Not all billionaires are created equal in the eyes of Clevelandโ€™s leaders. 

For months, Justin Bibb and Chris Ronayne have wrestled with the Haslams, who own the Browns, over their plans for a roofed stadium in Brook Park. But Dan Gilbert, the owner of the Cavaliers and patriarch of the Bedrock and Rocket family of companies? Now thereโ€™s a billionaire team owner they can get behind. 

Cleveland officials lauded Gilbert in absentia last week at a topping-off ceremony for the Cavsโ€™ new practice facility. Dubbed the Cleveland Clinic Global Peak Performance Center, the building is going up along the Cuyahoga River, where Bedrock has plans for other major developments. 

Location was important for speakers at the event, including City Council President Blaine Griffin, who wants the Browns to renovate the lakefront stadium rather than move to Brook Park.

โ€œDan Gilbert and the Rocket Mortgage team and the Cleveland Clinic put their money where their mouth is, and thatโ€™s in the city of Cleveland, in the heart of Cleveland,โ€ Griffin said.

Observers noted the contrast between the warmth for Gilbertโ€™s downtown investments and the coolness for the Haslamsโ€™ Brook Park plans. Calling Gilbert โ€œCleveland leaders’ favorite billionaire,โ€ Axiosโ€™ Sam Allard wrote that officials โ€œhave a billionaire they feel they can worship in good conscience.โ€

Clevelandโ€™s love language isnโ€™t just words of affirmation. Itโ€™s also economic development incentives, including tax increment financing to boost Bedrockโ€™s riverfront plans.

Real estate writer Ken Prendergast found what he called a โ€œbattle of the billionairesโ€ in Bedrockโ€™s landing of Cosm, the immersive entertainment complex, in one of its downtown projects. Look closely at one of the Brownsโ€™ Brook Park stadium renderings. Prendergast noted that Cosm had been included in the background. 

To that observation Weekly Chatter will add one more. Another rendering of the Brook Park stadium showed the indoor football field converted into โ€” of all things โ€” a basketball court. 

Time out for Clevelandโ€™s payments for Browns stadium

We told you last month that Cleveland City Hall was queuing up $2.6 million to reimburse the Browns for repairs at the lakefront Huntington Bank Field. 

City Council introduced legislation in June to pay the bill. Typically, such a routine measure would have been passed at the following meeting in July. But the Browns legislation didnโ€™t come up for a vote. 

A spokesperson for City Hall said the Browns themselves asked for the delay. 

Government Reporter
I follow how decisions made at Cleveland City Hall and Cuyahoga County headquarters ripple into the neighborhoods. I keep an eye on the power brokers and political organizers who shape our government. I am a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University and have covered politics and government in Northeast Ohio since 2012.