Dix: Two Wrongs Don't Make It Right

Published March 22, 2013

Here’s our bottom line on the Dix property feud. Governor Perdue was wrong on several levels to have committed the state to an agreement over the Dorothea Dix property, but so is the legislature wrong in reneging on the deal.

For starters, Perdue and just about everyone else seemed to have forgotten the Master Agreement for this property that was developed in the 1990’s, adopted by the Council of State and affirmed by the Joint Governmental Operations Committee of the legislature. This document states that future state government growth in the Capital City will occur on the Dix property. Either this agreement was forgotten or ignored.

Then there’s the matter of the hospital itself. Mental health reforms, first passed in 2001, are a total, unmitigated and unconscionable disaster. We have completely abandoned the cause Dorothea Dix championed in our state, turning our heads to those who cannot help themselves, pretending they don’t exist or, worse still, admitting we don’t have the intelligence, resources or capacity to help them. Shame on us! Many voices, ours included, urged the Governor and others to go slow on the Dix property until we come to our senses and determine a better course for assisting the mentally ill. We may well want to re-open the hospital that was largely closed because it needed renovation and out of spite toward Wake legislators. If there is even a remote chance we will decide to re-open Dix it is unwise to develop a theme park on a location where we house and treat those with mental illness.

But the deal itself was bad. We’re talking about 320 acres of prime real estate in downtown Raleigh. While most would agree we don’t want this to become a commercial real estate development it certainly has value beyond the 84 million dollar appraisal. At this price an acre of land is valued at 262,000 dollars. Prime residential lots of an acre or less in Raleigh sell for 500,000 dollars or better. Granted, we are looking at a lease rather than sale but taxpayers didn’t get a good deal. It becomes worse when you calculate the net cost to taxpayers.

A large number of employees, including the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services are housed on the Dix campus. As a result of this deal these employees will be moved. The Department of Administration has submitted requests for proposals for more than 1 million square feet of office space to house these employees. Granted, some of the current Dix space needs renovation, but so does most every state-owned building. Class B office space, the classification the state usually rents, can rent for as much as 21 dollars a foot. Do the math. We are leaving buildings we own to move to leased office space because of this Dix deal.

So subtract the meager 500,000 dollars per year we will receive in lease rent from the millions we will have to pay for new office space and this deal smells really bad. Perdue wanted a legacy as she was leaving office and wanted to circumvent an incoming Republican governor and legislature. She refused to heed many voices urging her to get it right rather than do it quick.

Having said all that we also have to say what the legislature is currently doing is wrong. When I was growing up you often heard people say, “A man’s word is his bond.” Forget the patriarchal language but the point is as true today as it was then. When you give your word, you follow through unless there are legal reasons not to. Just because our Governor AND Council of State made a bad deal on our behalf isn’t justification for walking away from it. This doesn’t send good signals to those with whom the state does business. It’s not the first bad deal our state has entered and it likely won’t be the last.

So two (or more) wrongs don’t make it right. Is there no ground here for people of goodwill to find an acceptable solution? We gave away a large chunk of the Dix site to the Farmer’s Market, The Healing Place and the NC State Centennial Campus. Surely in those remaining 320 acres there could be plenty of room for the City of Raleigh to develop a park while still leaving room for DHHS and other state employees on the property. Let us reason together.

March 22, 2013 at 2:14 pm
Ricky Evans says:

After the last patient left Dix, the hospital lost its accreditation. To re-open, it would have to be accredited under current standards which it most likely cannot even come close to meeting. Previously, I'm sure it was "grandfathered" under old regs that allowed Dix to continue operation without having to make untenable changes.

Bottom line: Some of Democrat Perdue's mistakes are so bad, they cannot be undone. A hallmark of probably our worst governor.

March 25, 2013 at 3:50 pm
Cameron Brown says:

Good point, I hadn't thought about regulation as applied to re-opening.

March 22, 2013 at 3:39 pm
dj anderson says:

Seems the mentally ill, for whom the land was dedicated, should be the prime beneficiary in any deal.