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Lawsuit filed against Potrero
planning group and county staff
By Miriam Raftery
The Alpine Sun
POTRERO — A lawsuit has been filed by Potrero
resident Zoe Rosell against County officials seeking to overturn a
December 2006 vote taken by the Potrero Planning Group (PPG) in favor
of allowing Blackwater USA to build an military and law enforcement
training facility on an 824-acre site in Potrero. In a separate
action, citizens of Potrero are gearing up to recall multiple members
of the Potrero Planning Group.
“It is imperative that the Potrero Planning Group
follow all legal requirements, including provisions of the Brown Act,
so that individual members of the community can be heard on issues
affecting them so close to home,” the lawsuit states, “and that the
position of the local community is made known to the County through
the intended Potrero Planning Group process as an advisory group to
the County Board of Supervisors.”
Rosell filed the lawsuit against the PPG and its
members, Chairman Gordon Hammers, the San Diego County Board of
Supervisors, and the San Diego Department of Planning & Land Use (DPLU).
Lawsuit seeks to void planners’ vote
The suit alleges that inadequate notice was provided to
the community prior to a 7-0 vote taken at the December meeting.
Potrero Planners attached specific conditions to the
vote, including satisfactory results from a live-fire noise test. That
test was later cancelled by the property owner due to liability
concerns. But, the court documents reveal, “the vote record turned in
to the County to reflect the Dec. 14, 2006 vote and the conditions is
blank.” Nor were minutes or transcripts of the PPG meetings included
in County records, the lawsuit alleges.
“It is clear that Gordon Hammers, as the Chair and the
Potrero Planning Group have not documented the participation of the
citizens of Potrero and the surrounding communities adequately,” the
suit further states, adding that the Board of Supervisors which
ultimately decides controversial land use issues has not been apprised
of citizens’ concerns. “Therefore based upon the written record, it
can certainly appear to the County that the local citizens are in
favor of Blackwater USA and that there is no dissension in the
community…” After opposition was voiced, the suit further contends,
“The Potrero Planning Group is excluding that opposition from the vote
record that is intended to be part of the democratic process…”
Asked about the lawsuit, Hammers replied, “In my eyes
the suit is completely without merit.”
Hammers said he remembers mailing a completed form to
the County but did not make a copy to keep. He disputes the contention
that a blank form was filed. “The County had the original form 534. It
hadn’t even been folded, therefore it could not have been what they
sent me,” he said, adding that the form he returned “apparently got
misdirected somewhere.”
Hammers said he asked Greg Kryzs, project manager at
DPLU at the time, about the missing paperwork. “He said so many people
have handled that file, there was no telling who it was. It may have
been removed.”
Hammers added that he offered to return the form to his
board and fill it out again, but was assured by Kryzs that there was
no need, since community opposition has been “well publicized in the
media.” Media reports, however, are not considered part of the
project’s official public record.
The lawsuit also alleges that records are missing from
County files and that citizens’ were refused access to some records
that were previously available to the public.
In addition, Rosell accuses Hammers of violating
provisions of the Brown Act, which mandates open government
procedures. Although the Brown Act states that citizens may not be
compelled to sign in at a public meeting, Hammers refused to allow
Rosell to speak at a March meeting even after provisions of the Brown
Act were read aloud by Ray Lutz, founder of the Citizens Oversight
Panels.
Rosell issued a “cure and correct” letter asking
Hammers to address alleged Brown Act violations prior to filing her
lawsuit, but before learning of the blank vote record and missing
minutes/transcript. According to Rosell, Hammers responded with a
letter on his own without meeting with the PPG, canceling an April
meeting and refusing several residents’ requests to reschedule it in
time to meet a late-April deadline for public comment. (That deadline
has since been extended by the County to May 25.)
“This is not a proper legal response,” the lawsuit
states, adding that a cure and correct letter requires action taken by
the full PPG, not solely by its chairman.
A motion for write of mandamus, injunction and
declaratory relief filed by Rosell in the County of San Diego Superior
Court, East County Division, asks the Court to declare the December
vote null and void and to further declare any action taken by the
Board of Supervisors based upon the PPG vote to also be nullified
until a lawful vote is taken and recorded to the County.
Hammers called the lawsuit “nitpicking.” He added, “She
[Rosell] is using this to disrupt the whole process.”
Until the lawsuit is resolved, Hammers said, “I will
not have any more Blackwater related items on the agenda…We will have
an executive session where we will discuss it...I am not going to give
these nitpickers any more opportunities for airing their grievances.
We had a nice, peaceful community here and these anti- people are not
willing to use the process in a community friendly manner.”
Rosell, who lives on the rim of the Hauser wilderness
area, contends that she is the one seeking to preserve the area’s
peaceful nature. Her lawsuit states that “the proposed use by
Blackwater is highly out of character for the rural, wilderness area.”
County spokesperson Mike Workman assured, “We are fully
committed to providing public documents and public information to the
public.”
He confirmed that that the County received notice of
legal action regarding Blackwater late Tuesday, shortly before press
deadline. “We would not be able to comment on it nor its merits until
we have had a chance to review it.”
Residents of Potrero are not waiting for a Court
decision to address what many feel is a planning group that has been
unresponsive to the will of the majority. An effort to recall Hammers
and most other Potrero Planning Group members is underway, Rosell’s
lawsuit states. Another Potrero resident has confirmed that a recall
movement has begun against several PPG members who voted in favor of
the Blackwater project, and that replacement candidates have stepped
forward to run.
Dem resolution to block Blackwater fails
A resolution introduced by Lutz at the California
Democratic Convention sought to block Blackwater’s Potrero project and
further, restrict military and paramilitary training facilities to
government-operated sites. The measure was blocked in the Resolutions
Committee, but Lutz indicated he may seek to reintroduce it at the CDP
Executive Board Meeting in July. Theodore “Ted” Smith III, a delegate
from Los Angeles, objected to the resolution on grounds that the State
of California has contracts with Blackwater.
Congressman Bob Filner (D-San Diego) addressed a Stop
Blackwater rally across the street from the convention Saturday
morning. He indicated that he will seek to introduce federal
legislation patterned after Lutz’s resolution that could block
Blackwater’s plans at the federal level.
After The East County Californian published an article
indicating that Blackwater representatives have been meeting with
other public officials for months but had not contacted Filner, the
company has since met with the Congressman.
“It was a good meeting,” Brian Bonfiglio, vice
president of Blackwater West, disclosed. “I gave him a brief and he
gave me no indication either way.”
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