Crain's Cleveland Business

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AKRON: From crafts to coffee, it’s still all in the family for the Alberty brothers. PAGE 17

REAL ESTATE Agents weathered the pandemic with distinction. PAGE 10

COSTAR

MICHELLE JARBOE/CRAIN’S CLEVELAND BUSINESS

MICHELLE JARBOE/CRAIN’S CLEVELAND BUSINESS

CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I SEPTEMBER 27, 2021

The owners of the Kimpton Schofield Hotel, from left, the operator of the Hilton Cleveland Downtown hotel and the owner of Great Northern Mall in North Olmsted are asking for a reduction in their property’s value.

QUEST FOR LOWER VALUES, TAXES

Commercial property owners cite pandemic in asking for relief during special filing window

BY MICHELLE JARBOE Commercial property owners in Cuyahoga County say the pandemic dealt them a $581 million blow — and they’re seeking tax relief based

on lower real estate values. During a special filing window that closed early this month, the Cuyahoga County Board of Revision received almost 200 complaints on properties hard-hit by the coronavirus crisis and government health orders. Most of the value-reduction requests came from owners and operators of hotels, parking facilities, shopping centers and nursing homes. PAGE 20

Distillers can't keep up with thirst for top-shelf bourbon BY DAN SHINGLER

A Bib & Tucker 12-year-old single-barrel bourbon bottled exclusively for Ohio. | DAN SHINGLER /CRAIN’S CLEVELAND BUSINESS

It’s 8 a.m. on a recent Saturday and customers are lining up inside the Giant Eagle store in Solon, among other places, hoping to purchase rare and coveted liquid gold. The grocery store is open, but the crowd of 20 or so, mostly men in jeans, shorts and T-shirts, is waiting

NEWSPAPER

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for a specific department to open — the liquor department. Saturday, you see, is when the store puts out its latest shipment of bourbon at 9 a.m., and if you snooze, you lose, and don’t get the booze. Or at least, you’re not likely to get the very best stuff. “This isn’t so bad,” remarked one customer who said that day’s line

THE

was relatively short. He, like others in line, didn’t want to give his name. Sometimes, the line and the wait are much longer. Ohio, you see, has a big thirst for American whiskey — in fact, the biggest. In fiscal 2021, which ended June 30, Ohioans purchased $376 million worth of the stuff. Michigan was in second place,

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with sales of $349 million, the state reports. “Once when I was here, the line went down the aisle and wrapped around through part of the store,” said the lone woman in line on that mid-September day. “They had Blanton’s.” See BOURBON on Page 19

A CRAIN’S CLEVELAND PODCAST

9/24/2021 2:08:23 PM


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