Port of Portland executive director Mike Thorne.
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COVER
STORY
PORT IN A STORM
by
NIGEL JAQUISS
njaquiss@wweek.com
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Sidebar: Busting
Up the Boys Club
When Vera Katz
declared March 20 "Great American Meatout Day," the press corps
had a field day. When Ben Canada rode a bus on the first day of
school, the media fought for seats. When Mark Kroeker helped a girl
get a liver transplant, the entire city read about it. But when
Mike Thorne, the executive director of the Port of Portland, cut
a multimillion-dollar deal affecting prime public property, hardly
anyone noticed.
One of the great
curiosities of Portland politics--and the local media's priorities--is
how little is known about Thorne, who has commanded the port for
a decade.
And yet, it
would be hard to overstate the importance of the organization he
controls. Thorne oversees Portland's airport, its harbor and nearly
10,000 acres of land (including much of the city's waterfront).
The port, which had a budget last year of $854 million, estimates
that $10 billion worth of goods passed through its facilities in
1999 and that one in five local jobs depends on its operations.
"Without the
port, this city would look like Des Moines," says Port Commissioner
Jay Waldron. "The reason there are 1.2 million people here instead
of 200,000 is the port and the global access it provides."
While the economy
and Oregon's rivers make front-page news daily, Thorne has labored
in relative obscurity.
That could soon
change.
On the brink
of Thorne's expected announcement about whether he will seek the
Democratic gubernatorial nomination, WW has obtained a previously
buried draft version of a report that is unusually critical of him,
going so far as to suggest that he should be replaced.
The draft was
completed for the port 18 months ago by the local consulting firm
David Evans and Associates, but it, like the final report, has been
seen by only a handful of port officials.
When WW showed
him excerpts of the document, City Commissioner Erik Sten, who was
interviewed by Evans and Associates for the report, said, "What
surprises me is the breadth of the criticism. I knew the port had
environmental critics, but it's clear that significant business
interests expressed similar thoughts."
News about the
report can't help Thorne. Nor can continued criticism of the way
in which his organization recently disposed of three large parcels
of real estate.
But Thorne's
greatest challenge as he weighs a bid for governor may come from
the man who now holds the job. Gov. John Kitzhaber, a former Thorne
ally, has begun taking a keener interest in the port--and he has
made it clear that he's not happy with what he sees.
The Evans and
Associates draft report includes excerpts from interviews with 24
business leaders, public officials and environmentalists who were
hand-picked by port staffers. The list of participants, all of whom
were quoted anonymously, includes Sten, Columbia Sportswear CEO
Tim Boyle and Mike Houck of the Audubon Society. Collectively, the
interviews portray an organization that is inflexible and unresponsive.
Jay Waldron says changing the port's culture is difficult:
"It's like turning the Queen Mary." |
Here are some
excerpts from the draft:
* "The culture
of the Port doesn't permit questioning or independent actions.
Those well-intentioned staff who take the concerns of the community
seriously soon come into conflict with a culture at the port that
does not welcome any challenge to authority."
* "The Port
will never act responsibly toward the environment until there
are decision-makers who...don't simply think that you can rewrite
a Mission Statement and suddenly be 'environmental.'"
* "The Port's
problems in communicating with
the public were mentioned more than any other issue in the stakeholder
interviews. It's not that the Port doesn't know how to communicate
but that they really don't want to."
* "The
CEO of a large business in Rivergate [the port's industrial park]
said he called eight different people at the Port, trying to get
answers to a key question about his lease, and no one could help
him."
The strongest
criticism in the draft report, however, was reserved for Thorne,
essentially calling for his ouster:
* "Several
stakeholders felt that the Port needs a more visionary and civic-minded
Executive Director, and that until such a person is appointed,
significant change is not possible."
In all, consultants
spent 15 months preparing the report. The draft (which was delivered
to WW anonymously late last year) was produced in August
1999.
While the
final version of the report, completed a year ago, contains harsh
criticism, it also contains a number of significant revisions,
including the elimination of an entire chapter that discussed
stakeholders' unhappiness with the port. Most notably, the direct
criticism of Thorne was replaced with praise: "Several business
leaders who had recently been invited to meet in small groups
with Mike Thorne to talk about the future of the Port felt that
the meetings were very productive."
Thorne was
surprised when WW read him the passage from the draft that
effectively calls for his replacement and then informed him that
the passage was absent from the final report. "That's not the
way we do things around here," Thorne says. "If that [criticism]
was part of the record then I should have been aware of it."
After receiving
the draft, WW spoke with nearly a dozen commissioners or
interviewees. None recalls seeing either the draft or the final
version. One of the people interviewed by Evans and Associates
predicted the report's low profile: "I don't think this report
will ever see the light of day," the interviewee told consultants,
who were paid $60,000 for their services. "The port is run from
the top, and there is no initiative for change."
Port spokesman
Steve Johnson says the Evans report was not intended for circulation.
But that explanation doesn't satisfy Port Commissioner Cheryl
Perrin, who reviewed exerpts of the draft shown to her by WW.
"I'm disappointed
and shocked that we didn't see this earlier," says Perrin. "If
we spend money on a report, what good is it if you don't see it
and learn from it?"
Few public
officials in Oregon's recent history have wielded power as long
as Mike Thorne. Prior to taking the top port job in 1991, he served
18 years in the Oregon Senate, the last seven as co-chairman of
the Ways and Means Committee. Ramrod straight, the 6-foot-3-inch
Pendleton native is so meticulous that his expense accounts record
four-mile trips (cost to the port, $1.30) to City Hall.
A third-generation
wheat farmer fond of quoting John Wayne--"talk low, talk slow
and don't talk too much"--Thorne was a natural choice when the
top port job became available.
Although a
bronze bucking bronco and a photograph of a wheat harvest adorn
his office, the port boss is no hayseed. In addition to serving
on the boards of the Association for Portland Progress and OHSU,
he is also a director of StanCorp Financial Group and Willamette
Industries, two of Oregon's largest companies. And although his
family farms 5,000 acres, he's as likely to spend winter weekends
golfing at his Borrego Springs, Calif., home as he is mending
fences in Pendleton.
Recently,
the port endured the loss of Delta Airlines' international service
and the Superfund listing of Portland Harbor. Nevertheless, Thorne's
tenure has included notable successes. He sharply reduced the
port's reliance on property taxes; he's overseen a doubling of
traffic at PDX and has helped make Portland Harbor the second-biggest
automobile importer on the West Coast. "He's done a fine job,"
says Jonathan Schlueter of the Pacific Northwest Grain and Feed
Association. Others are more effusive. "Mike Thorne's one in a
million," says Byron Hanke, the former director of the port of
Vancouver, Wash. "He's a great leader."
It's also
clear that Thorne has alienated people. He and Sten clashed over
how to clean up the Columbia Slough. The Audubon Society's Houck
and Nina Bell of Northwestern Environmental Associates have regularly
battled with him on issues including deepening the Columbia ship
channel, airport expansion and the proposed development of West
Hayden Island.
"The port
hasn't always been sensitive to who its shareholders are--taxpayers
and residents of the Tri-County area," says Waldron, an environmental
lawyer at Schwabe Williamson & Wyatt, who was appointed to
the commission in 1999.
Cheryl Perrin objected to the sale of Terminal One. "I believed
then and now that that land is never going to decline in value,"
she says. |
But Thorne doesn't
deserve sole blame for his organization's shortcomings. "I think
the problems at the Port of Portland are structural and go beyond
Mike Thorne's dismal environmental record," says Astoria city councilor
Doug Thompson, a longtime port watcher. "There is no political accountability
for the decisions made there."
In theory, Thorne
reports to a nine-member commission, appointed by the governor.
But in practice, the commission rarely opposes him. One commissioner,
who asked not to be named, says the executive director rules with
an iron fist: "The commission is intimidated. If you disagree with
him, you become a pariah."
Thorne scoffs
at such talk but concedes that commissioners rarely vote against
him. "I can't recall a situation where a resolution was rejected,"
he says.
Three recent
port real-estate transactions shed light on one of the central criticisms
aired in the Evans report--that Thorne and his organization are
indifferent to the public's interest. In two of the three cases,
the port sold or leased a major parcel of publicly owned real estate
without a competitive bidding process. All three raise questions
about whether the port made decisions that maximized value--or were
simply expedient.
* AIRPORT
LIGHT RAIL:
Slated to open
in September, the $180 million project linking PDX to the existing
light-rail systems is a joint venture between Tri-Met, the city,
the port and San Francisco engineering giant Bechtel Enterprises.
The port's role
in the deal was leasing 120 acres of land between Gateway and the
airport for 99 years to Bechtel, the project's developer, in exchange
for $28.3 million worth of work on the light-rail project.
At Thorne's
urging, the commission approved the lease in 1998 without soliciting
other bids. While airport light rail has been praised as an example
of intergovernmental cooperation, the decision to skip competitive
bidding, while legal, raised some eyebrows.
"Ultimately,
I think the port made a mistake," says Portland State University
urban studies professor Gerard Mildner, a light-rail critic. Mildner
argues that without competitive bidding it's impossible to determine
fair market value for the 120 acres.
Relationships
between key players in the transaction also provoke questions. Two
friends of Thorne's were key parts of Bechtel's team. One was the
company's hired gun, former Gov. Neil Goldschmidt, who originally
steered Thorne into the port job. The other was Bechtel Senior Vice
President John Carter, a Pendleton native. "Mike made it known that
he got the idea from Carter," confirms Port Commissioner Keith Thomson.
While there
is no evidence that Thorne did anything wrong, Mildner says that
the combination of personal relationships and a no-bid transaction
creates awkward appearances.
"If you're dealing
with nearly $200 million of public funds, you might want to steer
clear of deals in which you might have a perceived conflict of interest,"
Mildner says. Privately, at least two commissioners told WW that
they agree with Mildner, even though they voted for the deal.
Thorne concedes
that after Bechtel approached the port, he felt no need to contact
other companies. His relationship with Goldschmidt and Carter, he
says, is irrelevant: "You don't let personalities dictate how you
proceed."
* TERMINAL
ONE:
On Feb. 8 of last year, Portland developer John Carroll offered
to buy Terminal One, an unused 14-acre parcel along the Willamette
in the River District, from the port for $6 million. Carroll's unsolicited
proposal surprised commissioners. "I hadn't known that piece of
land was for sale," Perrin says.
Nevertheless,
20 days later, before any public discussion of the sale, Bill Bach,
the port's real-estate chief, wrote to Carroll, tentatively accepting
his price, subject to commission approval.
But at its March
2000 meeting, the commission tabled Carroll's proposal, in part
because of the highly unusual intervention of former port commission
president Bob Ames.
Ames, now a
Pearl District developer, warned the commission not to part with
Terminal One hastily. "They've owned that property for nearly 100
years and it hasn't been used for 15," Ames later told WW.
"There was a rush to judgment."
Pressured by
Ames' intervention, the port solicited competitive proposals. A
local group called Riverscape LLC bid $7.6 million for the property--$1.6
million more than Carroll's bid. Even then, commissioners Perrin
and Junki Yoshida voted against Riverscape's proposal. "We never
took a vote that the land was for sale," Yoshida says. "This is
such prime land they should have opened the bidding up nationwide."
While the port's
action was entirely legal, its approach differs from the process
followed by other publicly funded entities. For instance, Pam Brown,
Portland Public Schools' facilities director, says she could never
sell a major piece of property in a month, as the port nearly did.
"I can't imagine that it could happen," Brown says. "It's good to
be aggressive with your property, but you have to remember that
you're a public body and many people are your stakeholders."
For his part,
Thorne makes no apologies for nearly selling to Carroll. "His bid
was consistent with our valuation, and we recommended going forward,"
he says.
* PORTLAND
SHIPYARD:
In 1995, the port agreed to lease its 94-acre shipyard, located
on the east bank of the Willamette just northwest of the Fremont
Bridge, to Cascade General, a local ship-repair firm.
In 1997, Cascade
CEO Frank Foti began negotiating the outright purchase of the shipyard
from the port. Cascade lacked adequate financing, however, and was
unable to close the deal for three years.
Port records
show that in the meantime, at least three other companies expressed
interest in acquiring the shipyard: Singapore Technologies, a firm
owned by the Singapore government; First Wave, a Gulf Coast ship
repair firm; and Cammell Laird, a British ship-repair firm that
ultimately teamed up with Cascade General to buy the shipyard.
Cascade's difficulties
in completing the shipyard's purchase would have driven many property
owners into the arms of another buyer. But the port went to extraordinary
lengths to stick with Cascade. In 1998, the commission slashed the
company's rent on the shipyard from $5.8 million to $3 million.
In all, the commission set--and Cascade missed--four deadlines to
complete the purchase.
In the end,
the port sold Cascade and Cammell Laird 57 acres and all of the
yard's equipment last August for $18 million in cash and a $5.8
million unsecured note. (Cascade also received a $7 million credit
for rent already paid).
Critics, including
Tom Maples, owner of the local ship-repair firm Mar-Com (which was
also interested in the shipyard), argue that the port should have
opened up competitive bidding. "I think they should have sold it
for fair market value, which was more like $40 to $50 million,"
Maples says.
Thorne disagrees
that sticking with Foti was a mistake. "Notwithstanding the missed
deadlines, Frank continued to pay his bills," he told WW.
"There was no compelling reason to make a change." Port Commissioner
Michael Powell adds that selling to Cascade accomplished the goal
of maintaining hundreds of shipyard jobs.
Today, however,
according its own statements, Cammell Laird, Cascade's partner,
is nearly bankrupt. Port officials say they have no direct risk
but concede that the $5.8 million the Cascade/Cammell Laird joint
venture owes the port in 2009 is unsecured, as is the joint venture's
obligation to pay $2.5 million for eventual environmental cleanup.
While other
Oregonians may not have paid Thorne much attention, Kitzhaber has
been watching the port closely since his second term began in 1999.
And based on correspondence between Kitzhaber and Thorne and conversations
with sources close to both, it appears that Thorne has run afoul
of the one person he cannot afford to ignore.
A letter Kitzhaber
sent Thorne last February concerning the importance of at least
considering breaching the lower Snake River dams illustrates the
tension between the two. "What is unacceptable to me as a
regional leader and as a policy maker is the tactic of simply attacking
every option that comes along as too expensive, too risky, scientifically
unsound or politically impossible," Kitzhaber wrote.
In December,
Kitzhaber took the unusual step of summoning Thorne and commissioners
Yoshida, Perrin, Waldron and Bob Walsh to his Portland office. The
meeting came in the wake of a bizarre three-month period: In August,
Thorne announced his resignation; then, after an aborted replacement
search, the commission announced in late October that he was staying
on. (It's not clear that Thorne's resignation had anything to do
with the critical Evans report.)
Part of Kitzhaber's
agenda at the meeting was Thorne's unretirement, which was reportedly
as baffling to the governor as it was to some commissioners. "None
of us had a choice on Thorne coming back," a commissioner told WW.
"And the governor was incredibly pissed off." (Kitzhaber spokesman
Bob Applegate says the governor was merely "surprised" at Thorne's
return.) For his part, Thorne says that his relationship with Kitzhaber
remains strong although they do have occasional disagreements that
can get "emotional."
On March 6,
in a move that sent shockwaves through the port's Old Town headquarters,
Kitzhaber signaled the beginning of a major revamping of the port
when he nominated Bob Eaton to the Port Commission to replace Walsh,
whose term has expired.
Eaton, 55, a
fisheries advocate, hails from Astoria, the center of opposition
to Thorne's top priority--deepening the Columbia River shipping
channel. If confirmed, Eaton would be the first port commissioner
from outside the metro area. "This is probably one of the most significant
changes in the port's hundred-year history," a port insider says
of Eaton's nomination.
The governor's
chief of staff, Bill Wyatt, argues that the only way to win approval
for channel deepening will be to compromise with regulators, environmentalists
and downriver residents. "We view Eaton as an important part of
the deepening process, which the governor supports," Wyatt says.
As well as nominating
Eaton, Kitzhaber is expected to strengthen his influence with the
commission by appointing Waldron, a close ally, to succeed Walsh
as commission president. In September, Kitzhaber will also get to
fill the seats of commissioners Powell, who will finish his second
term then, and Ann Nelson, who is unlikely to be reappointed after
her first term.
As this story went to press, Thorne filed the paperwork in Salem needed to
run for governor. The news surprised Yoshida and Perrin, the two commissioners
WW was able to locate. Perrin says that given the highly public nature
of the port, Thorne should have alerted commissioners to his plans.
"I think this is highly inappropriate," she says. "It does not speak well for
his being forthcoming with the commission."
Should Thorne step down, it would open the job for Wyatt, the governor's right-hand
man and a finalist to replace Thorne last fall.
In the meantime,
Eaton's upcoming Senate confirmation hearings may expose the split
between Kitzhaber and Thorne more publicly. In Salem, the first
legislator to question Eaton's nomination was David Nelson, a wheat
farmer and senator from Thorne's hometown of Pendleton.
Busting
Up the Boys Club
Port Commission President Bob Walsh. |
Earlier this
month, Gov. John Kitzhaber appointed Bob Eaton to replace Port
Commission President Bob Walsh. Walsh, a former chairman of the
Portland Development Commission who has served on the port panel
for 12 years, epitomizes what a fellow commissioner calls "the
downtown boys club."
Walsh runs
Walsh Construction, one of the Northwest's largest construction
companies. He also has close ties to key players in two of the
port's most questionable transactions. Although there's no evidence
that Walsh profited from those relationships, his failure to disclose
them illustrates the cozy atmosphere in which the port operates.
In 1993, Walsh
Construction built the Virginia Street Rowhouses for developer
John Carroll. A year later it built the Pearl Lofts for Carroll.
Walsh, however, did not disclose those deals when Carroll's proposal
to buy Terminal One came before the commission last year. Port
counsel Cory Streisinger says Walsh was under no obligation to
do so because selling the property to Carroll would have had no
direct impact on Walsh or his company. (Neither Walsh nor Carroll
returned WW's phone calls.)
Walsh also
has close ties to Jeff Grayson, whose company, Capital Consultants
Inc., loaned more than $10 million to what is now Cascade General
in the '90s. Only once did Walsh disclose that he had personal
and company investments with Grayson, and that was in a 1995 closed-door
executive session with other commissioners. Walsh did not recuse
himself from deliberating on Cascade's 1995 lease or subsequent
purchase of the shipyard (see "The Fresh Connection," WW,
Aug. 23, 2000). In 1996, Walsh's company built the $16.4 million
Legends Condominium in Southwest Portland with financing provided
by Grayson. Walsh never disclosed that transaction.
Again, Streisinger
says that because the sale of the shipyard would not directly
affect Walsh's company, he was under no obligation to disclose
his relationship with Grayson.
--NJ
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