The Nepotism Continues

Frisco Chronicles recently told you that local businessman, Jason Young, obtained a liquor contract worth millions of dollars with Universal Kids Resort and Universal Kids Theme Park.  We published the liquor license on our Facebook page and questioned how Young always seems to appear whenever major opportunities land in Frisco.

Youngs longtime relationship with Mayor Jeff Cheney and current Mayoral candidate (aka his best friend) Mark Hill is hard to miss, as he brags about it on social media.  It lends to the other rumblings sent to us that Young has alleged contracts with Toyota for the World Cup (FIFA) games and the ever-coveted PGA Championship events coming to town.  One could ask, “Does being the current Mayor’s golf buddy have some benefits?”

It begs the question is nepotism, or favoritism based on relationships, at play in Frisco?   Every resident should question when public projects, insider relationships, and massive money collide, why does it make transparency become a treasure map? 

Frisco Chronicles would like to know how many other alleged or potential contracts may have been awarded to the same friends of Cheney and other committee members.

What do Public Records and Business Connections Reveal?

Through OpenCorporates you can learn about publicly listed businesses, business interests and more.  My research started by creating a list of Jason Young’s business.   OpenCorporates lists the following businesses.

Board and Bread LLC lists names include Donny Churchman, manager and Jason Young, agent & manager

The Parlour

Elaine’s Cocktail Kitchen

Alora Hospitality Group LLC lists Donald Churchman as the managing member, Erin Myers as the agent and managing member, and Young as a managing member.

Verona Villa Frisco LP

JYVV LLC, lists Jason Young as the agent and director

TexBev Services LLC listsJason Young as the manager and United States Corporation Agents, Inc., as the agent

Donny Churchman, Jason Young’s business partner and self-proclaimed “lobbyist for the Building Industry,” appears to have been a smart friend choice for Young. Churchman’s company lists were too long to share here. In my opinion, his hand in the development of downtown Frisco deserves closer public review. You can mosey on over to OpenCorporates.com for the full breakdown.

Next step, compare the names of the business to the minutes for City of Frisco meetings, boards and commissions.  Would we find any connections? 

The Grant

The Frisco Community Development Corporation, or FCDC, offers the Rail District Reinvestment Grant Program. Based on the description of the program, it provides matching grants of up to 50% of private investments, with a maximum of $300,000 per project, to property owners and businesses.

The city states the program “aims to enhance the built environment of the Rail District” through partnerships with property owners and businesses.  Another document states the overall goal is to enhance the architectural character, economic viability, and pedestrian experience in Frisco’s historic downtown.  But what is the primary intent of the grant? 

Well, according to the city website the grant’s PRIMARY INTENT is “to improve the architectural character and pedestrian experience of the Rail District through matching grants for building façades, streetscapes, and social spaces like patios and courtyards.”

The Connection: Found In The Agenda Details

While doing research, comparing Young’s company names to City of Frisco agenda and minutes – we found a connection!  Surprise, surprise.  Well, not really.  The connection is item #16 in the agenda for the Frisco Community Development Corporation on February 19, 2026.  It reads,

“Consider and act upon authorizing the City Manager to execute a Performance Agreement by and between Alora Hospitality Group LLC and the Frisco Community Development Corporation through the Frisco Rail District Investment Zone Pilot Program.”

According to the minutes posted on this city website, Chris Leanord, Planning Manager, discussed the improvements requested and answered questions related to this item.  Jason Young representing Elaine’s Cocktail Kitchen expressed appreciation for the program and highlighted the benefits these improvements would make to the Rail District.  Ed Kelly moved to approve, and Secretary/Treasurer Ed Mahoney seconded the motion.  The item was passed unanimously in a 7 to 0 vote by President Chad Brubaker, Vice President Joshua Meek, Secretary/Treasurer Ed Mahoney, Director Sadaf Haq, Director Craig Wax, Director Tracie Shipman, and Director Ed Kelly.

The Big Question

When downtown restaurants were hurting, falling into debt, and losing their businesses, why did Jason Young’s new business, Elaine’s Kitchen, allegedly receive one of these Frisco CDC $300,000 grants for a kitchen remodel?

Remember the Tier 1 core details of the grant program appear to include:

  • Eligible improvements: exterior building enhancements, streetscapes, patios, courtyards, interior improvements, and upgrades to building safety systems.
  • Match structure: reimbursement of up to 50% of approved development expenses after the project is completed.
  • Target area: restricted to properties located within the designated Old Town Commercial Zoning Boundary/Rail District Grant Zone.

Frisco Chronicles has to ask: How does an alleged $300,000 reimbursement from the Frisco CDC for a remodeled kitchen fall under those rules?

Which other merchants in downtown Frisco were able to take part in this program?

Nepotism Running Rampant

Look at the list of names who voted for Jason Young to receive this grant.  Then look at his social media and you will see these are not just Frisco CDC Board members but many of them appear to be good friends and political allies of Jason Young.   

Is that not the definition of “conflict of interest” and nepotism?

Imagine that money being used to help suffering merchants instead of allegedly reimbursing Jason Young’s kitchen remodel. 

Reference links:

Elaines Memo CDC Downtown Grant

Downtown Performance Agreement (Elaine’s Cocktail Kitchen)

Support Documentation (listed under the agenda item)

The Nepotism Continues

Who is Chef Nick?  According to OpenCorporates, Dominic Sean Parks Jr. owns Chef-Nic Catering LLC.  He is listed as the Director and Agent.

Frisco Chronicles also received information that Chef Nic, who provides meals and some catering for the city, may allegedly have the Universal Kids contract for his services.  

The Famous or Infamous Jake Petras

While we are at it, Jake Petras, former Frisco P&Z commissioner, good buddy, and keyboard warrior of Jeff Cheney, appears to have cashed in as well. If my memory serves me right, Jake was allegedly down on his luck and facing serious personal financial stress, an impending divorce and that his alleged lover, former Frisco ISD President Renee Archambault, may have been strained at the time.

Jake’s company, LMIF Real Estate, LLC, where he serves as director, appears to have scored big last fall.  According to the August 5, 2025 Frisco City Council Agenda Item #33, the applicant LMIF Real Estate, had a request to repeal Ordinance No. 18-10-56 consisting of 80.1+ acres on the southwest corner of Mahard Parkway and University Drive to AMEND the Zoning Ordinance to REZONE the property as Planned Development-271-Office-2/Retail/Residential, and to consider to direct Staff to prepare an Ordinance of the same.

Guess what, it passed 6-0.   Could this be another example of nepotism or quid pro quo?

Zoning Case No. Z24-0002. Applicant: LMIF Real Estate, LLC. (Development Services/JH) Reference Links:

Agenda Memo Document

PZ PH Result Memo

Sean Merrell – Planning and Zoning Board

Another example of alleged Nepotism maybe the recent “warehouse” deal that upset our Richwoods community.  We learned some interesting, alleged connections but we will talk about that in our next blog post – so stay tuned on that.

In Closing

I would like to know how many other contracts may have been awarded to the same friends of Cheney and other committee members.  In Frisco, the question is no longer whether favoritism exists — it’s how comfortable city leadership has become with it. When grants, opportunities, and city-backed incentives repeatedly seem to land in the laps of those with the right relationships, the public starts to notice a pattern.

The average business owner filling out paperwork, paying taxes, and trying to compete fairly deserves to know the playing field isn’t tilted toward insiders with direct lines to City Hall. Yet time and time again, residents are left wondering whether qualifications matter less than connections. If you know the mayor, attend the right events, donate to the right campaigns, or move within the right circles, does the red tape suddenly disappear? Do the rules become “flexible”? Does public money somehow become easier to access?

That perception alone is dangerous. Government runs on public trust, and once citizens begin believing there are two sets of rules — one for insiders and one for everyone else — confidence erodes quickly. Transparency becomes theater. Accountability becomes selective. And taxpayers begin asking whether city programs are truly designed to benefit Frisco as a whole… or simply reward the politically connected.

Frisco deserves leadership that serves residents, not networks. Because when special treatment becomes standard operating procedure, it’s no longer economic development — it’s a country club with taxpayer funding. And in Frisco, membership appears to have its privileges.

Disclaimer

This article is written as opinion, commentary, and personal interpretation based on publicly available records, meeting observations, agenda materials, and information I have heard from community sources. Any statements involving motives, intent, conflicts of interest, contracts, relationships, or behind-the-scenes activity should be understood as alleged, suspected, or opinion unless directly supported by cited public records. Readers are encouraged to review the linked materials, attend public meetings, request records, and form their own conclusions. Nothing in this article should be interpreted as a final statement of fact about any person’s legal conduct, criminal behavior, or ethical violations.

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