As Star Store Campus Closed, Politician Kept Six-Figure Maintenance Job

For the state of Massachusetts, UMass Dartmouth’s Star Store campus was expensive and short-lived. For New Bedford politician John T. Saunders and his relative who still owns the property, it was a windfall

The state invested more than $60 million in creating a new campus for UMass Dartmouth at the Star Store, which stayed open for 22 years.
The state invested more than $60 million in creating a new campus for UMass Dartmouth at the Star Store, which stayed open for 22 years.
Credit: Ben Berke / The Public’s Radio
Share
The state invested more than $60 million in creating a new campus for UMass Dartmouth at the Star Store, which stayed open for 22 years.
The state invested more than $60 million in creating a new campus for UMass Dartmouth at the Star Store, which stayed open for 22 years.
Credit: Ben Berke / The Public’s Radio
As Star Store Campus Closed, Politician Kept Six-Figure Maintenance Job
Copy

When UMass Dartmouth began renting the Star Store in 2001, the university entered into a public-private partnership that dazzled the city of New Bedford with promises of economic renewal.

With an annual earmark of $2.7 million in the state budget, the Massachusetts legislature created a new college campus for the arts in the heart of the city’s struggling downtown.

A prominent local developer, Paul Downey, would maintain ownership of the Star Store, but UMass Dartmouth’s rent would finance a complete renovation of the abandoned building, reviving a city landmark that dated back to the golden age of downtown department stores.

To round out the deal, state officials committed to paying an “additional rent” to reimburse the landlord for maintaining the campus. As part of their due diligence, they reviewed and signed a “good faith statement” where Downey outlined his anticipated annual expenses.

There, tucked within a 139-page lease, was the line that would financially benefit a New Bedford politician for decades to come.

The line itself budgeted a modest $45,000 for the “salary and fringe” of a building superintendent at the Star Store campus. But the salary rose significantly at the state’s expense after the job went to Downey’s relative, John T. Saunders, an influential New Bedford city councilor.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Legislation to end indoor smoking at Bally’s casinos wins unanimous support in committee, marking major step forward for worker health despite delayed implementation and industry pushback
Senate Republicans say legislation goes too far. Some gun rights advocates say it doesn’t go far enough.
Talks resume with federal mediator and larger union presence amid mounting worker hardship, community support, and questions over hospital finances and real estate deal
After a brisk three-hour debate, lawmakers advanced a budget boosting health care funding and raising new taxes on vacation homes—while bracing for potential federal cuts that could send them back to the State House this fall