Morro Bay officials shut down business competitors of council members

February 17, 2014
red tag placed on the former Morro Bay Sun Bulletin building last Halloween

Red tag placed on the former Morro Bay Sun Bulletin building last Halloween

By JOSH FRIEDMAN

(Editor’s note: This is the first in a series about allegations of abuse of power and selective enforcement of laws in Morro Bay. Several videos, showing police and planning staff interacting with people who have business interests in the city, are attached at the bottom of the story.)

Morro Bay officials have targeted new start-ups in the city that would have competed with businesses operated by current and past city council members, several businessmen say.

Morro Bay’s planning and permitting offices, city attorney’s office and the police department have taken part in the effort to restrict competition, the businessmen said.

The Morro Bay Police Department set up a plan to shut down a proposed arts center in the old Morro Bay Sun Bulletin building, a department memo obtained by CalCoastNews shows.

The arts center was the brainchild of Jim Davis and Rick Holliday. The two signed a master lease for the 8,000 square foot Sun Bulletin building at 1149 Market Avenue in May 2011. They planned to create a center for the arts, which would incorporate music, an art gallery, offices and some type of eatery.

The Morro Bay building located at 1149 Market Ave.

The Morro Bay building located at 1149 Market Avenue

When they tried to submit their building permit and business license applications, city staff called them into an impromptu meeting with then-Planning Director Kathleen Wold. Wold refused to accept their applications and architectural plans and instead ordered them to construct a tavern or hotel at the Market Avenue building, Davis and Holliday said.

“I remember distinctly her saying you can’t do music. You have to do a tavern or hotel,” Davis said.

Wold then threw the plans down on a planning table and ordered the pair to meet with the city attorney and police chief, Davis and Holliday said.

Davis and Holliday then met with Rob Schultz, who was Morro Bay’s city attorney, and then-Police Chief Tim Olivas. John Weiss, owner of Coast Electronics, who was present at the meeting, confirmed that the meeting occurred.

Schultz also ordered Davis and Holliday to put in a bar or motel, the two men said. No options were allowed.

“It felt intimidating,” Davis said. “The tone was harassment.”

Schultz went so far as to warn them about going into competition with established business owners in Morro Bay, Holliday said.

Schultz denied the allegations, calling them ridiculous.

Holliday said a councilwoman, who owned a business across the street from the building, too, threatened him about going into competition. Carla’s Country Kitchen owner Carla Wixom, then known as Carla Borchard, sat on the city council from 2008 to 2012, when she unsuccessfully ran for mayor.

Shortly after signing the lease, Holliday was eating breakfast in Wixom’s restaurant, he said. Holliday told Wixom that he and Davis were thinking of putting in offices, hosting bands and creating some type of eatery.

“She said straight up that will never happen,” Holliday said. “She said you will never get a competing business there.”

Wixom denies the conversation occurred, saying she never spoke with Holliday about his business plans.

But, Holliday said she told him several times that he would never open a competing business and made jokes about him being unable to get permits and a business license.

By the end of 2011, Holliday ended his lease, saying it was impossible to operate a business at the location.

Davis continued his efforts to start up the arts center. In early 2012, he was joined by Los Osos Mexican Market owner Rey Diaz. Diaz moved into the downstairs, with Davis retaining the upstairs. Diaz planned to open a Mexican market in Morro Bay. His Los Osos location sells groceries and includes a grill, where customers eat Mexican food.

On Jan. 14, 2012, Diaz arrived at the building to move in his belongings. Just after Diaz arrived, police officers did too, according to graphic artist Toby Schultz, who was working in the building at the time.

The officers said they were responding to a report of an illegally parked car but proceeded to question Diaz about the business he was putting in the building, Schultz said. An officer then asked Diaz if he would be going into competition with Wixom.

“‘So, you’d be in competition with Carla?’ That was exactly what he said,” Schultz recalled.

After questioning Diaz, the officers walked over to Wixom and spoke with her for at least ten minutes, Schultz said.

A second witness, who asked to remain anonymous because of fears of retaliation, said the officers spoke with Wixom for about 20 minutes following the interaction with Diaz. Before the police went to question Diaz, Wixom was pointing them in the direction of Diaz, the source said.

Wixom said she does not recall the incident and that she would not have directed the officers to Diaz. She said, though, that she is close to police officers and talks to them frequently.

Diaz would not comment on the incident. Diaz does not want to upset city officials, several sources said. Diaz is concerned that it might jeopardize his use of the building.

The Morro Bay police log for the day shows that officers were responding to a “suspicious person incident.” City Attorney Anne Russell did not provide the names of either the person who was considered suspicious or the complainant when CalCoastNews requested the records under the California Public Records Act.

Since then, Diaz had begun to construct the market and gained preliminary approval to open the business. He has not received permission from the city, though, to operate a grill.

As Diaz flirted with opening the market, Davis continued to pursue his dream of hosting bands in the upstairs for private video production and small performances. Davis managed to host several bands in the building and even shot a music video there. City officials said he could only use the property for storage.

On Oct. 31, 2013, the Morro Bay Police Department issued a memorandum planning a raid on Davis’ activities. In the memorandum, Police Commander Bryan Millard wrote that Davis and Holliday had been hosting parties with live bands and that a disturbance would likely take place that evening. Millard directed the officers who would respond to the party to obtain a signed noise complaint from a neighbor, issue a citation and call the city building inspector and fire marshal, who had volunteered to come out to the scene after hours.

Although Holliday had been gone from the building for nearly two years, Davis hosted performances and had planned a Halloween party with a live band that night.

Paula Radke, who lives in a nearby commercial building called the police to complain about the noise. Radke told CalCoastNews that she had been instructed by neighbors to make the call before the event began. Radke says she lives legally in the building, but city files show that she applied for, but never obtained a permit allowing residential use.

Police officers Gene Stuart and Sue Gomes responded to the noise complaint and told her to sign a noise complaint, Radke said.

Stuart and Gomes called building inspector Brian Cowen and waited outside the building for more than 20 minutes before approaching Davis, a video made the night of the raid showed. While waiting for Cowen to arrive, Stuart ordered the band’s drummer to continue playing music.

“Go rock one more,” Stuart said on video. “Just do the song.”

Stuart and Gomes later issued Davis a disturbing the peace violation, charging him with a misdemeanor.

Officer Gene Stuart speaking to Jim Davis

Officer Gene Stuart speaking to Jim Davis

When Cowen arrived, Davis would not allow him to enter the building. Then, without inspecting the building, Cowen declared the entire 8,000 square foot structure unsafe and ordered everyone to leave, the video shows.

“They essentially shut us down,” Davis said. “It’s a total violation of property rights and free enterprise.”

Cowen said that the building tenant and party host had violated state codes. But Cowen did not cite the particular codes, the video shows.

“Per state law, you can’t use this building for any use other than storage,” Cowen said to Davis on the video. “By having these people in the building, you are endangering them.”

But Cowen refused to explain how he had made the determination that the building was unsafe.

Cowen red-tagged the building. Red tagging requires the city to shut off the water, gas and electricity and bar the public from entrance. Cowen later posted a notice citing state building and fire codes.

A few months later, the San Luis Obispo County District Attorney’s Office dropped the disturbing the peace charge against Davis. Millard, though, said in an interview that his officers acted appropriately.

“We do work with the planning department as a partner agency in enforcing the laws,” Millard said.

The memo resulted from a meeting of the code enforcement committee, Millard said. The committee, which is comprised of representatives from different departments, including police and planning, meets to discuss code enforcement issues in the city, Millard said.

Code enforcers do not act on behalf of council members, Millard said.

“There is no direct action where a council member would talk to an officer and action would take place,” Millard said.

Building owner Clark Kayler, a Sacramento-based woodworker, said having his building red tagged was like getting slapped with a scarlet letter.

“They are allowed to just label a building unsafe,” Kayler said.

Kayler said the city has selectively enforced legal codes against him since he purchased the property in 2009.

Morro Bay planners have denied all business proposals for the Sun Bulletin building that occupy a cumulative total of more than 2,000 square feet. The city cited parking requirements as the primary reason for the occupancy restriction, even though the property includes an adjacent gravel lot.

Additionally, city records show that businesses have occupied the entire building on multiple occasions, dating back to its construction in 1969. The original business, a marine supply manufacturer and retailer, even used the parking lot for business activities, according to Morro Bay resident and former store employee Eddie Sylvester.

“When we were there, no one could park in the lot because we had it full of equipment,” Sylvester said. “The city uses parking against people when they want to.”

Market Ave. during business owners

Market Avenue during business hours

Other businesses on the block have grandfathered status and have no parking requirements. Radke’s business relinquished its parking lot in a property sale and remained open. Still, about one half of the parking spaces on Market Avenue are unoccupied during business hours.

Morro Bay has singled out his building, Kayler said.

“The scrutiny is not there for some people, and the scrutiny on my property never ends,” Kayler said.

Both Kayler and Morro Bay Councilman Noah Smukler, point to a 1986 city plan as evidence that the building owner has the right to make use of his property. The Beach Street Area Specific Plan calls for the protection of commercial activity in the area despite the existence of neighboring housing.

“It clearly shows that building has a right to be utilized,” Smukler said. “We have a specific plan that was approved and the community has adopted.”

The plan also called for the city to create parking stalls perpendicular to the sidewalk on Market Avenue to increase the amount of on-street parking. The city created the parking stalls on bordering Surf Street but never did so on Market Avenue.

One resident in the adjacent neighborhood is Councilwoman Nancy Johnson. Johnson’s Morro Avenue house with an adjacent vacation rental looks down on Kayler’s building.

Several individuals involved with the building allege that Johnson, also a political ally of Wixom’s, has frequently surveyed the property and rallied neighbors to oppose business activity there.

“I heard Carla and Nancy were really active down there in trying to fight that,” Smukler said.

Johnson said she never opposed businesses at the building and rather worked to lure them in.

The building is currently vacant, with the exception, of containing some Mexican market equipment. No new tenants have arrived since Halloween night when the building was red tagged.

Holliday and several associates have filed suppression of business and harassment claims against the city. Davis plans to do so as well, he said.

 

Audio and videos of the Halloween night incident:

Audio of Morro Bay Police officer Gene Stuart telling a man wanting to attend the Halloween party at the Sun Bulletin building that he gets a free pass to urinate in the street. Stuart does not want the man to tip off the building tenant that police are outside.

Video of Morro Bay Police officer Gene Staurt explaining that he has been up 36 hours and knows something is going on, but he is not sure what that something is because of his lack of sleep.

Morro Bay Police officer Gene Stuart says he is going to give a noise violation, but then orders the band to play one more song.

Morro Bay building inspector Brian Cowen says Jim Davis is violating state code though he will not divulge what code is being violated. He then red tagged the building.

Like CalCoastNews on Facebook and get updates on Josh Friedman’s Morro Bay series.

MB Police Memo by CalCoastNews


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Does this kind of crap happen everywhere, or are we just the lucky ones? Did it happen as much in the past, or was I just oblivious to it? Personal honor is gone, and “fair play”, and “rules” are no longer “hip” I guess.


This is the reason Morro Bay employs a full time attorney when larger cities like Paso Robles and Atascadero do not. Morro Bay is well known for corruption, intimidation tactics and rules that only apply to others who are outside the inner circle. I am friends with an officer that left Morro Bay who stated that he didn’t become an officer of the law to be a pit bull for personal retaliation and questionable direction. Anyone who has lived In Morro Bay for long knows that corruption has been gaining power. Bill Yates is a prime example of openly granting favors for friends. I hope this investigation opens up many old allegations that seem to follow the morally bankrupt old guard. A good start would be the Flippo’s skating rink fiasco. The city chose to close it down immediately after purchase while assuring previous owners they would continue to operate it for the good of the community. This prime real Estate was sold a friend of Bills and is now being used as a private storage facility. Flippo’s was a treasure to everyone. Was it ever offered for sale on the open Market or was it another back room deal? Keep up the investigations CCN!


Thank you, Diamond. I always wondered about that Flippo’s deal.


You learn very early after moving to Morro Bay about retaliation. You learn that if you want to live here comfortably, you don’t cross the wrong people – and it’s not just retaliation against business owners, or those trying to become business owners – it happens on a smaller scale too, say perhaps if your vehicle gets pointed out to the police by someone you’ve ticked off. Difference now is, those people afraid of retaliation have an outlet to talk about it anonymously and it is having a positive effect on Morro Bay.


bhahahahahahahahhahahah…you might want to check the facts before you make assanine statements and see who REALLY bought flippos.


Then tell us? Who “really bought Flippos”? Here is a good one for you…………..who’s boat is stored in Flippos? The answer….George Leage’s boat! So, please tell us about who owns Flippos?


Oh Mr. Holliday George does not own a boat. Try again : )


Fact, Don and Mary Jane Puett sold Flippos to the city with the assurance that the city would keep the skating rink open for the community. Mary Jane stated they NEVER would have sold Flippos to the city if they knew that the city of Morro Bay was going to close down the skating rink & sell the property. Mary Jane said they got screwed over, betrayed & lied to. Period! That my friends is how the old guard rolls. They betrayed the Puetts and the community. Business as usual.


Enlightening.


False, false, false, false. You people are unreal. DO SOME RESEARCH!


Yes, I agree! Voters need to research who were the sitting council members at the time of the sale. The only council member who voted to keep flippos was Betty Winholtz. No surprises here! The usual special interest names from the old guard? Mayor Yates, Janice Peters, Bill pierce and Elliot. Those are the ones who killed this family friendly treasure.


Elliot voted NO on everything – he would have voted NO on Christmas if it would have come up for a vote.


Yes, Yates’ main criteria for people when he was mayor was how many years he’d known them – the more years, the better the person they were. GOB defined.


It’s always happened, but before now there’s never been a voice for the people – the majority of Morro Bay residents. That’s why you’re hearing all this now now. It’s no longer being stuffed away by the Bay News and Neil Farrell


Rick Holliday>slophocles……The “stuffing” sound you will be hearing in the weeks, months and years to come……is the sound of Morro Bay residents “Stuffing” city officials back into doing what is best for the CITIZENS AND THE BUSINESS OF MORRO BAY and not the self entitled “privileged” few!


I sure hope so. If that is what happens, then we will all – well, almost all :) – be thanking you for your courage and willingness to stand up for what’s right, and CCN’s intrepid staff for their courage and willingness to write about it.


Politics makes strange bedfellows, seemingly.


The pro-growth, pro-business, old guard is shuttin’ ’em down thru the planning department.


Meanwhile, the fluffy, entitled set are championing new noisy business in a M/L quiet neighborhood.


My head doth spin.


Review section 17.40.100 of the Morro Bay Municipal Code and spin no more. This document clearly states the rationale for the cited Muni Code section: ca-morrobay.civicplus.com/DocumentView.aspx?DID=1063


Davis and Holliday clearly had every right to apply for a permit for their proposed uses for the building.


What is being defended is the right to apply for permits for land uses that fall within the law – and the zoning code is law. Through the permit process, mitigation for any potential noise issues could have been negotiated. A blanket denial of the proposed uses was clearly NOT consistent with zoning for the area.


Givemeabreak, have you ever thought of opposing the Mayor in the next election? You”d be perfect.


Fluffy?


What about Bill Yates? He promised to come back and save our town if Iron’s pushed Lueker & Schultz out. But no word of him picking up filing docs. Yates… where are you?!?!?!?!


I have heard rumors that there is a lawsuit brewing over the City’s illegal actions in this case. That certainly makes this news right now.


Go back and read the story. It is not about property rights. It is about:


* Abuse of power.


* Denial of a person’s rights under the municipal code to apply for a permit, and to have the application given a fair public hearing in light of our zoning law.


* Harassment


* What appears to be a well-organized effort to prevent businesses from competing with those of Council members.


No amount of attempted spin doctoring is going to keep people from seeing those very obvious facts.


Your problem is you give credibility to rumors (or just make them up yourself). And then you call it “spin” when the other party is confronted with your rumors.


And then you label the other side as bullies? Ha! What farce!


Look at the hard evidence presented in the article. Rumors? NO way


Rick Holliday to Kevin Rice: “Rumors”, “Spin”….The farce is your comment! How many videos do you need to see of city malfeasance, business suppression, harassment, lies, dis-information, how many documents, witnesses and Government codes need to be broken before it’s no longer a “rumor” Kevin. I have the proof, and a lot of it! I will get my turn, I will have my chance, the people of San Luis Obispo County will decide if my evidence is enough to bring criminal, civil charges etc. So for now, “I’ll just sit all back of the buss and wait”! Morro Bay staff and city officials know that the depositions are coming and when I drop the bombshell on Tuesday with another video! or two, or three, well let’s just say, The Hit’s will just keep coming and coming until the city stops these actions against it’s citizens and business.


Not to defend City employees, but under the building codes if you change the use of an existing building it triggers all kinds of stuff.


The Sun Bulletin building has always been an office building, granted there was a printing press in there for about 20 years, but it’s main use has always been an office building.


Putting in a performance theater/teen-age nightclub with live music and such is a huge change in the usage and would trigger a ton of legal hoops to jump through. Even changing it to a Mexican market is a big change in use.


Don’t get me wrong, I think the live music concept is great and would be a pretty good use of the building, which is one of the largest in the city. But you can’t just start throwing parties, invite the kids in and then call it a “private party” and not expect the cops to show up.


My understanding is that the night in question, Davis and others were hassled because there was a report of under-aged drinking going on, that’s why the cops were sent there.


Since these guys are now threatening to sue the City, I’d say their credibility is in question.


And it was Davis and Holliday who ambushed George Leage on he street and accused him of illegal parking.


They’ve also harassed Ms. Radke next door, pointing a video camera over the fence while she was relaxing in a chair on her back patio and going into her little bead store and trying ti intimidate her. These are not very nice fellows.


And as for the building inspector, when you change uses like this on an existing building you trigger things like the Uniform Fire Code, which calls for fire sprinklers to be installed throughout the building and the city muni-codes that would kick in the parking requirements.


Not to mention the federal ADA requirements for the woefully inadequate restrooms in that building.


Don’t think that just because there’s a little parking lot (for about 10 cars) that the parking regs won’t require many more to be provided. If they want an occupancy for 100 people they’re going to have to pay for parking. And thanks to the city council, the rates are back to $15,000 per space.


Had the city let these guys get away with what they wanted to do, the story headline would be — City Allows Illegal Nightclub; Residents Up In Arms


So before you condemn the city officials, think about the red tape and requirements that our society has demanded be in place to protect the rights of neighboring properties. And there is little sympathy for anyone who comes in and decides he’s going to do whatever he or she wants to do with THEIR property, and everyone else be damned. And then enlist a scandal sheet like CCN to attack the people who stand in their way.


I’m sure if someone wanted to put a nightclub in your neighborhood, you’d crap your pants too and the police would be there immediately. So don’t judge unless you stand in their shoes.


This is heresay. Who is Niles Q? They have no proof of any of these claims they make attacking CCN’s credibility. Niles is clearly with the good ol’ crowd. There is nothing that would substantiate Niles claim, is there Niles?


This isn’t the first time this has happened.


The Caccia House on MBB was remodeled and intended for a party/meeting room space, with a nice backyard and stage, etc…


They did a great job turning an old historic house into a place for weddings and such.


Then when they tried to open, the fire marshal stepped in and ordered it to be fire sprinklered, due to the change in use.


It was going to cost about $80,000 to put in the gatekeeper valves, the new water line and the sprinklers, so it didn’t happen and the intended use has never been allowed. And shock, surprise, who owns the Caccia House? Dan Reddell, one of your good old boys.


Instead of crying foul and threatening to sue, Reddell found another, acceptible use for the building, as a yoga studio. This building owner needs to do likewise, instead of crying like some baby about it.


You can’t ignore the fact that the codes are written this way. When you change the use you have to bring the building up to code. Period. I for one wouldn’t have it any other way, and so should you.


And a Mexican market with a grill inside? Now you bring in the plumbing codes (grease traps, etc) and the County Health Department to inspect the new industrial kitchen, the fire department to make sure there are fire suppression systems for the ovens and on and on. Hell, there isn’t but a tiny 10-gallon water heater in this building.


Ask anyone who has ever opened a new restaurant, they’ll tell you the red tape and health requirements and all are endless.


As for the other stuff, Ms. Radke told me herself about the harassment and the spying and how uncomfortable she felt with these guys there. Go ask her yourself and maybe buy something too (shop local).


And I’m sorry, but some moron with a video camera rushing up to a guy and sticking the camera in his face and accusing him of illegal parking is an ambush. And then to post it online and here, in an effort to embarass someone and harm them politically is chickensh*t. And it was indeed Jim Davis who did it, he’s shown right on the end of the video, plain as day. Guess when he gets a ticket, he retaliates in this way.


Anyone is allowed to park in these four spaces. This past weekend, they were all taken up, all three days, I know because I too like to park there and was unable to. And the police don’t actively enforce parking anywhere on Embarcadero. The whole street’s curbs are painted green, 30 minutes maximum parking, but no tickets are ever given out.


Delivery trucks double park all the time, no one writes any tickets. There are zero commecial zones (yellow curbs) anywhere on Embarcadero. So the trucks are allowed to block traffic anytime they want.


People jaywalk all the time across Embarcadero and frankly, I’m surprised that someone doesn’t get run over every single day, especially on weekends like this last one when there must have been 20,000 people in town.


And these guys should be happy that they City turned them down flat. Usually the City lets people put in applications, pay fees and then denies their project. She did them a favor.


And BTW, Kathleen Wold quit in Morro Bay and took the Planning Director job in Ojai. A nice raise, more responsibility and she escaped the craziness of this town.


And the spin doctoring continues … as unconvincingly as before. The diversionary tactics to attempt to focus the reader on other issues related to George Leage do not work. The story is not about Leage.


The business about how the building would have to be brought up to code for a Mexican restaurant does not work. The guy who wants to put a restaurant in there already has a similar operation in Los Osos. Note this sentence in the story: “His Los Osos location sells groceries and includes a grill, where customers eat Mexican food.” The guy knows what is required to open a restaurant, but as the story indicates, Carla apparently didn’t want the competition.


Parking? Did you happen to notice that the story indicates that the property includes a gravel parking lot?


Reddell is a swell guy who wouldn’t complain if he didn’t get what he wanted? WRONG. He has absolutely sued the City in the past when he didn’t get what he wanted. Check it out.


“Who is Niles Q?” I don’t know and I don’t care, his remarks about change of use, parking requirements, and required upgrades are factually correct. You cannot just buy a George Foreman grill and start a restaurant in an office building, some cases of alcohol and start a bar, or hire a band and start a nightclub. Civil disobedience is not acceptable as a response to city planning processes you do not agree with. Can you imagine where the Tea Partiers would take this?


Wow, this is one of the most impressive works of fiction and spin doctoring that I have read in years. Bravo! I don’t think it will fool too many people, but it is very creative. :)


… and by the way, there is a nightclub in my neighborhood, a couple of blocks away and right next to homes. The owners are very considerate and mindful of the neighbors, and there are no problems.


Beyond that, when you live in a neighborhood that is adjacent to a commercial area, or in a neighborhood that is mixed use, you have to expect more noise and parking issues than you would encounter in an R-1 setting.


Niles…. you said alot but your one statement..


“Since these guys are now threatening to sue the City, I’d say their credibility is in question”


I would say that puts your credibility in question. I hope you don’t feel anyone who would sue a government body calls into question their credibility? Sometimes when a government body abused their power a private persons only recourse is in the courts.


“Since these guys are now threatening to sue the City, I’d say their credibility is in question”


So that would be a Ad hominem circumstantial or perhaps genetic fallacy ” that a claim is incorrect due to its source”

A bias of some sort, also 500 words?


No one needs to ambush George. Niles states “It was Davis and Holliday who “ambushed” George Leage on the street and *accused* him of illegal parking”. Accused George? The videotape doesn’t lie. George was caught on tape parked in a red zone. The rest of us idiots just obey the law because if we didn’t we would be “ambushed” with a ticket from his buddies at the MBPD. I hope the IRS digs into Georges shell game of putting businesses in his relatives names. Watch the video where he is “ambushed” for illegal parking and he is seen telling a couple how he owns all three businesses. He is a professional shyster, always has been.


And still doing it, from what I understand.


Whoever you are… you are very very knowledgeable!!! Schultz? Andrea?


I’d say that he/she knows a smear campaign when they see one. Also I’d also say he’s someone who knows the law as written. Jamie and his two stooges are running scared and using every propaganda trick in the book to slander anyone whose done positive to help this city. I really think that the voters of Morro Bay are way too smart to fall for this kind of negative electioneering. We’ll see in June whether or not the voters in Morro Bay are as smart as I think they are. The half dozen commentators who fill this blog and talk back and forth with each other DO NOT represent the folks who love this town. They’re just a group of people who talk back and forth to each other and spread lies/ half truths in the hopes that people will believe them. I think the voters are a lot smarter than they are and can see who really cares about Morro Bay.


“Slander”? Hardly. Go back and re-read the story. Look at the evidence that Mr. Friedman has provided. Read the statements of the witnesses. The facts are clear. City staff and officials abused their power to prevent competition with a business owned by a Council member.


Niles Q… If there was illegal minor drinking at this scene with the attitude of the police officers and inspectors I have no doubt they would have arrested someone and taken the kids in. Rumors are evil canvas’ for people to hide behind. Please stay with facts! and not hearsay and all your legal jargon.


Legal jargon? as in the laws?


Man do I have lots to say about you …..NILES Q….First off stop gossiping about things you clearly no NOTHING ABOUT!

1. I was not even in the COUNTY when the video was taken of Mr. Leage’s illegal parking video. The video was taken by Mr. Brian Der Garabedian and it was Jim Davis you saw at the end of the video tell “Brian” to not say anything to George! You state that I was part of some “Ambush” of Mr. Leage. You are clearly full of shit! You are one of the worst of the gossip hounds on this site, you spew bullshit and I’ll prove more of it right now!

2. I’m not “threatening to sue the City”. I AM SUING THE CITY! And you think that just because I’m suing the city my “credibility is in question”. So your saying that if someone has been so wronged by the city of Morro Bay and they file a legal lawsuit to prove their facts in a court of law and you think that “my credibility is in question”, what should we do Niles? Shoot, stab or hang each other? No, I will take my case to court, CIVIL COURT….No Niles, I think it is YOUR CREDIBILITY that is in question with the BS you put out, but no facts!

3. Now your take on Ms. Paula Radke is a joke. When I leased the building from Mr. Kayler, Paula was storing items in the building. Mr. Davis and I informed Ms. Radke that she would have to move her belongs as we were going to be cleaning up the bottom to make ready for rent. Mr. Radke refused to move and we had to evict her and her belongings from the location. Ms. Radke has been illegally living in her building and everyone knows it! Check the permits with the city and you will see she NEVER got the permit to live in the building. The only harassment comes from Ms. Radke because we would not give her parking and we would not take her abuse! She filed a false police report against Mr. Davis and will be in court on that shortly. Mr. Davis had all charges dropped against him just incase you missed that part, NILES Q!

4. Your statement of; “I’m sure if someone wanted to put a nightclub in your neighborhood, you’d crap your pants too and the police would be there immediately. So don’t judge unless you stand in their shoes” only further shows that; A) If the nightclub was legally allowed by zoning, B) That we did get permits for everything that we did (check it Niles Q), C) That we tried not once, not twice but three times to have the city take our application only to be denied “DUE PROCESS” and you would still say that “we would have no right to put this in YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD! Your showing your colors very well….NILES Q!

5. And on a final note to you…..If you think that we spent $60,000 dollars to clean the place up, another $5,000 on design work and did not know that we would have to spend another $75,000 plus for upgrades to the building to meet the current codes then your not only UNINFORMED but just another gossip hound on this site! Where is your proof of all that you spew on here? I’m Rick Holliday and I approve of what I just wrote, because it’s the truth and I can back up EVERYTHING I SAY NILES Q!


Wow, talk about a lot of issues. Codes and planning ARE a huge hassle but they have a purpose. Folks, things like planning, parking codes, ingress/egress and submitting plans for a new public use of an existing structure are important. That’s how orderly development happens. 1969 uses might no longer fit the plan. This article points a lot of fingers at the planning operation in Morro Bay, but I’d like to know if plans, drawings, elevations, alternative parking agreements and other such things were provided by the proponents to the city. I’d say applicants should have to play by the usual annoying but necessary city rules and receive WRITTEN denials or council or planning commission actions before they can claim conspiracy. Perhaps that’s been done in part or in whole?


Otherwise, the scare tactics of existing business owners are just rude bluster and probably don’t rise to the level of conspiracy to exclude new comers.


I’m not saying that I doubt there is lots of misbehavior in the officials of Morro Bay, for example red-tagging was absolutely an out of line abuse of authority and when inspector tagged it, he was acting like a child or a bully or both since red-tagging typically relates to structural safety issues ONLY and NEVER to permitted/unpermitted uses (unless toxic waste had been hauled in). However some city enforcer such as code enforcement or inspector was probably otherwise within his/her right to declare an unpermitted busy loud public use to be improper and to issue some other form of notice to stop or cease and desist, citing fire or sprinkler or density or other codes.


To really nail this down as to abuse of influence, which seems to be the main focus of the article, I’d like to see a timeline of applications where properly documented city denials buttress up the verbal charges of undue influence by existing old businesses. Then we can talk about possible or imagined abuse of influence by the old guard business owners. Looking forward to next sections of the article.


I agree with Lame Commenter – lots of conspiracy theory based on what these two guys

said happened – two sides to every story


Do you think Cal Coast would post a story if only two people were talking about it? The editorial note said that this is just the FIRST of a SERIES of articles. Put your reading eyes on and look at the article again. If you stare at it twice as long as you did last time MBvoter, you might appreciate a little more of what is truly happening.


Well said, Morroknights.


morroknights…….do you really want an answer to that? All of this bullcrap is CLEARLY steering at the upcoming election.


Are you accusing CCN of something unethical?


yes


This is a WHOLE lot of CONSPIRACY talk. CCN I’m really disappointed that you’re posting articles based on he-said/she-said info. Throughout the entire article you use loaded language and a victim approach. Your video clips are phased in and out, and only last a few seconds, which make me believe you are not giving readers the full story.That is NOT OKAY. If you feel this is a conversation the public needs to be aware of then include the entire thing not just a sentence here and there. Maybe Morro Bay wouldn’t be as dysfunctional if the news would actual report REAL news and not this petty, one sided, winey BS.


And now the old boy/girl network has come to the “shoot the messenger” stage. Attacking CCN is not likely to convince anyone that this story is invalid.


To imply that the story is “petty” is ridiculous. Misuse of public resources to promote the private business concerns of Council members is not petty, and it is very big news.


One sided? Did you happen to notice that the story includes comments from the police officer, Millard, the former City Attorney and both Council members? Clearly, CCN asked them to comment and give their side, and they did so.


Details, details, details.


It depends on who the two people are.


It’s based on a whole lot more than what two guys said. There are witnesses (who are NOT business partners of the two guys), There is video. There is audio. Check it out.


Hey MBvoter and Lame commenter………….it’s not “conspiracy” when you have the proof! You can see mine now and much more in the weeks and months to come! Stay tuned! Video, audio, documents, eye witnesses and the law will prove my case! The depositions of city officials startsin just a few weeks! I’ll look forward to your comments! Have you seen the videos? So you think these are fake? There not!


The refusal of the governing body to accept claims is a denial of general due process under law and stops citizens before they can even start. They don’t have to move in any direction for it to be illegal. Non-action by the government does not protect the liberties promised by the constitution. It clearly said in the article that Wold and Schultz WOULDN’T even let them submit the plans because it didn’t conform with what their handlers wanted. Go back to class and figure out civics 101. You must work for the city of MB to be this daft.


Josh, thank you, for your well documented article. I know some of the people involved and will talk to them. This is outrageous in so many ways. Carla’s restaurant across the alley and Nancy/Garrey Johnson’s B&B over on the next street….hummm. I’m reading it all over very carefully.


Thanks Merrily Merrily Merrily….will be looking forward to the results of your investigation. bahahahahahaha


The county does the same thing by telling YOU what is the highest and best use of your land. I had owned a two acre single family housing zoned parcel in the county.

In 2005 I went with a planner and a contractor to several pre-planning meetings with several county dept heads and was told out right they would not approve single family housing.

It had to be a high density multi family housing or the project would not be approved.

The county wanted infill and wanted more people per square foot.

The cost to build such a large development was over $10 million and I did not have the capacity to finance a project this large or want the risk. So I sold it and a out of town low income developer built 50 low income units that are section 8. It is a three story ghetto with tenants that were not from this area of the county but waiting on the counties “affordable” housing list. The neighborhood is full of crappy cars, and kids all over the place at all hours of the night. Graffiti and Sheriff cars fill the neighborhood now.


If you build it, they will come.


Robert1 you nailed it right on the head. Overzealous planning officials bring their ideas to bear on owners, and your only appeal, the BOS, has probably just been restored by the appointment of Supervisor Ray to it’s former highly-anti-owner and anti-freedom status.


Planning is necessary, over control is not. Your story rings quite true, and is a sad one.


Yes Lame Commenter…..just ask Betty Winholtz. Now it seems they want it BOTH ways…this should really get interesting. Am in hopes that Karen or Josh do a COMPLETE investigation and not resort to what the Tribune does.


Lets not overlook the fact that when the city planning officials deny an honest person the right to build, they have bent over backwards for their inner circle, developers like Dan Reddell, to not only build but also throw in freebies and allowances not given to anyone else.


Maybe Fogcutter Dan is the real puppetmaster of Morro Bay?


You’re actually right. The Reddells have been the recipient of, lets say good fortune. For those of you who were here during the years when Dan’s brother Dale Reddell was mayor, you may remember The Reddell family was able to build on a north Morro Bay property during a building moratorium. This hill property above Del Mar park was undeveloped, not a remodel or tear down. Reddell was somehow enabled to build a new home on this property during a moratorium. Many Many stories of working class citizens who have bought property with hopes of building a home that were later denied permits. Some gave up and re-sold their property only to have it developed later down the road by city friendly developers, who so kindly took it off their hands at bargin prices as unbuildable land. Deny some only to allow to others. Yes slophocles this is another example of the inner circle and special interests that have a different set of rules.


So, you’re saying the only fog he cuts through is the red-tape fog that ties up and strangles the rest of us? I stand corrected – Dan is a true fogcutter, after all.


Does this constitute misuse of public funds? I found this on the State Attorney General’s Web site:


“The starting point for any analysis concerning the misuse of public funds begins with the principle that public funds must be expended for an authorized public purpose. An expenditure is made for a public purpose when its purpose is to benefit the public interest rather than private individuals or private purposes.”


Planning directors, police, and building inspectors are, after all, paid with public funds. If they were used to protect private business interests, then it seems to me that the actions described in the story are likely more than mean and nasty – they are likely illegal.


My, this playground has become a dangerous little place to play – swings broken, monkey bars rusted, broken glass everywhere – and the only ones getting ahead are the bullies. The bullies say they love the playground and they probably do, just not as much as the lunch money it provides them.


What Carla wants, Carla gets.


That may be about to change.