Friday, October 22, 2010

Cart before the Horse

It remains obvious that backroom shenanigans continue to pervade the Poway city council. Three hours before the October 19 meeting Cunningham wrote an email suggesting what basically became the result of the meeting. In the message he recognizes that what the council would do would be against the extant General Plan. He goes on to offer a compromise and at the same time naming the Arbolitos area neighbors as "Opponents."

We are not opponents but citizens of Poway and residents of a neighborhood.

If there is any "contentious" behavior, as indicated in this Pomorado News article, it originates from city hall, not the Arbolitos neighbors.

Through non-public actions and verbal obfuscation what each of the council members did was break the commitment they made to uphold the General Plan when they vowed to be city council members. Instead each agreed, without saying so explicitly, that to lawfully proceed with the lighting of the flood control basin plan they had to change the General Plan first; not within 120 days, but by the next meeting.

Breaking commitments is not new to this council and we should all be wary of their remaining seated.

If the plan allowed the lighting of the basin, then there would be no need to direct the city staff to quickly cover their tracks and amend, change, or include a new definition for a unique and light-able park.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Arbolitos Flood Control Basin Summary UPDATED



   The Arbolitos Flood Control Basin was created in 1996 as a rain water retention basin to prevent flooding south of Abraxas High School. A sports field was created in the process of grading the detention basin in what was originally an open space nature preserve. To secure the cooperation of the local residents in creating a sports field over the basin, The City of Poway promised (or gained cooperation,  or gained a concession with the neighbors) that the fields would be for daytime use only and that floodlights would never be installed for night time use.

Since then, and repeatedly, the city council has been harassed, harangued, cajoled, and petitioned by a minority of Poway residents and non-Poway residents to renege on that promise. To convince the council to renounce the promise and to ignore the primary reason the fields exists, this minority has generated a plan that included these statements:


1. Flood lights should be installed for night time use of the basin.
2. Artificial turf should be installed over the basin. 

Through backdoor dealings with the city council, the city manager and the city staff these attempts have finally met with some success in getting one of these elements of this plan approved. They have convinced the current members of the city council to ignore the City's General Plan and more importantly to break the promise to the neighbors and proceed to put lights over the flood control basin.

We can, and should, hold the members of the city council to the commitment (promise) made and not spend our tax dollars in this venture. In reneging on the earlier commitment to the Arbolitos neighborhood, the Mayor said it was "not a promise, but a decision," one in which he participated. But at the September 7th council meeting it was obvious that the council members had already made up their minds. The meeting was simply a necessary legally required roadblock. They chose to ignore the facts and they summarily disregarded the concession to the Arbolitos neighbors treating it as something no more than a minor bother. The Mayor and the rest of the council were steadfast in retracting on the commitment, just as they have done in prior instances.

Peter De Hoff attempted to hold the city council members to their commitment, but that too has was passed over. Here is your opportunity to add your name on his petition against this plan.

The city staff and the members of the city council set aside the issue of placing artificial turf in the Flood Control basin. This was done mainly because there is strong visual evidence of the folly of putting artificial turf in a flood control basin, but they are continuing to pursue lighting of the flood control basin with additional "promises" that the lights will go off at 8:00 p.m.

When the current members of the city council promise something, then don't keep that promise, what then of the 8:00 p.m. promise?

October 13 Update: It didn't take long for that "off at 8:00 p.m." promise to die; it's now being discussed "as a concession to the neighbors, the lights will go off at 9:00 p.m.


Yeah, right. Here's another 'concession' being offered that will soon be broken too. Ten o'clock anyone?  

Letters appearing in the News Chieftain

Why spend $700K on Arbolitos?

The Poway city staff report for the Conditional Use Permit to allow lighting Arbolitos Park for nighttime sports activities has been issued. It is too late for me to urge that lights not be allowed at Arbolitos Park, but I would like to urge our City Council to consider a few items as they review the staff report.

More than one councilmember stated at the Sept. 7 council meeting that they were committed to an 8 p.m. curfew for lights at Arbolitos. Now is the time for them to remember those commitments and change the staff recommendation from a 9 p.m. curfew back to that 8 p.m. curfew.

PYSL only asked for a practice field. The staff report recommends game- level lighting for Arbolitos Park. Now is the time for the council to change to practice-level lighting, which the staff report says would have less impact on the neighbors. The physical installation for the lights should be practice-level only, not a dual level with a switch.

PYSL promised $350,000 toward lighting Arbolitos Park. The council should require PYSL to make good on that promise, rather than accept the staff recommendation to appropriate $700,000 for the city to fund the entire project. There are other parks in Poway where that money could be put to good use.

I encourage Powegians to attend the Oct. 19 council meeting and watch the actions of their councilmembers as they think about who to support in the upcoming election.
Tom Tucker
Poway



Stavros best choice for Poway Mayor

To those who think the recall shook our appointed mayor into being more forthright and ethical, you are wrong. In the last five months Don Higginson has dropped to an all-time low in his treatment and consideration of his constituents.

Higginson was the lesser of all evils when Cafagna anointed him. Many of Higginson’s current supporters were recall supporters. I find it disturbing that anyone who supported the recall can now look at Higginson and not understand that Betty Rexford did not act in a bubble, she had inside help.

The alternative is Nick Stavros. Nick is articulate in his understanding Poway political business in the past and why we desperately need change moving forward. Nick has repeatedly stepped up to be the voice of reason only to be dismissed with a bang of a contemptuous gavel. I was particularly impressed with his ideas for our redevelopment dollars and the conflict of interest between our city manager and City Council.

Is Higginson our best choice? No, Stavros is. South Poway may be the redheaded stepchild to north Poway. Until south Poway neighborhoods are improved, we will become the rotting fish that fouls the north’s air. South Poway issues will become north Poway issues — unmanageable traffic as commuters fight to get around the Poway Road gridlock, increased crime as mega-centers are built on land that was never intended for big-box development, and destruction of our last vestiges of open space. I believe Stavros is the new leadership for Poway.

Clariece Tally
Poway

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

"integrity-be-damned" Boo

Below is an excerpt from Bob Emery's editorial published October 13.
Emery retired from the City Council after serving 28 years

"And an integrity-be-damned, “let’s light up the night” boo hiss to the Poway City Council for reneging on a long-standing city policy that prohibited the lighting of neighborhood parks. The council apparently gave its go ahead on Sept. 7 to lighting Arbolitos Park with 70-foot poles, when it directed staff to bring back a revised conditional use permit on Oct. 19. Not only does this action fly in the face of numerous promises to residents in the past not to light neighborhood parks, it opens the flood gates for numerous requests by all sports leagues to request equal treatment. As stated by soccer parent Ginger Couvrette, “We need more lighted fields, not just for soccer but for other teams, too.” I asked in a previous column, what’s next, Starridge Park, Valle Verde Park, and Aubrey Park? The possibilities are endless."

To see the full article, click here.

Straw Man Surfaces

In the online Pomorado News story it is reported that the statements made by the city council about shutting off the flood lights over the Arbolitos Flood Control Basin at 8:00 p.m. is now going to be discussed as 9:00 p.m. This has been offered as a "concession to the neighbors."

Let this not be a diversion from the original intent of this issue. The real issue isn't what time the flood lights will be turned off, but whether there should be lights in the first place.

It is again obvious that some behind the scenes operatives have been lobbying "the staff" and the city manager to make a recommendation to the city council to make changes. The city council, albeit incorrectly, made another decision at the last council meeting - to obviate the original "concession to the neighbors" to "not put lights over the fields."

How insulting is this new "concession to the neighbors?"

Once the city council made that new decision, the back room politics were pressed again to change what the council said "off at 8:00 p.m." Hence, this new change. How soon will it be that the backroom dealings will change that again to 10:00 p.m.

This Straw Man tactic to continually pressure "the staff" into doing what they want will continue.

Now, let's also review what they said. They offered $350,000 to help defray the costs. Show me the money. Want to guess who is going to foot the full bill? You the taxpayer.

See the full news article here.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

An Open Letter

An Open Letter to the members of the Poway City Council

Reference: Arbolitos Flood Control Basin Lighting

Recently, in an umpire's decision in calling a runner "safe" and in turn denying a pitcher a perfect game, much was made about the call. It included petitioning the commissioner of baseball to reverse the decision.

By definition a decision is the final word on something. In the baseball case the commissioner accepted that definition by not reversing what was obviously a mistake. The commissioner understood that changing a decision sets a precedent that future decisions are in peril and would be cause for much consternation.

In the current voter booklet, the current Mayor of Poway repeats the word "decision" twice, but doesn't seem to understand its meaning.

Unlike the baseball issue, it was not a mistake by stating that lights would not be installed to gain commitment from the neighbors of the Rancho Arbolitos area to allow the flood control basin be used as a sports field.

That commitment was part of the reasoning for the "decision," which the Mayor seems want to ignore. He mentioned at the September 7th council meeting that he participated in making a decision then and was making a new decision to go ahead and ignore his earlier commitment to the neighbors in the area.

It is obvious that there is political reasoning to reverse this decision. There is a large number of strident people that outweigh in numbers those of the Arbolitos neighborhood. Politically, it's better to gratify larger numbers of potential voters than the smaller number and prior commitments or decisions be damned.

Changing the decision sets several precedents, among them being that a decision is not really a decision, but something that is less. It teaches everyone including the children of Poway that a politician will do or say anything but not really mean it. And that any decision the City Council makes today is subject to pressure of special interest groups to be changed in the future.

The Mayor is correct, it was not a "promise" that was made, it was a "decision."

Unfortunately, making then reversing a decision seems counter to the "Respect" and "Honor" mentioned in the Poway City Council code of ethics. Those words are something the commissioner of baseball, Bud Selig, and the umpire, Jim Joyce, so readily demonstrated to the children of Poway and the world were not just words, but a commitment to ethical behavior.


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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

What follows is detail ...

supporting data, and opinion in support of the summary above.


If you only read the summary and maybe click on some of the links within it you will get the picture.




Thursday, September 23, 2010

Opinion Piece. Published in MyLocalNews



Council sets bad example

What the City Council did Sept. 7 (by approving lights at the Arbolitos flood control basin) was demonstrate to the children of Poway that it is OK to make a promise, then not keep it.

The council did this by hiding behind the language of a “conditional use permit,” and the mentality of granting variances. They rendered a promise as worthless since a) most of them didn’t make the promise personally, and b) they bent to the very vocal and strident minority community pressure.

But, a promise is not an ordinance. A promise is not a something that is either mandated by ordinance or something to be evaluated as part of a variance. Keeping a promise is an issue of moral integrity and ethical behavior — there is no such thing as promise with a variance.

Don Nieto
Poway




Friday, September 3, 2010

Opinion Piece. Published in MyLocalNews

                    A picture of the Flood Control Basin at work ; January 21, 2010



Who will repair turf?

A letter sent out by the city says the Sept. 7 City Council agenda will include “Consideration of artificial turf and lights at Arbolitos Sports Field.”

Aside from the fact that placing artificial turf will cost a lot of taxpayer money, the city seems to forget that this place is not a sports field, but a flood control basin first. Photos taken the last time such flooding took place show the basin did its job.

Assuming that artificial turf was placed in the flood control basin, what then  would be the additional cost to the taxpayers of Poway to repair or replace the  artificial turf when the next heavy rain occurs?

Thursday, January 21, 2010