Friday, November 03, 2023

Cushman & Wakefield Takes Some Lumps

 

Cushman & Wakefield Fired by Brookfield as Investment Sales Team Departs for Newmark

 REPRINTS


Cushman & Wakefield (CWK) has had a hard day at the office.

The brokerage has been fired from handling office and logistics listings in the U.S. by Brookfield Propertiesand, to add insult to injury, its employees are still being poached by rival Newmark (NMRK), according to reports.

SEE ALSO: New York Vies for Life Science Glory at Builds Bio+ Symposium

Brookfield’s massive scale makes it a golden goose for any brokerage, and the falling out between C&W and Brookfield may have happened after the brokerage backed out of a deal to move from 1290 Avenue of the Americas to Brookfield’s 660 Fifth Avenueaccording to Bloomberg.

“We’re proud of the work and long-standing value our brokerage advisory professionals helped to build into Brookfield’s portfolio,” a spokesperson for C&W said in a statement to Commercial Observer. “While completely surprised by this reaction, we consider disciplined management in the best interest of our firm, employees and shareholders.”  

Brookfield declined to comment.

And to make Thursday worse, investment sales brokers Dan O’BrienEric Roth and Maurice Suede jumped ship to Newmark, joining powerhouses Doug Harmon and Adam Spies who made the same move in February. News of the job changes was first reported in The Real Deal

O’Brien, Roth and Suede will launch a new sales team called the “New York Private Capital Group” to focus on smaller institutional investors.

“The launch of the New York Private Capital Group underpins our dedication to providing comprehensive advisory services to our clients and further accelerates our progress to become the most sought-after capital markets firm in the world,” Barry Gosin, Newmark’s CEO, said in a statement. “We are uniquely positioned to capitalize on a new era for our industry with our world-class bench of talent and services.”

In response to an inquiry on the most recent departures, a spokesperson from C&W referred CO to CEO Michelle McKay’s remarks during the firm’s second-quarter earnings call.

“I think that we are in a particularly educated seat when it comes to broker retention,” McKay said at the time. “So if we have an individual or a group that’s been working for us, we have somewhere between five to 10 years of the financial history of that individual or team. And we know if they’re enterprise positive or negative. So we have perfect information when we make a decision about who to offer retention to and who not to offer retention to.”

C&W has been cutting costs to reduce debt and reduce its leverage by about $200 million, according to its third-quarter results. It experienced a net loss of $33.9 million during that period, according to Bisnow.

Mark Hallum can be reached at mhallum@commercialobserver.com.

More evictions filed during October in Maricopa County than any month th...

Ilya: the AI scientist shaping the world

MAG Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Committee Meeting - November Rescheduled from Wednesday 11/1/2023 to Tuesday 11/7/2023.


Intelligent Transportation 

Systems Committee 

11/7/2023 Meeting

 November 7, 2023, 10:00 AM

 This meeting is available to watch online!
 Submit written comments up to two hours 
  prior to the start of the meeting.

Rescheduled from Wednesday 11/1/2023 to Tuesday 11/7/2023.

The agenda and materials for the November 7, 2023 MAG Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) Committee meeting have been posted 

and can be viewed on the MAG website. 

Link to the agenda and meeting materials are here

 MAG November 7 ITS Committee Meeting Materials. Thank you.


ADEQ Wants You to Help Shape Arizona's Advanced Water Purification (AWP) Program!

 

Water Quality Division

ADEQ Wants You to Help Shape Arizona's

Advanced Water Purification Program!

Dear Stakeholders,

ADEQ is pleased to introduce the Advanced Water Purification (AWP) Proposed Program Roadmap. This innovative program aims to convert treated wastewater into purified water, addressing water scarcity challenges in Arizona. 

Our goal is to introduce AWP as a viable option for Arizona communities, ensuring a safe, reliable, and sustainable drinking water supply. To that end, we invite all stakeholders and interested parties to contribute their input on the proposed Roadmap as we collaborate to enhance Arizona's water portfolio for a prosperous future. 

AWP Proposed Program Roadmap | View/Download > 

Read the News | View the Press Release >


We value your insights and input during this process. 
  • Therefore, we are initiating an informal 30-day comment period, which allows you to share your comments and suggestions with us. 
  • Your feedback is invaluable as we strive to shape the future of AWP in Arizona. 
  • Please send your comments to reuserulemaking@azdeq.gov by December 2, 2023. 
The AWP Proposed Program Roadmap is the result of eight months of research and recommendations by the Technical Advisory Group on AWP topics such as pathogen and chemical control, enhanced source control, advanced water treatment, and outreach. 
  • ADEQ has also conducted a technical and legal analysis and evaluated processes from other states to provide safe, reliable, and sustainable drinking water to Arizona communities. 
  • We are confident that our state will meet and exceed industry standards.

If you are interested in receiving upcoming AWP stakeholder meeting information, please subscribe to the AWP Rulemaking email list | Subscribe to Receive AWP Rulemaking Updates >
AWP Graphic

About ADEQ

Under the Environmental Quality Act of 1986, the Arizona State Legislature established the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality in 1987 as the state agency for protecting and enhancing public health and the environment of Arizona. For more information, visit azdeq.gov.

ARIZONA CENTER FOR INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING: AHCCS Mis-steps have put members of an already susceptible population at further risk of relapse, abuse, homelessness and even death.

GOVERNMENT | HEALTH

Patients, advocates describe ‘pure chaos’ in state response to AHCCCS fraud

On May 16, as cameras flashed and tribal leaders looked on, Arizona’s governor and attorney general announced a statewide crackdown on behavioral health providers suspected of defrauding the state’s Medicaid program out of hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars.

Leaders revealed the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) had suspended payments to more than 100 providers to tamp down widespread fraud. Officials had developed extensive safeguards to help prevent new, unscrupulous operators from cropping up, they said, and had begun rolling out a comprehensive plan to assist and protect the vulnerable, largely Indigenous patients victimized by the scandal.

“It will be a fight, but one that my administration and I are fully committed to,” Gov. Katie Hobbs told reporters. “We will take the actions necessary to bring an end not just to the fraudulent activity, but also to the humanitarian crisis that it has created.”

More than five months later, patients, advocates and providers contend the state has fallen short on both fronts. In interviews with AZCIR’s Hannah Bassett and Maria Polletta, they described the chaotic rollout of a dedicated crisis response line, insufficient vetting of providers meant to fill gaps in housing and treatment, and a lack of oversight that has allowed people affiliated with suspended facilities to quickly reopen new businesses, among other problems.

As suspended operators continue to shutter, AZCIR has found, the state’s missteps have put members of an already susceptible population at further risk of relapse, abuse, homelessness and even death.

READ THE FULL STORY

RELATED:

State officials’ failure to adequately anticipate the impact of widespread suspensions among behavioral health providers has left grassroots organizers grappling with much of the human fallout.

In this piece, AZCIR’s Hannah Bassett shares the story of how one such group—Stolen People, Stolen Benefits—helped two tribal members return to the Fort Apache Indian Reservation after they experienced the predatory behavior targeted by the state.

Road to Recovery

As Arizona officials crack down on fraudulent behavioral health providers, suspending payments to hundreds of them in a sweeping statewide response, those in need of treatment were caught in the middle, often left on their own to find a path forward. In their own search for sobriety, one couple eventually seeks a future in the place they left behind.
READ MORE >

ABOUT THIS PROJECT

These articles are published as part of the Mental Health Parity Collaborative, a national partnership between AZCIR and The Carter Center’s Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism, The Center for Public Integrity and news outlets from across the nation. The collaboration brings together reporters and editors to independently produce data- and solutions-driven stories that examine access to mental health care in their respective states. You can read more about the collaborative project here.

Did you know stories like this can take months to report? It's the type of reporting you've come to rely on from our newsroom, and it's funded almost entirely by readers like you. Help us keep doing journalism that matters.

From now through December 31, NewsMatch and local philanthropists will match your new monthly donation 12 times or double your one-time gift, all up to $1,000. DOUBLE your impact by donating today!

Yes, I want to DOUBLE my donation!

Thanks, as always, for following and supporting our work.

With gratitude,


Brandon Quester
Executive Director and Editor
Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting




Brandon Quester | AZCIR brandon.quester@azcir.org

 

Zelensky Calls for a European Army as He Slams EU Leaders’ Response

      Jan 23, 2026 During the EU Summit yesterday, the EU leaders ...