(October 5) NEEDLES—The Needles City Council has waived a host of the restrictions it normally applies to selling city-owned property in listing for sale more than 280 acres of what it now considers surplus municipal land.
In recent months, the city proceeded with the sale of five parcels totaling 1.81 acres, including a one acre parcel near the rodeo grounds, netting $40,510.05 for those combined properties. The council on September 11 resolved to put a significant amount of the land it owns on the market. In doing so, the council approved waiving requirements it has traditionally adhered to in selling property. Those included obtaining a real estate appraisal prior to the sale, prohibiting the sale of property smaller than an acre and requiring a developer agreement and master plan on larger properties prior to the sale.
The city will now allow the properties to be sold on the basis of a broker’s opinion of the value instead of a real estate appraisal.
Georgia Breault, a member of the city’s property sale committee, and council member Terry Campbell said that maintaining the prior requirements for the sales would likely discourage buyers from purchasing the properties. Breault said the sales would have a short and medium term benefit to the city in the form of revenue from the sales and property tax income.
The city had waived those requirements in selling the five parcels totaling 1.81 acres.
The properties being listed inclued 3.54 acres at 3509 Needles Highway; 0.37 acres on Route 66 near the wrecking yard; 20.39 acres off Bailey; 24.88 acres at the intersection of Lillyhill and Parkway; 6.01 landlocked acres accessible via Casa Luna; 1.22 acres off east Broadway, across from Harris Motors; 37.14 of wilderness acreage 5,000 feet from Peru and Lillyhill; 5 acres on Bailey near the senior citizens center and the hospital; 17 acres on Lillyhill behind the senior citizens center and the hospital; 20 acres at the southwest corner of Lillyhill and Parkway; 16.97 acres at the end of J Street; 37.33 acres on Eagle Pass Road past the San Bernardino County flood control property; 39.9 acres on Needles Highway outside the city limits; 20 acres at the end of Crestview below the Travelers Inn; 0.68 acres at 511 W. Broadway; 8.42 acres at 228 Safari Drive; 2.53 acres on the north side of the intersection of Clary and San Clemente, across from the water tank; and 22.87 acres at the end of J Street.
In the previous sales, the city used two of the four brokers based in Needles, and will seek to involve all four brokers in future sales.
Monthly Archives: December 2012
3 Years Later, DA Drops Child Porn Charges Against Dem Operative
(October 5) The San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office last week dismissed all charges against Sam Clauder, the former spokesman and finance chair for the San Bernardino County Democratic Central Committee, more than three years after he was charged with felony child pornography possession.
The district attorney’s move came just three days before Clauder’s trial on those charges was set to commence and raises questions with regard to the motivation of the prosecutor’s office in having initiated the case against Clauder.
The case was initiated with a complaint filed by the district attorney’s office on February 25, 2009, and an arrest warrant was issued shortly afterward on March 3.
From the outset, the case against Clauder appeared marginal, at best. It was based wholly on offending images that were alleged to have been downloaded on a computer in the control and possession of Clauder’s former wife until the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department took possession of it.
Moreover, there have been accusations all along that the prosecution was politically motivated, given Clauder’s standing within the Democratic Party and the consideration that despite county voter registration numbers by which Democrats have eclipsed Republicans, the GOP still dominates San Bernardino County politically in terms of the numbers of elected officials at the municipal, special district, county, state and federal level.
Clauder’s function within the party was key to marshaling resources to invigorate voters and encourage them to show up at the polls and vote. His arrest and prosecution dealt a significant blow to the party, which now boasts more registered voters in the county than the Republicans but continues to lag behind its rival in voter turnout at the polls.
The case against Clauder was based upon allegations made against him arising out of the break-up of his marriage, in particular that his son had found an image “depicting a minor engaging in sexual conduct” on a personal computer to which all members of the household had access during the time they lived together in the community of Crestline in the San Bernardino Mountains.
Clauder contends his wife and son provided the computer to the San Bernardino County Sheriffs Office in Twin Peaks on July 7, 2008. On January 8, 2009, both his wife and son submitted to a polygraph examination regarding their discovery of the images on the computer and failed that test. According to Clauder, Deputy Brian Swann wrote regarding the polygraph tests “inconsistent … but we believe them anyway” in his report.
Despite the district attorney’s office’s contention that evidence implicated Clauder in the matter, no evidence was ever produced that Clauder had in fact downloaded the image in question onto the computer.
At the September 28, 2012 hearing three-and-a-half years after the charges were filed, San Bernardino County deputy district attorney Maryanne Jung Won Choi told the judge, “At this time the people wish to dismiss the case.” Choi cited information that her office had received in July, indicating her office did not want to proceed any further. She called for the charges to be dismissed “in the interest of justice.”
A press release issued by Clauder just before the September 28 hearing claimed, “Clauder’s computer consultant has presented undeniable evidence to prove all of the alleged child pornography found on the Clauder family’s computer is traced to his son, while none of it is traced to Clauder.”
At the time Clauder was charged, he was a staffer for local Congressman Joe Baca. Clauder was released from that position when the charges became known.
Clauder alleges that in addition to the domestic issues involving his former wife and son, members of the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department Twin Peaks Station had motivation to wish him harm and those two forces joining together resulted in the filing of false charges.
Clauder related that while working for the Alpenhorn News as a sports writer he reported and investigated allegations of sexual assault made against a star football player at Rim of the World High School by a fellow female student. Clauder objected to a press release issued by the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department announcing the arrest of the football player at the high school.
Clauder’s position on the press release was that the announcement tainted the case in that if the suspect was innocent, it would ruin his life, and that if the case was valid, the victim would be exposed to peer pressure and possible retaliation, lowering the chances of her testifying in the case. Clauder believes the sheriffs’ press release caused a sexual perpetrator to get away with a crime because the victim and three additional victims who came forward decided not to testify in the matter.
Clauder claims he became motivated to lobby the state legislature on the issue and as a result of his actions the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department Twin Peaks Station came under scrutiny.
Clauder alleges that led to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department’s Twin Peaks Station to cover up a beating that he sustained in October 2006 from several youths. Deputies falsely claimed he sustained his injuries as a result of stumbling due to inebriation at the San Bernardino County Central Detention Center, he said.
In September 2007, Clauder worked for three months as an associate editor and primary crime reporter at the Mountain News and primary crime reporter. In that position, Clauder asserts he was able to gain additional information regarding corruption in the San Bernardino County Sheriffs Department Twin Peaks Station.
Clauder spoke of spending 50 days in the San Bernardino County Central Detention Center as a result of the criminal charges and of being made “homeless” when he moved out of his family home and again when he lost his job with Congressman Joe Baca.
At the September 28 hearing, Clauder inquired of the court, “Where do I get my life back?” Judge Glenn Yabuno responded, “I don’t have an answer.”
After the court hearing, Clauder’s attorney Raj Maline told the Sentinel, “There was conclusive proof that it was all done after he (Clauder) left the house.” Maline further explained that at the preliminary hearing the defense was given a folder of photographs, in which there were ten photographs that could be considered child porn. “It was Trey’s (Clauder’s son’s) account on the front.” Maline said. He asked, “How did they miss that?”
Two years ago, in discussions with Maline, Choi offered Clauder two years in the state penitentiary as part of a plea bargain.
“Friday morning she wouldn’t look me in the eye,” Clauder said.
Contacted by the Sentinel, Choi declined to comment.
Los Angeles Seeking $550 Million For Ontario Airport; Will Accept $450 Million
(September 28) LOS ANGELES—The findings in a long-awaited report from the Los Angeles city administrative officer further the possibility that the City of Angels will relinquish ownership and control of Ontario International Airport, though the report indicates the aerodrome’s selling price will be far higher than Ontario officials were hoping. And while Los Angeles City Manager Miguel Santana’s report recommends that his city begin a dialogue on negotiations for the possible transfer of the airport back to Ontario, he has also called for exploring the possibility of selling the airport to the highest bidder, which might prove to be any of ten private sector domestic and international companies that last year expressed an interest in owning and running the facility.
This week, four days after the report was released, the Los Angeles City Council’s Trade Commerce and Tourism Subcommittee endorsed Santana’s report and recommended to the full city council that it direct Santana to begin discussions for transferring control of the airport.
Los Angeles took over management of the airport in 1967 as part of a strategy to increase flights out of the aerodrome. That ploy worked, as Los Angeles was able to use its control of gate positions and other considerations at Los Angeles International Airport to induce airlines to fly into and out of Ontario. Just under 200,000 passengers enplaned at Ontario Airport in 1966. Under Los Angeles’s management, over $550 million in improvements were made to the facility. In 1985, Ontario deeded the airport to Los Angeles for no consideration. In 2007, usage of the airport peaked, with 7.2 million passengers moving through the airport’s gates.
Since that time, passenger traffic through Ontario International has dropped dramatically, with 4.2 million passengers using the airport in 2011, and further declines registering this year.
Ontario city officials have repeatedly asserted that Los Angeles World Airports, the non-profit entity Los Angeles created to manage the four airports it owns, is purposefully mismanaging Ontario Airport’s operations to increase passenger traffic at Los Angeles International Airport, which has undergone significant renovations in recent years.
Los Angeles World Airport (LAWA) officials reject those assertions, maintaining that the drop in passenger traffic through Ontario is a function of the sputtering economy and the doldrums in the airline industry generally.
Ontario officials have pushed ever more strenuously – including seeking legislation in Sacramento and Washington, D.C. and conducting an intense public relations campaign – to have Los Angeles return ownership and management of the airport to Ontario.
At one point, Ontario city officials, led by councilman Alan Wapner, were suggesting that Los Angeles should simply deed the airport back to Ontario as a public benefit transfer, propounding that the airport had no value as marketable real estate. Quietly, however, the city of Ontario made a confidential offer to purchase the airport for $50 million and an assumption of $71 million in bond debt related to financing for improvements that had been made to the airport and another $125 million to repay Los Angeles for passenger facilities charges collected at Los Angeles International Airport that were used to make improvements at Ontario Airport.
On September 21, Santana, who in March was directed by the Los Angeles City Council’s Trade, Commerce and Tourism Committee to examine the feasibility of transferring Ontario Airport to local control, released his 100-page analysis calling for Los Angeles to “respectfully” decline Ontario’s $246 million offer. Rather, Santana suggested, the two cities carry out discussions relating to viable options for Ontario’s purchase and Los Angeles’s sale of the airport along with the shared ownership and management of ONT between officials from Los Angeles World Airports, the owner and operator of the airport, and Ontario and San Bernardino County, who have members that make up the majority of the Ontario International Airport Authority board.
That crucible of negotiations would lead to a determination of the airport’s a fair market value, which Santana indicated was well above what Ontario had offered.
Santana was assisted in compiling the report by New Jersey-based Acacia Financial Group.
“Ontario Airport, despite the economic downturn affecting both the national and local economies with its corresponding effect on airline service levels and passenger volume, is an important regional transportation asset,” the report states. “With a focused and innovative approach in creating a new business model for the airport, Ontario Airport could become a stronger driver of economic growth in the Los Angeles region.”
In calling for the rejection of the $246 million offer, Santana still signaled that the offer represented a beginning point for negotiations. “While the conceptual proposal by the city of Ontario has limitations, it does provide a vehicle in which to open a dialogue between the city and Ontario and pursue commonalities between the parties,” he stated.
Santana suggested the airport is a far more valuable commodity than the city of Ontario has suggested.
“With the proper mix of innovative management and operational models and efficiencies, Ontario Airport could become a strong contender for the busiest regional medium-hub airport in the Los Angeles Basin,” Santana wrote.
Santana said Ontario’s offer was problematic for technical legal reasons, as well. “The $50 million transaction payment to the city of Los Angeles’ general fund is meant by Ontario to be a reimbursement of the city’s costs for transferring the airport; however, such a payment appears to be viewed by the FAA [Federal Aviation Administration] as a potential revenue diversion under federal aviation law. The FAA regulations define airport revenue as any revenue that the sponsor (owner) derives from the use or sale of airport property. Likewise, federal airport grants like those received by LAWA require that the airport revenue be used solely for capital and operating costs of the airport, the local airport system or other local facilities substantially related to the air transportation of passengers or property. As a consequence, the city attorney is of the opinion that payment to the city’s general fund would likely violate the FAA revenue use diversion rules.”
Santana said the city of Los Anglees had four basic options, consisting of maintaining ownership of the airport and the status quo; marketing the airport to the highest bidder; negotiating a selling price and acceptable legal terms with Ontario and transferring ownership and operations to Ontario; or entering into an agreement with Ontario and the Ontario International Airport Authority for operation of the airport.
Last year Los Angeles floated the idea of privatizing the airport and selling it and its assets to an investor or firm specializing in airport operations. The city sought parties interested in just such an arrangement, eliciting responses from ten domestic and international entities, including American Airports Corporation, a California-based airport operator; Airport Property Ventures, a California-based airport operator; AMP Capital Investors, an Australian infrastructure fund manager; Aviation Facilities Company, a Virginia-based airport manager and developer; Carlyle Group, a Washington DC-based private equity firm; Fraport, a German airport investor, owner and manager; GMR Airports, an Indian airport operator; Goldman Sachs Infrastructure Partners, a New York-based infrastructure fund; Incheon International Airport Corporation, a Korea-based airport operator; and Munich Airport Consulting, a German airport operator.
The transfer of the airport to a private sector operator could happen in relatively short order, according to Santana.
“The estimated time needed to structure and execute a management services contract could take as little as six months,” Santana wrote.
Los Angeles World Airports recently hired the firm of Leigh Fisher to make a calculation of the airport’s fair market value. Leigh Fisher pegged the airport as being worth at least $243 million and as much as $605 million. The calculations were based on cash flow expectations over the next half century.
According to Santana, “The final value will be determined through negotiations between the parties but should not be less than the fair and reasonable recovery of LAWA’s investment.” Given that total investment by Los Angeles over the years has reached $550 million, the asking price would appear to be $550 million.
Los Angeles officials have privately told the Sentinel that if Ontario were to make an offer of $450 million, it would be accepted.
Ontario city councilman Alan Wapner, who is leading his city’s efforts to wrest Ontario Airport back from Los Angeles, resisted making any commitment with regard to the dollar figure Ontario will be willing to pay to purchase the airport, and he quibbled with the use of the term purchase.
“FAA regulations dictate that an airport, as a public benefit property cannot be sold,” Wapner said. “It was never Ontario’s intent to buy the airport from Los Angeles. The $50 million we offered was money to be paid to Los Angeles in consideration for dissolving the joint powers agreement.”
Pressed about the language in Santana’s report stating that the amount to be paid to Los Angeles for relinquishment of ownership and operation of the airport “should not be less than the fair and reasonable recovery of Los Angeles World Airports’ investment,” Wapner said that the amount Ontario would be prepared to pay under that formula was $0. “That one is easy,” Wapner said. “Zero. Los Angeles and Los Angeles World Airports have never invested any money in Ontario Airport outside of $58,000 in legal fees they accrued when they got the airport in 1985. If you can show me documentation that Los Angeles or Los Angeles World Airports invested any money beside that, I’d love to see it.”
When quoted the $550 million asking price and $450 million minimum expectation prices, Wapner said, “Any negotiating on the price will be done at the negotiating table and not publicly in the media.”
SEBA Pact Milestone For Devereaux
(September 28) San Bernardino County Chief Executive Officer Greg Devereaux on September 25 nailed down a key plank in the fiscal reform platform he has been charged with effecting to reverse the “institutional deficit” the county is projected to face by the middle of this decade.
At its meeting on Tuesday, the board of supervisors approved a four-year contract with the Safety Employees Benefit Association (SEBA), the union representing sheriff’s deputies and district attorney’s office investigators.
The terms of that contract, worked out between Devereaux and the union’s president, Laren Leichliter, included a curtailment of benefits previously enjoyed by the union’s members. The union accepted, and supervisors on Tuesday ratified, having the officers pay into their own retirement plans a sum equal to 4.72 percent of their yearly pay, which until now was being defrayed by the county; reducing previously granted 5 percent raises to promoted employees to 2.5 percent; giving back one percent of what the county pays into their medical retirement trusts; a reduction from 100 hours to 50 hours the compensation time union members can cash out annually; no cost-of-living salary increases; reducing the salary for entry level deputies by five percent; and having all new hired union employees accept a retirement plan that grants them the right to retire at the age of 50 and receive two percent of their highest yearly salary times the number of years they have worked with the county. The acceptance of the latter provision will create two classes of employees, since current union members are eligible to retire at 50 and receive three percent of their highest salary times the number of years they have worked with the county. The county will register an immediate $5.3 million per year savings as a consequence of the contract, a significant step toward closing a $33.2 million budget gap that Devereaux has identified.
Simultaneously, Devereaux is continuing to seek concessions and/or contract terms with other county employee unions to ensure that what was previously foreseen as a “locked-in” annual deficit by 2016 can be avoided. Had the terms of the contracts with county employee unions signed in recent years been perpetuated across the board, those contractual commitments with regard to salary and benefits would have resulted in the county expending $130 million more annually to operate county government than it woud take in per year in revenues. Devereaux is seeking to negotiate with the San Bernardino Public Employees Association, which is the largest bargaining unit representing county employees, modest pension and medical benefit reductions for current employees and more substantial reductions for employees to be hired in the future. He is also in discussions with the unions representing county nurses, attorneys and probation officers.
Devereaux committed to press as hard in wringing concessions from those unions as well as the one representing emergency service employees, saying that if those units “do not agree to reduce or eliminate the items of compensation or benefits [conceded by the sheriff’s deputies and district attorney’s investigators], then those items of compensation and benefits shall be restored retroactively to members of the safety unit.”
A major consideration in the effort to rein in county costs consists of skyrocketing pension commitments, as life expectancies lengthen and the sheer numbers of county retirees increase. In this respect, the concession obtained from the Safety Employees Benefit Association with respect to reducing the retirement benefits of future hires was seen as a major breakthrough and accomplishment, and a feather in Devereaux’s cap.
Nevertheless, others made a more sober assessment of the accomplishment, pointing out that the impact from that reform will not manifest for at least two decades.
County Supervisors To Hold Hearings On Desert Water Project On Monday
(September 28) The San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors will hold a special meeting on Monday at 10 a.m. consisting of a public hearing to be followed by deliberation on action to either endorse or reject an Orange County Water District’s approval of a private company’s plan to extract massive amounts of water from the East Mojave Desert for ultimate use in Orange, Los Angeles and Riverside Counties.
On July 31, Orange County-based Santa Margarita Water District certified the environmental impact report for the Cadiz Water project, clearing the way for Los Angeles-based Cadiz, Inc. to extract an average of 50,000 acre-feet of water per year for the next century from the eastern Mojave Desert and send it via pipeline westward to Los Angeles, Orange and Riverside counties.
The controversial plan was given go-ahead over the strident objections of desert residents and landowners, who said they viewed the project as an unprincipled theft of the desert’s water resource by Cadiz, Inc. and the water district, the second largest water district in Orange County serving the affluent communities of Rancho Santa Margarita, Mission Viejo, Coto de Caza, Las Flores, Ladera Ranch and Talega.
The Santa Margarita Water District’s assumption of lead agency status on the project, officially known as the Cadiz Valley Water Conservation and Recovery Project, raised hackles in several quarters within San Bernardino County. The Santa Margarita Water District lies 217 miles from the Cadiz Valley across the county line from San Bernardino County. Moreover, the district has an interest in the project in that some 20 percent of the water to be mined by Cadiz, Inc. will be sold to Santa Margarita.
The San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors, which would have normally been the lead agency responsible for approving the project and granting it environmental certification, initially contemplated filing an appeal with the California Office of Planning and Research to wrest from Santa Margarita authority over the project and its application for approval. The county, however, did not file such an appeal and acceded to the Santa Margarita Water District’s assumption of lead agency authority over the project application and environmental certification. Earlier this year, the county upon a vote by the board of supervisors entered into a memorandum of understanding with Cadiz, Inc. and the Santa Margarita Water District that gave the county limited power to second-guess the district’s decision on the environmental certification and compliance with its own ground water management ordinance as well as requiring that Cadiz, Inc. defray the cost of any legal action taken by parties against the project or in reaction to its impacts.
The project has garnered considerable opposition, particularly in San Bernardino County and the East Mojave Desert, where the Cadiz Valley is located.
A brine mining operation in the desert, Tetra Technologies, has already filed a lawsuit against San Bernardino County over the memorandum of understanding. Tetra alleges the monopolization of water in the area will harm its operation.
Four environmental groups – the Center for Biological Diversity, the National Parks Conservation Association, the San Gorgonio chapter of the Sierra Club and the San Bernardino Valley Audubon Society – filed a suit in San Bernardino County Superior Court, naming both the county of San Bernardino and the Santa Margarita Water District. That suit asserts the county should not have allowed the environmental review of the project to be carried out by the Mission Viejo-based Santa Margarita Water District. The suit challenges the county for allowing Santa Margarita to commandeer lead agency status and calls into question as well the water district’s approval of the environmental impact report.
The Colorado River branch of the Archaeological Heritage Association filed suit in federal court against Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and San Bernardino County, further naming the Santa Margarita Water District, project proponent Cadiz, Inc. and a Cadiz, Inc. corporate offshoot, the FennerValley Mutual Water Company, as real parties in interest. That suit cited the failure of Salazar and the Department of the Interior to invoke the protocols and requirements of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, the National Historic Preservation Act, as well as the National Environmental Protection Act, which the association maintains should have been done because part of the project will involve a 42-mile right-of-way for the aqueduct on federal land. The suit further alleges the county failed to live up to its obligation to comply with federal law in reviewing the impact a permitted project might have on federal public resources in transferring the authority for environmental certification of the project to the Santa Margarita Water District.
A group of Orange County residents calling themselves Citizens and Ratepayers Opposing Water Nonsense have sued the Santa Margarita Water District over its approval of the environmental impact report and the water purchase agreement it entered into with Cadiz, Inc.
John Goss, a former assistant administrative officer with San Bernardino County who had worked for 18 months drafting the county’s desert groundwater management ordinance before it was adopted in 2002, said he was concerned that the memorandum of understanding between the county, Cadiz, Inc. and Santa Margarita Water District had been entered into before a groundwater management plan for the Cadiz project was adopted. He said this violated the terms of the 2002 ordinance.
On October 1, the board of supervisors will consider the proposed Groundwater Management, Monitoring, and Mitigation Plan for the project and determine whether it will accept the Santa Margarita Water District’s certification of the project’s Environmental Impact Report. The board of supervisors will also consider a finding that it has acted properly with regard to its responsibility under the California Environmental Quality Act.
Documents to be considered by the board during the hearing are now available for public review at http://cms.sbcounty.gov/lus/Planning/CadizValleyWater.aspx.
Flap Develops Over Apple Valley Chamber’s Slighting Of Council Candidates
(September 28) A complaint to the State Fair Political Practices Commission is being drafted which will detail accusations that the Apple Valley Chamber of Commerce has favored one set of candidates by providing them with a forum to promote their town council candidacies while excluding others. The complaint alleges the chambers action ran afoul of the Political Reform Act in that the chamber is a recipient of town funds, and is thus prohibited from sponsoring a political forum that favors any candidates over others.
The chamber’s executive director, Janice Moore, said no promotion of candidates took place and that all candidates who were in attendance at the September 19 convocation of chamber members were offered the opportunity to address those assembled and introduce themselves and their campaign platforms. Moore insisted that the chamber was not receiving town subsidization, as had been alleged.
The chamber, which routinely holds a gathering of its members on the third Wednesday of every month, met on September 19. That meeting featured a presentation by Burrtec, the city’s franchised trash hauler, relating to its service and arrangement with the town to enforce recycling by the imposition of liens against homeowners who fall into arrears on their trash service bills. During the gathering, Moore invited all political candidates present, including those for Congress, the board of supervisors, town council and the school board to introduce themselves and expound on their current political effort.
While former Apple Valley fire chief Art Bishop and Apple Valley Fire District board member and Apple Valley planning commissioner Larry Cusack made a pitch to their fellow chamber members, council hopefuls, Iver Bye, Jackie Moore (no relation to Janice Moore), Christina Burton, David Phillips, Tom Piper and Robert Seifert were not in attendance.
Bye, Burton and Jackie Moore told the Sentinel they had been snubbed by the chamber, having not been invited to participate and having not been informed that the opportunity to address the chamber membership about their respective candidacies was being provided.
The chamber receives money from the town of Apple Valley. In February, the town council approved a business retention services agreement with the chamber for a six-month term at a cost of $18,820. This week, on Tuesday September 25, six days after the chamber’s September meeting, the town council approved an extension of the agreement with the chamber for the nine-and-a-half month remainder of fiscal year 2012-13 in the amount of $29,400.
The chamber’s financial ties to the city prohibit it from engaging in any type of selective candidate promotion, several of the challenging town council candidates and their supporters maintain. At press time, they were preparing a complaint to the FPPC, citing state law, the chamber’s receipt of town taxpayer money and last week’s forum.
Chamber executive director Janice Moore said the complaint was based on a misreading of the facts, state law, the chamber’s policy and routine and the circumstance.
“The chamber of commerce is a membership-driven organization for business people and people in Apple Valley interested in developments in local business circles,” Janice Moore said. “Every third Wednesday of the month we have a speaker of relevance to the business community. Last week we had a presentation on the town’s mandatory recycling program. After the speech I asked if those running for office wanted to speak. We had a congressional candidate, one for the board of supervisors, two running for town council and two running for school board. I told them I thought it was courageous of them to be stepping up to run for office and wanted to give them the opportunity to introduce themselves. Those that were there came forward.”
Janice Moore said that there was no favoritism shown to anyone and no one was purposefully excluded. “Everyone who was there was allowed to speak. If they (Bye, Jackie Moore and Burton) had attended I would not have said, ‘You can’t stand up, too. We are pretty inclusive, but I’m not going to chase them down. If you are a member of an organization and you are running for office, I do not think that it is odd that your fellow members want to hear about your election effort. I am sorry if people feel they missed out. It is too bad they felt slighted.”
Turning the matter around, Janice Moore said that those who were not at the meeting to take advantage of the forum it offered were to blame. “They say they want to be on the town council but are not interested in joining the chamber?” she intoned. “If they are not interested in the chamber, then they are not interested in the local business climate. It only costs $250 per year to join. I do not have leverage on people. You have to be present to play. I sent out over 500 emails. I announced this at the town council meeting. They are not members of the chamber and they don’t subscribe to our newsletter. Even if you are not a member of the chamber of commerce, you can still come to the meetings to see our culture, to see what we are like. They had the chance to be there. I have heard of Iver Bye. I don’t know either of those other people [Jackie Moore and Burton]. I do not know why they would choose not to be a member of the chamber. I don’t have an understanding of why someone who wants to lead the city would not want to be a member of the chamber. It sounds to me like someone doesn’t know how to organize a campaign.”
As to those who suggested that the chamber is bound by the Political Reform Act and Fair Political Practices regulations because the town is subsidizing the chamber, Janice Moore said those people are “misinformed. We have a contract with the town for services. Read it and tell me if that reads like a subsidy.”
The chamber contract with the town calls for the chamber to host a recognition event for top sales tax producers and long-standing businesses; develop a shop local program; create a business start up guide; develop a YuccaLomaBridge.com website for promotion and information of local services; survey and promote home-based businesses; and continue the ongoing radio media and marketing campaign. In the previous six months, the chamber had conducted grand opening celebrations; served as a member of the Local Preference Ad-Hoc Committee; conducted computer skills training workshops; conducted a job preparation and job skills training workshop, facilitated a social media campaign for Apple Valley Village, served as a marketing consultant to Apple Valley Village PBID Association; and attended the International Council of Shopping Centers tradeshow.
“I am a professional person,” Janice Moore said. “This sounds like there is jealousy in people who do not want to be a member. I and the chamber do work under contract for the town. I am contracted to provide specific things, specific services. My skills and services and my knowledge are valuable. The town happens to be one of my clients. They seek my service. I write contracts for services. I am pretty doggone talented to provide these services. Not everyone can do that. Look at the contract.”
Janice Moore said the chamber provides to the public on its premises electioneering material prepared by current office candidates who are chamber members and does not feature electioneering material by candidates who are not chamber members. She said that policy is not out of compliance with the law or FPPC regulations.
Bye told the Sentinel, “I was not invited to the chamber’s function. I received no notice that it was going to take place.”
Jackie Moore said, “I heard there were several candidates at the luncheon, all invited. I was not invited. They were given time to promote their elections. But it was only the chosen few. This was for the powers that be. The little people were not invited. The town pays the chamber $29,000. I think the FPPC will have something to say about that.”
Burton told the Sentinel, “I heard that the chamber CEO mentioned that she had invited everybody and that all the candidates were expected to be there. Those that were there were allowed to speak and campaign. I was not invited. At least four of us were not invited. I think the chamber is in collusion with the good old guys, [incumbent councilmen]Curt Emick and Scott Nassiff and their supporters and hand-picked candidates all together. That is what I think.”
Resigned Councilman’s Timing To Cost Chino Hills $135,0000
(September 28) CHINO HILLS—The timing of councilman Wilburn “Bill” Kruger’s resignation, combined with other factors, has necessitated a special election that will cost Chino Hills taxpayers $135,000.
Had Kruger delayed his resignation by another 40 days, the council would have had the option of appointing his replacement. Because he tendered his letter of resignation on September 4, however, and because two of the currently serving members of the council are serving in an appointed rather than an elected capacity, an election to replace him must be held.
Under California’s election code and the municipal regulations for general law cities throughout the state, following the resignation of a council member a city council normally has three options: appoint a replacement for the remainder of the official’s term, hold a special election, or appoint an interim replacement to serve until a special election is held. The law specifies a 60-day deadline for the council to commit to one of those options.
Another law, however, prohibits a governing panel such as a city council from being composed of a majority of appointed rather than elected members. In the run-up to the 2008 election Art Bennett and Gwenn Norton-Perry were the only candidates who had qualified to compete in the November election. The council cancelled the election and appointed them both to the council that August. Thus, for the council to now appoint Kruger’s replacement would result in three members being appointed.
The city does not have the option of waiting until after the November election to make the appointment because Kruger resigned on September 4, necessitating that the appointment be made by November 3. The winners of the upcoming November race, in which Bennett is running and Norton-Perry is not, will not be sworn into office until December.
The city council on September 25 voted to hold a mail ballot special election in March involving all 36,512 of the city’s voters, the estimated cost of which is $135,000.
At press time, Chino Hills city attorney Mark Hensley had not responded to a Sentinel inquiry as to whether the council will have the option of cancelling the election in December and making an appointment at that time.
Sheriff’s Department To Acquire Its Own Firearm Tracking System
(September 28) The sheriff’s department in short order will acquire a device of its own that will allow the department to track firearms used in crimes or otherwise obtained by its officers. According to captain Steve Higgins, the department has requested and the board of supervisors has approved the expenditure of $206,427 to purchase an Integrated Ballistics Identification and Forensic Technology System manufactured by WAI, Inc. as an unbudgeted fixed asset.
The device “will allow the department’s scientific investigation division to track guns used by and found on criminals,” Higgins said. “This purchase will allow the scientific investigations division to retain access to the system while providing enhanced three dimensional imaging and reduced processing time. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms spearheads a National Integrated Ballistic Information Network Program to track about 100,000 guns used in crimes and facilitate the sharing of information between different law enforcement agencies. The rapid dissemination of ballistics information allows for tracking of gun-specific information and connection of a particular firearm to multiple crimes irrespective of geographic location. Historically, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms has allowed local laboratories to access the National Integrated Ballistic Information Network to search cartridge cases for possible case-to-case or case-to-gun matches by utilizing equipment provided and maintained by The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Due to budgetary issues at the federal level, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms is removing its workstations from a number of local law enforcement laboratories, including the sheriff’s department’s scientific investigations division crime lab.”
The purchase was made without a competitive bid, Higgins said.
“This is a sole source purchase, as it is the only new system approved by Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms,” he said.
Passion For Lifelong Hometown Fuels Garcia’s Victorville City Council Run
(September28) Gloria Garcia said she is running for Victorville City Council “because I have passion for this city and am dedicated to honesty, accountability and fiscal responsibility.”
A lifelong resident of Victorville, Garcia attended Victor Valley High, married at the age of 16 and obtained her high school diploma after completing high school coursework at Victor Valley College. She graduated from Skadron College in San Bernardino, where she studied business management and accounting. Since 1975, she has operated her own business, Garcia Bookkeeping & Income Tax Service.
The major challenge facing the city, Garcia said, “is that four of our five council members are there just for self-recognition, self-promotion and self-gain. Councilwoman Judith Valles is the only one in office at this time who is there for the people. The biggest issue is our need for more law enforcement. We need to increase our law enforcement resources so we can have a safer community. I have lived here all of my life. I can remember when this was a joyful place to live. People were happy to come live here with their families. Now that has changed. People who live here commute down the hill to go to work and many want to leave. No one wants to live here with the bad situation in our city.
“The reason that law enforcement is my priority is that eight years ago, my granddaughter, my son’s only child, was brutally murdered,” Garcia said. “She was stabbed, shot, set on fire and dumped in the desert. We had called the sheriff’s department to tell them she was missing and to ask for help. They did not have the manpower to carry out a search. Three days later they found her in the desert. When I heard they had found a dead woman, I felt in my heart it was her. We knew someone with the sheriff’s department and reported her missing again. They did an examination and it was her. I am coming forward to do something about this. One of the reasons I am running is I strongly urge more law enforcement. Eight years later, supposedly because of the cutbacks and the lack of funding, she is still a cold case. No one has been prosecuted. We have had to live with this for eight years.”
Garcia continued, “Being that I was born and raised in Victorville and was living here even before the city incorporated, I know that this was once a very safe community where families felt safe,” she said. “All that has changed. We once had reliable council members who were taking the city forward. There was progress and businesses coming in, families coming in from other areas. People knew this was a good area to raise families. All that changed. Now, we have city council members for way too long, decades. Mike Rothschild has been a council member for 28 years. The existing council has misspent money to the point that the city is on the brink of bankruptcy. There is a lot of corruption. Four of our council members are there for self gain. The grand jury found a lot of mismanagement of funds. The grand jury was very critical of the power plants they [the city council] invested in. The grand jury did not look at the whole picture. The city’s books were altered. Millions and millions of dollars were lost that will never be recovered. They use the excuse that the city’s redevelopment agency has been discontinued. Well, what happened to the money? The golf course continues to lose $1.2 million per year. There was $13 million lost from Southern California Logistics Airport. The power plants lost close to $200 million. On the books we have lost $450 million, but the books have been altered. Councilwoman Valles says it is closer to twice that. How can all of that money have disappeared and no one knows where it went? The grand jury says there has been fraud and corruption and mismanagement but so far no one has been prosecuted. They are in denial. They still feel the city is fine and there is progress. There is not enough money to maintain roads and parks. I am very concerned about our community, our infrastructure, our roads and parks. When people have failed like they have, it is time to bring in someone with a better vision before they spend more and lose more money. That is why I am running.”
Garcia said she will work to solve the law enforcement problem by “Getting on the council and working with the other council members. They eliminated five sheriff’s department positions that were already in place but unfilled. It was because of the lack of funds that those jobs were eliminated. We have to get funding to bring in more law enforcement. We have to go through the channels. We need the support of our district supervisor.”
Garcia said she is qualified to serve on the city council because of her professional acumen. “I am not a certified public accountant and not trying to pass myself off as one,” she said. “I do have experience in accounting. As part of my bookkeeping service, I prepare everything from payroll to balance sheets. I am registered with the state and Internal Revenue to prepare tax filings. With that experience I am able to look at budgets and look out for the taxpayers. The current council is not doing that. They say they have a balanced budget but how can you have a balanced budget with all that debt? There is money coming into the city. The city does generate money through property tax and sales tax, but property tax is down. I can look into the books to control spending and waste. I can achieve savings and I can push to have additional officers on the streets and push to have the city return to what it was like when I was born, with sound management. I feel I can contribute in that way.
“I was born and raised here,” Garcia said. “My family has been here over 100 years. We were a pioneering family of Hispanics who settled into this area. I grew up here and have a passion for the community.”
Garcia was the treasurer for the High Desert Chamber of Commerce for five years. She is a member of the National Association of Notaries. She was the compliance officer for the Oro Grande Credit Union.
With her husband, Garcia has two children.
Filippi Gets Police & Fire Union Endorsements
(September 28) Gino Filippi has garnered the endorsement of both the Upland Police Officers Association and the Upland Professional Firefighters in his run for Upland mayor.
Filippi, who was elected to the Upland Council in 2010, is challenging incumbent mayor Ray Musser.
Musser, who has been on the city council since 1998, emerged early on as the sole political opposition to former mayor John Pomierski. Pomierski served on the city council for slightly over ten years. He was first elected in the November 2000 election. In 2004, Musser challenged Pomierski in that year’s mayoral contest, but narrowly lost.
That electoral effort earned Musser the enmity of Pomierski and his political machine. Supported by the members of his political team – councilmen Brendan Brandt, councilman Ken Willis and then councilman Tom Thomas – Pomierski sought to politically neuter Musser and stripped him of his committee and external joint powers agency assignments. Musser again opposed Pomierski in the 2008 election, but was again unable to derail the Pomierski political juggernaut, as Pomierski retained the endorsements of an array of entities, including all of the city employee unions, including the Upland Police Officers Association and the Upland Professional Firefighters.
As early as 2004, Pomierski was using his position as mayor to shake down local businessman and others with permit applications at Upland City Hall. Using a number of intermediaries such as his appointee to the Upland Housing Appeals Board, John Hennes, or his business associates Jason Crebs and Anthony Sanchez, Pomierski would obtain money from project applicants who were told that they could secure Pomierski’s support at City Hall by hiring Hennes, Crebs or Sanchez as a consultant. In June 2010, FBI agents served search warrants at Upland City Hall and the homes and businesses of Pomierski, Hennes, Crebs and Sanchez. In January 2011, Crebs and Sanchez were indicted by a federal grand jury and in March 2011, one week after Pomierski resigned as mayor, Pomierski and Hennes were indicted by a federal grand jury. All four of the defendants were charged with conspiracy and involvement in a bribery and extortion scheme. All four have since entered guilty pleas.
Musser, who in the aftermath of Pomierski’s resignation was appointed to the mayor’s post by the same council that ostracized him when he opposed Pomierski, is now being challenged by Filippi and councilwoman Debbie Stone, who was elected to the city council in a special election last year.