Carlsbad voters who wonder why their elected officials
unanimously supported an L.A. developer's failed attempt to bring a shopping
mall to the city's Agua Hedionda Lagoon last year may find an answer in the August
1 Financial
Disclosure Statements filed by incumbent city council candidates Keith
Blackburn and Lorraine Wood. Follow the money they've already raised this year,
combined with their 2012 campaign stashes, to see why city leaders get along so
well with developers.
There's a lot of overlap in the special interest groups
supporting Blackburn and Wood. Topping the list is one of the few local
residents with a financial interest in winning the favor of council members,
James Ukegawa. He's the owner of the Carlsbad Strawberry Company. Other than
the billionaire developer, he's also the single individual who had the most to
gain from the lagoon mall project.
Ukegawa contributed $9,260 to the 2014 re-election campaigns
of Mayor Matt Hall and Councilmember Michael Schumacher. He's added $1,500 in gifts
so far this year to the Blackburn/Wood combo. I'm guessing he's eager to see a return
on his two-year investment in sitting city council members.
The other special interest groups supporting both candidates
include:
Joseph Charest, Vice President
of Katz and Associates, the San
Diego public affairs consulting firm hired by the city to help build a consensus
on public participation through community interviews, surveys and outreach
materials. The paid consultant served on the Envision Carlsbad Phase 1 team;
Mike Howes, of Howes,
Weiler and Associates, a Carlsbad land use planning/consulting firm hired
by the city to review developer Rick Caruso's 85/15 Plan (aka the Lagoon mall
project), producing the city's debunked 9212 Report. Howes served on the 2009 Envision
Carlsbad Citizen's Committee. Among the firm's other clients and projects are
the Robertson Ranch Master Plan, the Shopoff Group, and the Gunther Guns indoor
shooting range;
Planning Systems
Carlsbad lists among its clients and projects the Agua Hedionda Retail
Specific Plan, City of Carlsbad Environmental Processing and Monitoring (2012 -
2015), and preparation of Robertson Ranch and Quarry Creek Master Plan
documents for city permits (2011-2015);
Gromet and Associates,
the Irvine attorneys representing Shopoff
Realty Investments in the purchase
of 50 acres for a planned Ponto Beachfront project, to include 76 luxury townhomes, 42 townhome lofts and 73
apartment homes, and 50,000 square feet for commercial and public space;
ConAm Apartment
Management, a San Diego corporate donor of special importance to Keith Blackburn.
On his Statement
of Economic Interests (SEI) Form 700, filed on February 19, 2016, Blackburn
checked the box reporting his gross income last year from his investment
partnership with ConAm Tradition Homes exceeded $100,000;
Carlsbad Research
Center Association (a client of Meissner
Jacquet, a San Diego commercial and property real estate management firm);
Techbilt Construction
Corporation, San Diego;
Evan Gerber, Gerber
Group, LaJolla restaurant developer;
Wave Crest Hotels and
Resorts, Encinitas;
Shea Homes,
Encinitas and Vista.
Wood received separate donations from:
Ocean Park Estates,
LLC, Irvine, CA;
Holly Springs LLC,
San Marcos;
Tim Stripe, Rancho
Santa Fe, Corporate Executive Grand Pacific Resorts.
Blackburn received a separate donation of $3,000 from the California Real Estate Political Action
Group based in Los Angeles.
With friends like these is it any wonder Blackburn and Wood were
eager to join Mayor Matt Hall, Michael Schumacher and Mark Packard last year in
their unanimous support of Measure A, despite the strong opposition of the
majority of their constituents, who had to launch a referendum drive to force a
vote to defeat the Council's pet project?
And is there any question about how council members Blackburn
and Wood would vote on future issues of interest to donors to their campaigns,
like land use and open space, growth management, the Ponto beachfront, and the
Village and Barrio plans?
From January 1 to June 30 this year the two raised $29,675
between them. A total of $13,300, or about 45 cents of every dollar, came from special
interests, predominantly from out of town.
Blackburn had a cash balance of $122,000 left over from his
2012 campaign to add to the $13,330 he's raised so far this year. Wood had a
$12,000 nest egg to add to her $16,345 in fundraising this year.
It appears Carlsbad's pay to play politics is now a job
market for lobbyists and candidates, where those without deep pockets need not
apply.
Thank you Richard once more for exposing the dark side of local politics. The more we know, the more we can make informed decisions come November. That's what these people are afraid of. Their deals are all made behind closed doors or in dimly lit steakhouses.
ReplyDeleteExcellent journalism, and I thank you for keeping us informed. Not likely to see this in the UT!
ReplyDeleteThank you Richard for all your great articles. This info needs to get out. Cori and Ann for Carlsbad city council...
ReplyDeleteThank you Richard for all your great articles. This info needs to get out. Cori and Ann for Carlsbad city council...
ReplyDeleteRichard, you continue to be the voice of reason crying in the wilderness. Thank you for presenting facts that voters need to know. You're still my hero.
ReplyDelete