llc.
WHO are THEY??
Read the article in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. And check out what the Dallas Observer had to say. Yeah, Dallas is watching too.
We 'll hold off on saying, we told you so.
Owner Carl Bell has agreed to sell the baseball team to a group led by John Bryant and Byron Pierce, co-founders of United League Baseball.
The Cats will be the fifth independent team owned by Bryant and Pierce. Former Texas Rangers President Mike Stone is also part of the ownership group, Trinity Vision Partners Llc., and will be the team's chairman.
Financial terms were not disclosed, although Bell said he did not profit from the sale. The costs of independent teams vary depending on financial conditions, attendance and other factors.LaGrave Reconstruction Co., which Bell runs, still owns LaGrave Field and the surrounding 131/2 acres.
Bell felt that the proper business decision was to split the two entities. Most professional teams are tenants of the stadiums they play in, and the Cats have a 20-year lease at LaGrave.
Observer:
That said, "I really don't care who our landlord is," Stone says. "We have a 20-year lease. We bought the Cats, the property, the right to do business as the Cats, and that's what crucial to us." When it comes to the land, he explains, "It's a complicated process, a complicated transaction. The Tarrant Regional Water District is involved. Carl is involved. Amegy Bank is involved. We're involved. The bottom line is we end up owning the Cats and the right to play ball as the Cats."
Owner rl Bell has agreed to sell the baseball team to a group led by John Bryant and Byron Pierce, co-founders of United League Baseball. The Cats will be the fifth independent team owned by Bryant and Pierce.Former Texas Rangers President Mike Stone is also part of the ownership group, Trinity Vision Partners Llc., and will be the team's chairman.Financial terms were not disclosed, although Bell said he did not profit from the sale. The costs of independent teams vary depending on financial conditions, attendance and other factors.LaGrave Reconstruction Co., which Bell runs, still owns LaGrave Field and the surrounding 131/2 acres.Bell felt that the proper business decision was to split the two entities. Most professional teams are tenants of the stadiums they play in, and the Cats have a 20-year lease at LaGrave.
Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/12/21/3611839/fort-worth-cats-sold-will-play.html#storylink=omni_popular#storylink=cpy
Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2011/12/21/3611839/fort-worth-cats-sold-will-play.html#storylink=omni_popular#storylink=cpy
Thursday, December 22, 2011
WHO controls YOUR water?
It's a tricky question. For a reason. There are many water districts in Texas. Nine times out of ten, they are above the law, as in they don't have to follow any.
There's been a lot of talk about the Tarrant Regional Water District lately, but it hasn't been due to water. It's all been about the J.D. Granger and Tim Love Woodshed restaurant sweetheart deal on the Trinity River. A million dollar (give or take a few, again, it's just YOUR money) deal. Don't you wish YOU could go into business for with no start up cost and if it bombs, you lose nothing? YOU bet you do, cause you've already lost another million. And counting. It's a small price to pay for the billion dollar boondoggle known as the Trinity River Vision.
The TRWD and the Trinity River Vision Authority, under the leadership of JD Granger, Congresswoman Kay Granger's son, heavily promoted Tubing on Trinity or Rocking on the River this summer to the citizens and taxpayers of Tarrant County. WHY didn't they test the water? WHY did the citizens have to pay to have it tested?
The project was touted as flood control, so it would receive federal money. YOU hear that rest of the country? YOU'RE paying for this too, so there. We have to ask again, what does a BBQ shack on the river, a wakeboard park and bridges over dry land do for flood control? YOU should ask. After all YOU paid for it.
The TRWD should be reaching out to real water planners of the world and getting their act together before Fort Worth runs out of water. Instead their reaching out and suing our neighbor, Oklahoma for their water. The same state those gas drillers using all our water hail from. The same fellas that made our water district rich. Hey, here's a thought, why don't you make them bring their own water and take their waste back with them? Ever wondered why many drill sites are close to the river and the tributaries? Remember, it flows both ways. Water, too.
If all that weren't enough, then there's fracing. Even if you don't believe it could ever possibly happen, let's just say, what IF just ONE time it does? Remember the coast? What IF the Trinity aquifer is contaminated? How do YOU fix it? What happens then? WHO is responsible?
If all that isn't enough, we came across the article below. Which brings us back to the original question, WHO controls YOUR water?
I am in Parker County at a hearing where Range Resources has filed a plea to jurisdiction in the water contamination case where EPA had to step in. If the judge grants this motion, it means the Texas Railroad Commission is the final authority in fracking water contamination cases. It means you can’t sue for damages if the Big Gas Mafia fracks up your water. It would be a disaster for all Texas water drinkers.
Read the rest here.
There's been a lot of talk about the Tarrant Regional Water District lately, but it hasn't been due to water. It's all been about the J.D. Granger and Tim Love Woodshed restaurant sweetheart deal on the Trinity River. A million dollar (give or take a few, again, it's just YOUR money) deal. Don't you wish YOU could go into business for with no start up cost and if it bombs, you lose nothing? YOU bet you do, cause you've already lost another million. And counting. It's a small price to pay for the billion dollar boondoggle known as the Trinity River Vision.
The TRWD and the Trinity River Vision Authority, under the leadership of JD Granger, Congresswoman Kay Granger's son, heavily promoted Tubing on Trinity or Rocking on the River this summer to the citizens and taxpayers of Tarrant County. WHY didn't they test the water? WHY did the citizens have to pay to have it tested?
The project was touted as flood control, so it would receive federal money. YOU hear that rest of the country? YOU'RE paying for this too, so there. We have to ask again, what does a BBQ shack on the river, a wakeboard park and bridges over dry land do for flood control? YOU should ask. After all YOU paid for it.
The TRWD should be reaching out to real water planners of the world and getting their act together before Fort Worth runs out of water. Instead their reaching out and suing our neighbor, Oklahoma for their water. The same state those gas drillers using all our water hail from. The same fellas that made our water district rich. Hey, here's a thought, why don't you make them bring their own water and take their waste back with them? Ever wondered why many drill sites are close to the river and the tributaries? Remember, it flows both ways. Water, too.
If all that weren't enough, then there's fracing. Even if you don't believe it could ever possibly happen, let's just say, what IF just ONE time it does? Remember the coast? What IF the Trinity aquifer is contaminated? How do YOU fix it? What happens then? WHO is responsible?
If all that isn't enough, we came across the article below. Which brings us back to the original question, WHO controls YOUR water?
I am in Parker County at a hearing where Range Resources has filed a plea to jurisdiction in the water contamination case where EPA had to step in. If the judge grants this motion, it means the Texas Railroad Commission is the final authority in fracking water contamination cases. It means you can’t sue for damages if the Big Gas Mafia fracks up your water. It would be a disaster for all Texas water drinkers.
Read the rest here.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Pulitzers and Pickets
Incoming from a local taxpayer concerning the JD Granger, Tim Love, Trinity River Vision, Tarrant Regional Water District, Woodshed Boondoggle...
I'm boycotting....I hope it fails HUGE...The Business Press should get a Pulitzer for this cover up....
Not only am I boycotting, I'm looking forward to picketing, too. Every restaurant owner in town should be out there in force. Businesses in Fort Worth need to get a clue. Don't they know they are next?
I'm boycotting....I hope it fails HUGE...The Business Press should get a Pulitzer for this cover up....
Not only am I boycotting, I'm looking forward to picketing, too. Every restaurant owner in town should be out there in force. Businesses in Fort Worth need to get a clue. Don't they know they are next?
Sunday, December 18, 2011
WHO do you Love?
The Fort Worth Business Press has a follow up article on the Tim Love Woodshed on the Trinity River. We've added our own questions. YOU should too.
Calls to David Hall and Randal Harwood at the Fort Worth planning and development department requesting information about the code compliance issues were not returned. Love also did not return calls.
WHY is that? Hello...? Anyone there?
The Woodshed was scheduled to open on Labor Day, then in October, and then last week, but Love told questioners on Twitter that the opening is several weeks away and that the outdoor deck “might” be opened in mid-January to attract visitors to the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo.
“He’s a world-class chef; he’s famous,” Lane said. “This was a business proposition, trying to stimulate interest in the river and in Fort Worth. Sit and watch, there’ll be money made for the regional water district.”
Was Lane elected to promote famous people or protect those WHO elected him? WHEN did the Tarrant Regional Water District change its mission to "make money"?
That might answer a few questions about why a water district – without competitive bidding or a vote by its board of directors – would spend nearly $1 million to build a restaurant and sign a 10-year contract with Tim Love to manage it.
Information about the deal was made public after Texas Public Information Act requests by the Fort Worth Business Press and was featured in a story in the Dec. 5 edition.
WHY would that be? Wonder WHAT else could be learned from more requests? Ask YOUR local media.
The Woodshed restaurant is located at 3201 Riverfront Drive, near the Fort Worth Zoo and University Park Village shopping center, on land the water district owns. Instead of paying rent on the building, Love will pay a percentage of the restaurant’s total sales to the Trinity River Vision, a subsidiary of the TRWD. Love also is responsible for utilities, maintenance and upkeep of the building.
A taxpayer purchased, risk free restaurant in a floodplain, next to the contaminated Trinity River, on land owned by the Tarrant Regional Water District...WHAT could possibly go wrong with that?
He was recruited for the deal by J.D. Granger, executive director of the Trinity River Vision Authority and the son of U.S. Rep. Kay Granger (R-Fort Worth), a proponent for the TRV development and flood-control project along the river.
“Whether it’s an abatement, TIF, public/private partnership, getting favorable changes in the law to reduce private risk – it never stops,” Picht said. “TRV is in a class by itself for getting so much public money from so many sources while having no transparency, no hope of keeping within budget, no competent management, and no hope of producing the product that was advertised in the original concept plan.” he said.
Water district officials say the criticism is unwarranted. The idea behind the TRV always has been to reintegrate the Trinity River back into the city and make it a centerpiece of economic development, they say.
Calls to David Hall and Randal Harwood at the Fort Worth planning and development department requesting information about the code compliance issues were not returned. Love also did not return calls.
WHY is that? Hello...? Anyone there?
The Woodshed was scheduled to open on Labor Day, then in October, and then last week, but Love told questioners on Twitter that the opening is several weeks away and that the outdoor deck “might” be opened in mid-January to attract visitors to the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo.
“He’s a world-class chef; he’s famous,” Lane said. “This was a business proposition, trying to stimulate interest in the river and in Fort Worth. Sit and watch, there’ll be money made for the regional water district.”
Was Lane elected to promote famous people or protect those WHO elected him? WHEN did the Tarrant Regional Water District change its mission to "make money"?
That might answer a few questions about why a water district – without competitive bidding or a vote by its board of directors – would spend nearly $1 million to build a restaurant and sign a 10-year contract with Tim Love to manage it.
Information about the deal was made public after Texas Public Information Act requests by the Fort Worth Business Press and was featured in a story in the Dec. 5 edition.
WHY would that be? Wonder WHAT else could be learned from more requests? Ask YOUR local media.
The Woodshed restaurant is located at 3201 Riverfront Drive, near the Fort Worth Zoo and University Park Village shopping center, on land the water district owns. Instead of paying rent on the building, Love will pay a percentage of the restaurant’s total sales to the Trinity River Vision, a subsidiary of the TRWD. Love also is responsible for utilities, maintenance and upkeep of the building.
A taxpayer purchased, risk free restaurant in a floodplain, next to the contaminated Trinity River, on land owned by the Tarrant Regional Water District...WHAT could possibly go wrong with that?
He was recruited for the deal by J.D. Granger, executive director of the Trinity River Vision Authority and the son of U.S. Rep. Kay Granger (R-Fort Worth), a proponent for the TRV development and flood-control project along the river.
Proponent made us laugh. The following says it all:
“Whether it’s an abatement, TIF, public/private partnership, getting favorable changes in the law to reduce private risk – it never stops,” Picht said. “TRV is in a class by itself for getting so much public money from so many sources while having no transparency, no hope of keeping within budget, no competent management, and no hope of producing the product that was advertised in the original concept plan.” he said.
Water district officials say the criticism is unwarranted. The idea behind the TRV always has been to reintegrate the Trinity River back into the city and make it a centerpiece of economic development, they say.
Funny, we thought the plan was always "flood control". Oops.
Taxpayers aren’t footing the bill for the restaurant, Oliver said. “The project was paid for with oil and gas revenues so it didn’t impact the portion of our budget funded by taxpayers,” he said.
Those revenues, however, come from gas wells located on public land owned by the water district.
Taxpayers aren’t footing the bill for the restaurant, Oliver said. “The project was paid for with oil and gas revenues so it didn’t impact the portion of our budget funded by taxpayers,” he said.
Those revenues, however, come from gas wells located on public land owned by the water district.
Duh.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Fort Worth has a new owner
"Time to get to Fort Worth. Tim Love owns this town. It’s a great honky-tonk town."
So. In the world of celebrity chefs, apparently, it is known that Tim Love owns Fort Worth.
This is the best explanation yet as to how it was Tim Love got his sweetheart restaurant deal for his new Woodshed restaurant, courtesy of the generosity of his drinking buddy. J.D. Granger, the Trinity River Vision Boondoggle and the Tarrant Regional Water District.
Read all about it on Durango.
So. In the world of celebrity chefs, apparently, it is known that Tim Love owns Fort Worth.
This is the best explanation yet as to how it was Tim Love got his sweetheart restaurant deal for his new Woodshed restaurant, courtesy of the generosity of his drinking buddy. J.D. Granger, the Trinity River Vision Boondoggle and the Tarrant Regional Water District.
Read all about it on Durango.
Monday, December 5, 2011
All the newspapers...
Are finally talking about the Tim Love Woodshed deal, part of the Trinity River Vision. (Which means more finger pointing and story changing).
The other restaurant owners in town are wishing the "news" would have done so sooner. (Kind of like the tubers of the Trinity Rockin the River events wish the "news" would have tested the water sooner). What will all the businesses in Fort Worth say when the Trinity River Vision promotes their own over the current, established ones?
Check out the Fort Worth Business Press article. Is it just us or do some of the answers given by J.D. Granger and Jim Lane sound different than the ones they gave in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram just a little over a week ago? Last week, neither J.D. or Love could remember WHO asked whom. Read the latest below. Jim Lane told the S-T that the Tarrant Regional Water District board voted on it...now it's clear, no one voted on it.
Lane compares the Trinity River Vision to Lockheed Martin and Alliance Airport. Apples and oranges.
The Trinity River Vision is all taxpayer funded (that's YOU) and has nothing to do with defense (aside from "news" articles) or planes. Nice try though.
And someone please tell these boys, this ain't San Antonio.
After behind-the-scenes negotiations, without public input or competitive bidding, the Tarrant Regional Water District (TRWD) has spent $970,000 of public money to build a restaurant near a popular trail head along the Trinity River. Along the way, the Water District signed a 10-year lease with celebrity chef Tim Love to run it, without a competitive bidding process.
The lease was drafted and approved by Ken Brummett, the water district’s general counsel, but not voted on by the district’s board.
TRVA Executive Director J.D. Granger, who helped search for a tenant for the restaurant, said Love proposed the profit-sharing lease rather than a standard rent agreement because fixed rents often cause problems for open-air, climate-sensitive venues.
The behind-the-scenes negotiations with Love and the terms of the lease, not to mention the lack of competitive bidding, aren’t doing much to change critics’ views that the water district is more interested in creating an economic windfall for downtown developers via the TRV than it is in doing its real job of finding new sources of water for a rapidly growing population, preserving current resources and managing flood control projects, says Clyde Picht, a former city councilman who ran for the water board opposing the Trinity River Vision plan.
The other restaurant owners in town are wishing the "news" would have done so sooner. (Kind of like the tubers of the Trinity Rockin the River events wish the "news" would have tested the water sooner). What will all the businesses in Fort Worth say when the Trinity River Vision promotes their own over the current, established ones?
Check out the Fort Worth Business Press article. Is it just us or do some of the answers given by J.D. Granger and Jim Lane sound different than the ones they gave in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram just a little over a week ago? Last week, neither J.D. or Love could remember WHO asked whom. Read the latest below. Jim Lane told the S-T that the Tarrant Regional Water District board voted on it...now it's clear, no one voted on it.
Lane compares the Trinity River Vision to Lockheed Martin and Alliance Airport. Apples and oranges.
The Trinity River Vision is all taxpayer funded (that's YOU) and has nothing to do with defense (aside from "news" articles) or planes. Nice try though.
And someone please tell these boys, this ain't San Antonio.
After behind-the-scenes negotiations, without public input or competitive bidding, the Tarrant Regional Water District (TRWD) has spent $970,000 of public money to build a restaurant near a popular trail head along the Trinity River. Along the way, the Water District signed a 10-year lease with celebrity chef Tim Love to run it, without a competitive bidding process.
The lease was drafted and approved by Ken Brummett, the water district’s general counsel, but not voted on by the district’s board.
TRVA Executive Director J.D. Granger, who helped search for a tenant for the restaurant, said Love proposed the profit-sharing lease rather than a standard rent agreement because fixed rents often cause problems for open-air, climate-sensitive venues.
The behind-the-scenes negotiations with Love and the terms of the lease, not to mention the lack of competitive bidding, aren’t doing much to change critics’ views that the water district is more interested in creating an economic windfall for downtown developers via the TRV than it is in doing its real job of finding new sources of water for a rapidly growing population, preserving current resources and managing flood control projects, says Clyde Picht, a former city councilman who ran for the water board opposing the Trinity River Vision plan.
___________________________________________
The Fort Worth Business Journal "Water District takes heat over no-bid lease deal"article also makes note of the Trinity River Improvement Partnership (TRIP) award winning documentary, Up a Creek.
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
And the Winner is...
Ms. Hopkins. Again.
The Loser? YOU.
Read Ms. Hopkins latest letter in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. It's got everything from tragedy to comedy, from the Trinity River to Santa Claus.
Bravo, ma'am.
TRV lease
"I'm shocked, shocked!" that anyone is shocked that J.D. Granger granted a no-bid lease on the might-as-well-be-a-million-dollar Woodshed Smokehouse restaurant that his "fiefdom," the Trinity River Vision, has built. (See: "Eatery deal is debated," Sunday) Remember that's how "Mama's Boy" Granger got his own "no-bid" job? Granger, the Trinity River Vision's executive director, is nepotism's biggest beneficiary since the Borgias.
What does the Tarrant Regional Water District get in this $970,000 sweetheart deal? A mention of the proposed restaurant on a television cooking demonstration. Plus -- in lieu of paying rent -- the Woodshed will "ensure ... a specified number of beers ... on tap" and a promise that cyclists and joggers can use the restroom. Plus, if the Woodshed closes before the end of its lease, "the district would get some $400,000 of restaurant equipment."
Used restaurant equipment should come in handy; water board members can become short-order cooks when our 50-year drought dries up the river. Meanwhile, who's minding the store? It took a Star-Telegram Texas Public Information Act request to find out anything about this boondoggle. There's more going around in the dark than Santa Claus.
-- Guelma B. Hopkins, Fort Worth
The Loser? YOU.
Read Ms. Hopkins latest letter in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. It's got everything from tragedy to comedy, from the Trinity River to Santa Claus.
Bravo, ma'am.
TRV lease
"I'm shocked, shocked!" that anyone is shocked that J.D. Granger granted a no-bid lease on the might-as-well-be-a-million-dollar Woodshed Smokehouse restaurant that his "fiefdom," the Trinity River Vision, has built. (See: "Eatery deal is debated," Sunday) Remember that's how "Mama's Boy" Granger got his own "no-bid" job? Granger, the Trinity River Vision's executive director, is nepotism's biggest beneficiary since the Borgias.
What does the Tarrant Regional Water District get in this $970,000 sweetheart deal? A mention of the proposed restaurant on a television cooking demonstration. Plus -- in lieu of paying rent -- the Woodshed will "ensure ... a specified number of beers ... on tap" and a promise that cyclists and joggers can use the restroom. Plus, if the Woodshed closes before the end of its lease, "the district would get some $400,000 of restaurant equipment."
Used restaurant equipment should come in handy; water board members can become short-order cooks when our 50-year drought dries up the river. Meanwhile, who's minding the store? It took a Star-Telegram Texas Public Information Act request to find out anything about this boondoggle. There's more going around in the dark than Santa Claus.
-- Guelma B. Hopkins, Fort Worth
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Front page "news"?
By the time the Fort Worth Star-Telegram article about the Trinity River Tim Love Woodshed restaurant appeared on the front page, it already had 50+ comments online.
So what are THE PEOPLE saying about YOUR elected officials allowing their unelected friends and family to gamble with YOUR money?
We received a couple of questions such as, How do you agree "in principle" to make a building smaller than it is? And how much did Granger and Love drink that neither of them know WHO asked WHO? WHY did it take the paper till now to start asking questions?
Landslide left a comment here.
And the comments keep pouring in on the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, when it rains it pours.
So I suppose we have to assume this is a sweetheart deal courtesy of Kay Granger by way of Granger Junior? Business as usual for those two and for Fort Worth insiders.
I think the celebrity title may have been added by the S-T writers as window dressing- designed to put lip stick on a pig and sell it to us as a great idea.
It kind of shows who really pull the strings at the S-T.
Kay Granger decries crony capitalism and the evil and dangers of the government helping citizens with anything including healthcare for children (She has voted against it everytime). But then she appoints her son to a 6 figure job for which he has no qualifications and then her son decides to appropriate $1 million dollars of taxpayer dollars to a very wealthy businessman just because. If that isn't corporate welfare for the very rich and crony capitalism than somebody tell me what it is. Who elected Kay Granger's son JD to hand out my tax dollars to his buddies. (other than his mother)
This is just the beginning of the Trinity River flood control project turned private development boondoggle. After the by-pass channel is cut and the people of Fort Worth are all assured of being flood-free, the leeves along the river are scheduled to be leveled. What's the Tarrant Regional Water District going to do with all that nice new river edge real estate they own or control?! Figure it out.
This is an outrage to every person that pays taxes. It is bad enough that Granger was given this job by his mother despite the fact that he had absolutely no experience. He makes a huge 6 figure salary, (your taxes) to transfer your hard earned tax payer money to his mothers political cronies. This whole "Vision" is nothing more than very rich people appropriating the working mans tax dollars for their own gain. They support corrupt politicians like Kay Granger that will do anything to keep her job and get one for her unqualified son. We have the highest taxes in Texas right here in Fort Worth and as long as every "chosen" one can dip their hand in for a scoop of tax payer money it is going to stay that way.
This is the first of many shady transactions involving the Trinity boondoogle.
Citizens have already seen that this sweetheart deal short changes the tax system that was supposed to help the city.
I, like an earlier commenter, smell a rat in the kitchen
So what are THE PEOPLE saying about YOUR elected officials allowing their unelected friends and family to gamble with YOUR money?
We received a couple of questions such as, How do you agree "in principle" to make a building smaller than it is? And how much did Granger and Love drink that neither of them know WHO asked WHO? WHY did it take the paper till now to start asking questions?
Landslide left a comment here.
And the comments keep pouring in on the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, when it rains it pours.
So I suppose we have to assume this is a sweetheart deal courtesy of Kay Granger by way of Granger Junior? Business as usual for those two and for Fort Worth insiders.
I think the celebrity title may have been added by the S-T writers as window dressing- designed to put lip stick on a pig and sell it to us as a great idea.
It kind of shows who really pull the strings at the S-T.
Kay Granger decries crony capitalism and the evil and dangers of the government helping citizens with anything including healthcare for children (She has voted against it everytime). But then she appoints her son to a 6 figure job for which he has no qualifications and then her son decides to appropriate $1 million dollars of taxpayer dollars to a very wealthy businessman just because. If that isn't corporate welfare for the very rich and crony capitalism than somebody tell me what it is. Who elected Kay Granger's son JD to hand out my tax dollars to his buddies. (other than his mother)
This is just the beginning of the Trinity River flood control project turned private development boondoggle. After the by-pass channel is cut and the people of Fort Worth are all assured of being flood-free, the leeves along the river are scheduled to be leveled. What's the Tarrant Regional Water District going to do with all that nice new river edge real estate they own or control?! Figure it out.
This is an outrage to every person that pays taxes. It is bad enough that Granger was given this job by his mother despite the fact that he had absolutely no experience. He makes a huge 6 figure salary, (your taxes) to transfer your hard earned tax payer money to his mothers political cronies. This whole "Vision" is nothing more than very rich people appropriating the working mans tax dollars for their own gain. They support corrupt politicians like Kay Granger that will do anything to keep her job and get one for her unqualified son. We have the highest taxes in Texas right here in Fort Worth and as long as every "chosen" one can dip their hand in for a scoop of tax payer money it is going to stay that way.
This is the first of many shady transactions involving the Trinity boondoogle.
Citizens have already seen that this sweetheart deal short changes the tax system that was supposed to help the city.
I, like an earlier commenter, smell a rat in the kitchen
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Rumor has it....
Since May, we've been posting about the long rumored Tim Love Woodshed restaurant on the banks of the Trinity River. As we told you recently, nine times out of ten, rumors in Cowtown usually turn out to be true. Lots of people have been asking questions about the Woodshed for awhile now, seems our "news" finally decided to play too.
Read the article in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, don't miss the comments from THE PEOPLE. Seems we aren't the only ones who suspect WHO's next.
I suspect one day we'll turn on the news and see the video of the FBI raid on their offices, carting out box after box after box of documents not unlike what has been happening in Dallas with their crooked South Dallas politicians.
If the head of the Trinity River Vision Authority was hired without a proper job search, and the contractors and PR firms are too, what makes local restaurant owners think the River Shack would be any different? Wake up, people. No wonder Love didn't know how much it costs now to open a restaurant. And don't forget, the former Gideon Toal who received many no bid TRV and Tarrant County contracts gave the Woodshed an award. How cozy.
Remember, this is the same water district that can't figure out how to supply us water for the future. But they serve one hell of a barbeque, with a side of BS at no charge.
Without open bidding, the Trinity River Vision Authority signed a 10-year lease with Tim Love and spent $970,000 building a restaurant structure at the most popular riverbank trailhead, hoping that the celebrity chef's Woodshed Smokehouse will generate hundreds of thousands of dollars annually in a profit-sharing rent arrangement.
Unlike municipal lease deals, those offered by water districts do not require competitive bidding under Texas law, said Anthony Magee, a Dallas attorney with Gruber Hurst Johansen Hail Shank who is familiar with such issues.
"Gosh, I wish we had an opportunity to bid on this," said Shannon Wynne, CEO of Dallas-based 8.0 Management, which operates three Fort Worth restaurants, Flying Saucer, Flying Fish and the downtown open-air 8.0. "I had been looking up and down the river for a location like that for 18 months.
"I don't know how Tim got the call, but he's a lucky guy to get it," Wynne said. "We weren't asked and so I was upset. I asked J.D., 'Who did you all ask?'"
"I think there would be other people interested if they had known about it," said Shaw, who is on the board of the state restaurant owners association. "I just can't believe Tim was the only one interested. Who did [Granger] approach? Did he send out letters? Did he just sit in a bar and talk about that?"
Neither Love nor Granger recalls who approached whom first about the site.
Because of its location, on the bank of a narrow section of the Trinity River's Clear Fork, the site was extremely difficult to develop, and the Army Corps of Engineers made clear that it could only be rented, not sold, Granger said.
In the end, Granger said, he reviewed two proposals and selected Love's. One thing that the high-profile chef -- who owns Lonesome Dove, White Elephant Saloon and Love Shack -- could bring to the table is an ability to generate interest in North Texas and beyond, he said, noting that Love had mentioned the Woodshed on national television.
Last week, Love agreed in principle to cut back slightly on interior space so that the structure is small enough not to require ceiling sprinklers, said David Hall, the city's assistant director of planning and development. Originally, the leased premises measured 10,295 square feet of enclosed and unenclosed areas.
The lease agreement, made available to the Star-Telegram after a Texas Public Information Act request, has the Woodshed paying 6 percent on the first $500,000 of sales, 5 percent on the next $500,000, and then 4 percent on sales over $1,000,001.
"If it goes south, the tenant is in a better situation than the water district," he added. "It was stupid on the water district's part not to bid it out because I think they could have gotten a lot more favorable lease.
Read the article in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, don't miss the comments from THE PEOPLE. Seems we aren't the only ones who suspect WHO's next.
I suspect one day we'll turn on the news and see the video of the FBI raid on their offices, carting out box after box after box of documents not unlike what has been happening in Dallas with their crooked South Dallas politicians.
If the head of the Trinity River Vision Authority was hired without a proper job search, and the contractors and PR firms are too, what makes local restaurant owners think the River Shack would be any different? Wake up, people. No wonder Love didn't know how much it costs now to open a restaurant. And don't forget, the former Gideon Toal who received many no bid TRV and Tarrant County contracts gave the Woodshed an award. How cozy.
Remember, this is the same water district that can't figure out how to supply us water for the future. But they serve one hell of a barbeque, with a side of BS at no charge.
Without open bidding, the Trinity River Vision Authority signed a 10-year lease with Tim Love and spent $970,000 building a restaurant structure at the most popular riverbank trailhead, hoping that the celebrity chef's Woodshed Smokehouse will generate hundreds of thousands of dollars annually in a profit-sharing rent arrangement.
Unlike municipal lease deals, those offered by water districts do not require competitive bidding under Texas law, said Anthony Magee, a Dallas attorney with Gruber Hurst Johansen Hail Shank who is familiar with such issues.
"Gosh, I wish we had an opportunity to bid on this," said Shannon Wynne, CEO of Dallas-based 8.0 Management, which operates three Fort Worth restaurants, Flying Saucer, Flying Fish and the downtown open-air 8.0. "I had been looking up and down the river for a location like that for 18 months.
"I don't know how Tim got the call, but he's a lucky guy to get it," Wynne said. "We weren't asked and so I was upset. I asked J.D., 'Who did you all ask?'"
"I think there would be other people interested if they had known about it," said Shaw, who is on the board of the state restaurant owners association. "I just can't believe Tim was the only one interested. Who did [Granger] approach? Did he send out letters? Did he just sit in a bar and talk about that?"
Neither Love nor Granger recalls who approached whom first about the site.
Because of its location, on the bank of a narrow section of the Trinity River's Clear Fork, the site was extremely difficult to develop, and the Army Corps of Engineers made clear that it could only be rented, not sold, Granger said.
In the end, Granger said, he reviewed two proposals and selected Love's. One thing that the high-profile chef -- who owns Lonesome Dove, White Elephant Saloon and Love Shack -- could bring to the table is an ability to generate interest in North Texas and beyond, he said, noting that Love had mentioned the Woodshed on national television.
Last week, Love agreed in principle to cut back slightly on interior space so that the structure is small enough not to require ceiling sprinklers, said David Hall, the city's assistant director of planning and development. Originally, the leased premises measured 10,295 square feet of enclosed and unenclosed areas.
The lease agreement, made available to the Star-Telegram after a Texas Public Information Act request, has the Woodshed paying 6 percent on the first $500,000 of sales, 5 percent on the next $500,000, and then 4 percent on sales over $1,000,001.
"If it goes south, the tenant is in a better situation than the water district," he added. "It was stupid on the water district's part not to bid it out because I think they could have gotten a lot more favorable lease.
Friday, November 4, 2011
How much Love?
People just keep asking about the Woodshed. In a recent Fort Worth, Texas Magazine article Tim Love says he's going to write an open letter to the state about the bureaucracy of opening restaurants. He says it's more difficult now and "To open a restaurant now is a minimum half-million dollars, probably $1.5 million. In my opinion, that isn't fair."
Probably? He's not sure? Isn't he opening the Woodshed? People keep asking about the price tag of it, since it sits on Tarrant Regional Water District property.
And if you were wondering, yes, he plugged the Trinity River Vision.
He notes Angelo's Bar-B-Que gets it right and isn't going anywhere. Too bad all their neighbors are being acquired by eminent domain. He also mentions Railhead, which happens to be Charlie Geren's restaurant.
In Texas, we keep it in the "family".
Probably? He's not sure? Isn't he opening the Woodshed? People keep asking about the price tag of it, since it sits on Tarrant Regional Water District property.
And if you were wondering, yes, he plugged the Trinity River Vision.
He notes Angelo's Bar-B-Que gets it right and isn't going anywhere. Too bad all their neighbors are being acquired by eminent domain. He also mentions Railhead, which happens to be Charlie Geren's restaurant.
In Texas, we keep it in the "family".
Monday, October 31, 2011
Dear Texas Attorney General
It seems some in Tarrant County might need to be taken out behind the Woodshed...
The citizens have taken a special interest in the new Tim Love restaurant on the banks of the Trinity River. They seem to have issue with WHERE all this public money for private profit is coming from. THEM.
Check out the latest on Durango. Then, sit tight, more to come.
Beale also told me that the Woodshed cost $1.2 million and that currently three entities, (Tim Love, Tarrant Regional Water District and Trinity River Vision Authority) are at odds over something, which is why the Woodshed sits on the bank of the Trinity River, unopened.
The citizens have taken a special interest in the new Tim Love restaurant on the banks of the Trinity River. They seem to have issue with WHERE all this public money for private profit is coming from. THEM.
Check out the latest on Durango. Then, sit tight, more to come.
Beale also told me that the Woodshed cost $1.2 million and that currently three entities, (Tim Love, Tarrant Regional Water District and Trinity River Vision Authority) are at odds over something, which is why the Woodshed sits on the bank of the Trinity River, unopened.
Friday, October 14, 2011
One question leads to another
From a concerned observer....
I have a few questions about Tim Love's new restaurant and how it relates to the TRV. I attempted to get some info from TAD. The business is listed as 3201 Riverfront Dr., but that address is not listed with TAD. Numerous properties in that area show to be owned by the water board. Was the land purchased or leased from the water board? If so what was the purchase price or how much is the rent? What is the taxable value of the land? Why is the water board involved in commercial development? I thought their purpose was flood control and water management. This deal seems as stinky as the river itself. If you do not know the answers to these questions, could you please tell me where I should direct them?
Thank You,
P B
We're waiting.....
I have a few questions about Tim Love's new restaurant and how it relates to the TRV. I attempted to get some info from TAD. The business is listed as 3201 Riverfront Dr., but that address is not listed with TAD. Numerous properties in that area show to be owned by the water board. Was the land purchased or leased from the water board? If so what was the purchase price or how much is the rent? What is the taxable value of the land? Why is the water board involved in commercial development? I thought their purpose was flood control and water management. This deal seems as stinky as the river itself. If you do not know the answers to these questions, could you please tell me where I should direct them?
Thank You,
P B
We're waiting.....
Labels:
Tim Love Woodshed,
TRV
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