Event Recap - Discussion with Laura Meckler - September 19, 2023

Washington Post reporter Laura Meckler met with the Cleveland Club on September 19 to discuss education and racial issues, notably ones highlighted in her recent book Dream Town: Shaker Heights and the Quest for Racial Equity.

Meckler grew up in Shaker Heights, graduated from Shaker Heights High School and spent considerable time in Cleveland researching her book, which scrutinizes Shaker’s history and then efforts to the present day at integrating housing and education.

Meckler said that Shaker’s integration efforts have notable similarities and differences from ones in other communities. Unlike many cities in the period 1950-1970, Shaker – or at least some neighborhoods in Shaker – made a concerted effort to develop a racially integrated community that halted white flight, which was a response of many communities to Black families moving into established white areas. Shaker whites held the line, and beginning in 1970, the school district used busing to achieve racial diversity throughout the various elementary schools.

“What I love about this story,” Meckler said, “is that there are no heroes and villains, that there was progress as well as mistakes. There is lots about this story that is in the messy middle.”

Meckler noted that the Ludlow neighborhood in particular organized itself against white flight. In doing so, its citizens had to battle the local mortgage-lending companies plus established real estate industry practices. She pointed out that the Shaker school system began a program of voluntary busing long before many communities followed but under court orders.

However, by the 1980s, a new problem was out in the open, Meckler explained: segregation within the schools on account of tracking, that is, the advanced classes were composed mainly of white students while the remainder were filled disproportionately with Black students.

She said that the Shaker schools again attempted remedies, most recently during the covid pandemic by attempting to eliminate tracking while still keeping Advanced Placement and Baccalaureate Classes. There are some indications of success, but Meckler said it’s too soon to say if the effort will achieve its goals. “The city and the schools are integrated,” she said. “Blacks and whites live and work together, and this is notable, but the achievement gap racially – or socio-economically – remains. Reducing this gap is difficult, and there remains a lot of work to do. Nevertheless, what I see is success.”

Answering a question, Meckler surmised that zoning had much to do with the present socio-economic makeup of Shaker. After the housing crisis of 2008, absentee landlords bought up properties, which resulted in lower income families taking up Shaker residency. This widened the gap between rich and poor, with attendant strain on city cohesion and the school system. (In 1989, median Black income was roughly 65% of median white income; in 2020, it was roughly 35% of white income.)

Meckler added that “the setback nationally for students on account of the covid pandemic cannot be overstated.”

She also noted that Shaker has an important schools plan on the ballot for this November. In keeping with some conclusions of her book, Meckler said that with respect to issues put before voters, “a school system’s administration has to be ‘up on its game,’ presenting its case clearly so that voters are not confused, and communicating both accurately and effectively.”

Excepts and condensations of Dream Town have appeared in the Washington Post. The website for the book can be found here.

Event Recap - Discussion with Dan Moldea, June 8, 2023

Noted author and expert on organized crime Dan Moldea met with the Club on June 8.

Moldea, who grew up in Akron, began investigating crime and corruption as a graduate student at Kent State in 1974. Eight months after he began his investigations of the Teamsters and the Mafia for a small weekly newspaper—including an eight-part series about the union pension fund—Jimmy Hoffa disappeared on July 30, 1975. Forty-eight years later, Moldea—who described himself as Ahab searching for the white whale—is still looking for Hoffa.

He said that Cleveland was like the Wild West for a time during the 1890s-1920s immigration phase and Prohibition. Then, as the city grew, so did the Mafia. “Its heyday was in the 1950s and ‘60s,” Moldea declared. “It was very influential nationally.

Because of influential mob associate Moe Dalitz, Cleveland was instrumental in the development and success of Las Vegas. Dalitz arranged the financing of the Desert Inn and other hotel/casinos with the help of Hoffa and the Teamsters pension fund. “Dalitz’s memory is still cherished in Las Vegas,” Moldea said. “He’s regarded as kind of the George Washington of Las Vegas.” 

The leader of the Cleveland Mafia beginning in the 1940s was John Scalish, who, according to Moldea, “was a kind of bon-vivant and natty dresser. But he did not bring younger men into the organization such that by the mid-1970s, all the leaders were themselves past 60. When Scalish died during heart surgery in 1976, none of the three senior Mafia men wanted the top job.”

But John Nardi—persona non grata among Mafioso while working in Cleveland with Irish gangster Danny Greene—did.

When Nardi was told he would not be selected to succeed Scalish as the boss of the local crime family, Nardi and Green attempted to take control of the Mafia’s territory. Violence resulted. Three prominent racketeers were murdered by 1977, including Nardi and Greene.

However, the killing of Greene was handled in such a sloppy manner that federal prosecutors managed to flip one of Greene’s killers, which led to the prosecution and total downfall of the entire hierarchy of the Cleveland Mafia.

“The Cleveland mob never really recovered from that,” Moldea said, adding that the 2011 movie, Kill the Irishman, depicted the Cleveland mayhem. Moldea praised the work of Rick Porrello, the author of the book upon which that motion picture was based.

Moldea reaffirmed statements he made in his 1978 book, The Hoffa Wars, that Jimmy Hoffa, New Orleans Mafia boss Carlos Marcello, and Tampa Mafia boss Santo Trafficante engineered the assassination of President John Kennedy in 1963, the reason being to stop Attorney General Robert Kennedy’s relentless assault against the Mafia.

Moldea also had strong words about legalized sports gambling: “It’s a disaster for both America and for sports,” he said. “The legalization of gambling always leads to the proliferation of illegal gambling and organized crime activities. Instead of paying the high commissions in legal gambling operations and then taxes to local, state, and federal jurisdictions, more sophisticated bettors will turn to illegal operations in which bookmakers only make bettors put up eleven dollars to win ten—and only take a ten-percent vigorish on the losing bets booked. Plus, the illegals will extend credit. After drug trafficking, the Mafia’s top money-making activity is gambling on NFL games.”

Moldea added that “organized crime has now become very sophisticated. It’s gone online, high- tech, and offshore. These guys are no longer fourth-grade dropouts. The top leadership is well- educated. They are not like the old Mafia.”

In response to a question from one of our members, Dan offered the following links to stories about organized crime in Cleveland: two about the Tong Wars among Chinese in the 1920s and one about crime hangouts on and near Short Vincent Avenue downtown.

You can learn more about Dan Moldea, his books, and his views at his website, www.moldea.com