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


Loading...
386 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

The murder of Donal Schneider was not an accident. Its a sobering reminder of how the government retaliates against whistleblowers.


Machiavelian cronyism and opportunism is the main reason why all levels of government are corrupt. Machiavelian cronyism and opportunism is the main reason why government can’t be trusted. Government can’t be trusted because government agents are not our friends. Government employees are serving themselves, not the public.


unlisted you might want to do a bit of RESEARCH and see who in the city of MB actually gave to who…..you might be a bit surprised.


I’ve been waiting to hear the complaints from Mr. Davis and Mr Holliday because I couldn’t understand their dilemma as stated by others. After reading this article I’m even more perplexed. What is their problem? do they think they can role into any town and do as they please? start up a business with live music that would generate complaints. Carla can handle competition, she has at least 50 other restaurants to compete with now and is doing a fine job of it. Maybe her concern, if any was parking and loud music…understandable. Mr Davis…when you have a bad business plan and it all falls apart on you don’t blame the town and the police…


Rick Holliday>Rambunctious……No I did not “roll into town” I have raised my son here for 22 years. I have created business that help “at risk youth” and worked for the developmentally disabled for years in our county! We did get the permit to start, it was the city that shut us down, get that right and right now! Carla and her cronies were very worried. We would have taken away market share from them and they did not want the competition, period! And please name me the “50” other lousy greasy spoons in Morro Bay that serve shitty breakfast along with lousy service (in my opinion!). 50 of them? Really!

I have created spots where you can insert you foot into your mouth.

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

etc. etc. etc,


Mr. Rambunctious….when you have illegal activities of city staff etc. “don’t blame the citizens for demanding that city staff and employees get their just deserts because of “bad business” and what they have done! Support the rights of all citizens and business, not “bad business” as Mr. Rambunctious say’s! We agree!


Your poor son :(


I am totally flabbergasted. I once compared this whole attack to a school of piranha attacking meat. I must now apologize to piranha everywhere.


This is a frenzy of epic proportion. It is amazing to hear people who sound intelligent and rational go off the deep end.


1.Has anyone been to Diaz “restaurant” in Los Osos? A few chairs and a couple of tables inside a food market do not constitute a restaurant. If that was competition to Carla’s, I am sure she wished all her competition was like that.


2. I have been lead to believe that the building was a “fire trap”. I heard that long ago, pre- “the old boys, old girls mega conspiracy of 2011/2012/2000 ad infinitum ….”. If it was dangerous and there were a fire that destroyed property and/or killed people, these same people you are attacking would be the same ones attacked for allowing the building to be used for the purpose it was.


3. Last and most importantly- are you the same people who begged that we “all just hold hands and get along”? We were told how our city is too important for us to have all theses battles and skirmishes and we should leave the mayor alone so we could move forward. Now that Jamie avoided the recall, I believe we could term this whole action a PURGE..


This may be best described by an Italian word:


ven·det·ta noun \ven-ˈde-tə\


: a very long and violent fight between two families or groups


: a series of acts done by someone over a long period of time to cause harm to a disliked person or group


And here we have yet another approach to spin doctoring this situation. I’ll give the old boys and girls one thing – they sure are creative.


I’m shocked too, Shock. I also heard the building was a firetrap. And that Jim Davis was running a bar on top of that.


Davis was aware he wasn’t compliant with the fire codes. There was no fire exit and he procrastinated on creating one. The steps leading up to the front entrance on the second floor had termite damage and were structurally unstable, i.e. dangerous. People couldn’t safely escape a fire by using those crumbling stairs, and there was no fire exit.


Davis furnished alcohol, including whiskey, vodka and brandy, on the premises without a permit, with his children on the premises, even helping out. Guests were asked to pay a donation to be there. Davis also charged guests for food and alcohol, both without permits. Those were his choices.


There is more to this story than the creative version presented here. Is anyone interested? Or are you all satisfied with less because it sounds good to your closed ears and you’re just lazy?


I think most of us want to get my information from sources we trust. I trust CNN because they back up their stories with hard evidence, as has been clearly demonstrated time and again.


If you have other facts related to this story, take them to CCN. If they are true, provable with solid evidence, and pertinent to the story, then it is likely that CCN will publish them. If your allegations cannot be backed up with solid evidence, or are unimportant in terms of the story, then obviously, they will not make the cut.


Your own approach of apparently attempting to justify bad behavior by City staff and officials does not inspire confidence, and the suggestion that those who are not interested in more old boy/girl propaganda have closed ears (or minds) or are lazy is nonsense.


The bottom line is still that, whether or not Davis or other building users did anything they shouldn’t have, the City staff and officials still need to follow proper legal procedure.


That does NOT include denying people the right to apply for permits. It does NOT include the City Attorney dictating to people what commercial uses they can make of their commercial buildings when the zoning code presents no such restrictions. It does NOT include condemning a building without ever going inside to inspect it. It does NOT include wildly-inconsistent enforcement of parking requirements and citing parking as an issue for a property that has its own parking lot.


I’m making no attempt to justify any bad behavior by city officials, just pointing out that the story is incomplete and that’s a lot more to it. CCN needs to do more digging. Developing a basic timeline would have been a good place to start. It would have shown that Davis occupied the building illegally, was serving alcohol and conducting business in a firetrap.


It’s hardly nonsense to question the appetite of readers for the whole story when they are so easily satisfied swallowing just a piece of the story instead. Something’s wrong with that. What is nonsense, though, is the political hackery and divisiveness continuously sown by elitists with a backroom agenda. Hopefully we can weed that toxic behavior out of Morro Bay’s future.


The bottom line is that it certainly matters what Davis did — as is matters what the city did. It’s not all about what one side did and calling that The Story. That’s just mindless cheerleading for conspiracy theorists who take comfort in knowing less because knowing more forces the them to practice critical thinking. That is ridiculous.


If Davis didn’t break the law in the first place, if he had stayed the course like everyone else instead of circumventing it because he’s special and didn’t want to wait in line for his permits like everyone else, the city would never have had to waste time and resources shutting him down and he wouldn’t be whining.


Shifting the entire blame onto the city is simply an infantile attempt by Davis to save face and cover up the embarrassment of his costly blunder. He should man-up, take his due share of responsibility for what happened, and pay the price for being just plain dumb.


FINALLY a voice of reason!!


More nonsense, and an obvious and ridiculous attempt to divert attention from the facts by shifting the blame to Davis. You said, “If Davis didn’t break the law in the first place, if he had stayed the course like everyone else instead of circumventing it because he’s special and didn’t want to wait in line for his permits like everyone else, the city would never have had to waste time and resources shutting him down and he wouldn’t be whining.”


READ the story. There was no option to wait in line. Davis was not even allowed to APPLY for permits for the type of business he wanted to run, despite the fact that such businesses are clearly legal under the zoning.


Again, this story is not about Davis. It is about violations of the law by City staff and officials. No matter what Davis did, City staff and officials should have, but did not, follow the proper legal procedure.


The story is about Davis, Linda. This was CCN’s trigger:


“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.”


Your statement that “Davis was not even allowed to APPLY for permits for the type of business he wanted to run,” is based on an allegation and nothing more. Not knowing the difference between allegation and fact is a testament to the mental state of someone who can’t leave their home because they’re “allergic to gasoline.”


Trigger for the story, yes. Subject of the story, no. Try READING the story. Try starting with the title: “Morro Bay officials shut down business competitors of council members” Note the subject of the sentence that makes up the title: “Morro Bay officials”. Hopefully, this will help you understand what the subject of the story is.


If you are still confused, try reading the first sentence of the editor’s note at the top of the story: “This is the first in a series about allegations of abuse of power and selective enforcement of laws in Morro Bay.”


Regarding your other comments, no one should make abusive remarks about people’s physical disabilities, be they allergies, or any other form of impairment, and it speaks to the mental state of the person making the remarks, not the mental state of the disabled person.


That said, you seem to be mistaking me for someone else, as I leave my home several times a day for all the usual reasons – such as meeting friends, walking, shopping, and even, yes, getting gasoline for the car!


You just spew bullshit cowpetal…..The building has fire egress and if you check with the city and or the fire Marshall you would know the facts. Yes, I want to know all the “facts you have” and right now! Tell us, cowpetal………show us your videos, your documents, your proof! The steps had “termite damage and were structurally unstable”….again your full of it! You just have nothing but hearsay, of gossip of your creative version OF WHAT YOUR HEARS….but you have proved nothing here! So…..please tell all of Morro Bay of your knowledge of 1149 and please make sure to include facts!


Everyone, Facts not personal insults.

Further bullshit will be composted.


I say boycott Carla’s, The American Fish Company and anything else owned by Carla Vourchard Wixon and George Leage, Boy, they must have had fun sitting on the City Council, her with the Police Department as her friends and George with the Planning Department and both with Admin and Attorney in their pockets. Must be nice. No wonder there is so much trouble and corruption in little quiet peaceful Morro Bay, everyone was afraid in stayed in their place.


“Protest by pocketbook” is a very effective mode of protesting.


What is REALLY funny is that The folks that own the Cannery property in MB…which mind you is zoned commercial……well these same whiney pee holes that are all in a uproar over the Old Sun Bulletin Building…all had a big S fit not long ago about those terrible boats tying up at the dock down there….yes that is ZONED Commercial. Now the same people that cried stairs to heaven about that are the same nut jobs that want The Old Sun Bulletin turned into a disco. Go figure…..bet ya if that old bag Cutter lived in the SB neighborhood she would be the first in the city council meetings with her daffy duck shades on.


More diversionary tactics. The story is about City officials and staff failing to adhere to the City’s own laws. Trying to equate the current situation with the wharf issue is nonsensical. The story is about bad behavior by City staff and officials. It is not about boats.


Beyond that, you need to check your facts regarding those “big boats” you refer to (huge, industrial, ocean-going tugboats). Here is some pertinent material from the LCP:


“LCP Policy 7.09 says: “The City shall designate recreational boating and fishing uses as priority uses for the portion of the planning area west of Main Street and south of the Acacia Street Intersection . Existing coastal dependent uses shall be protected when approving new development”


“Program LU-52.1 says: “Future harbor expansion, specifically for commercial fishing, should occur in the northern portion of the bay. This area is better suited to accommodate the larger boats which are becoming more prevalent in the fishing industry.”


Note the statement that in the area where the Wharf was, recreational use has priority. Note also the statement that the northern portion of the Harbor is better-suited to larger boats. The tugs were not just large. They were enormous.


Furthermore, the zoning you refer to applies to the LAND, not the water. Finally, the whole idea was dumb, because the old wharf was crumbling, as was later confirmed when the City approved removal of the wharf because it could not be salvaged and was unsafe.


Now, hopefully we can get back to focusing on the story, which is what the comments section is supposed to be for.


Moderator, can you put a stop to the personal attacks on people who have absolutley NOTHING to do with Mr. Friedman’s story?


Mary does that mean we should quit paying our taxes and then we could get rid of people like Bruce Gibson, Adam Hill, Jamie Iron’s, Schmuckler and their secretary Christine Johnson?


Oh SLOBIRD……..yawn…………………….we already know all the granola eating, birkenstock wearing chicks with the hairy armpits and legs do not eat there anyway. And I thank god because I hate the smell of someone sitting next to me wearing a s load of patchouli oil, coupled with their boy or girlfriends (whatever the case may be) that have insects jumping off their dreadlocks. Carla’s, GAFCO, Harbor Hut and Off The Hook, would probably be happy if you boycotted them as they have a LONG following of people that have lived here.You know where the real bread and butter comes from ALL YEAR. Now get back to your FRUIT and NUT salad.


Seems like the “real bread & butter” comes from us, the taxpaying citizens of Morro Bay. It is no secret that these good ‘ol boys- & girls (yes you,Carla & Nancy) have been lining their pockets for YEARS at our expense! I find it ironic that one of the crooks in question bristled at a council meeting recently, and snarled “this is not the City of Bell!”.

Welcome to Morro Bell, folks… Hope that the truth finally comes to light & exposes these a** clowns for the criminals that they really are!


They might have to move their tar-n-feather meetings to Fennecy Law-BQ.


Let’s boycott a business solely based on unvetted accusations. Now THAT’s progress!


I think it would be more effective to boycott her in the election :)


Why would anyone be surprised. These public officials, including the idiots at the top openly feel that the public is there to serve them. As their PW Director states “I have a vision” which is the same thing the idiot former Chief Building Official in SLO used to say. This reminds me of history, Hitler had a vision. Thus, they all seem to have a vision of a utopia, unfortunately us tax payers have no say so on that vision.


Now visions are bad? Visions lead to utopia? Kind of a jump, isn’t it? But nothing compared to the Hitler crack. Livick? Hitler? What would that make Irons? Satan? Where does it end?


I guess all the journalists over a Fogcutter “News” are off to a journalism seminar with Neil Farrell because they haven’t posted anything since Jan. 17th when Billy Peirce published his excuses – I mean, reasons, why the recallers didn’t get enough signatures. Maybe Neil Farrell is teaching it – I hear his course: Bias 101: News is What You Want it to Be, is quite good.


It takes a very long time to destroy 1753 signed recall petitions.


why is it the left that always starts this sort of thing?


What sort of thing? Exposing corruption? Because they’re usually not the ones engaged in it and respect their country/community enough to try and do something about it. However, if you have followed other CCN stories like the CAPSLO articles, I think you’ll find they have no problem going after the Left.


The ones who started “this sort of thing” are the renegade City staff and officials who, along with the Council members who didn’t want this business in their neighborhood, obviously have no respect for the law. Are they “left”? No way


Please focus on the story and stop pulling in totally unrelated issues.


You’re such a right-wing partisan, Roger, that you blame everything on the left even when it’s you righties who are at fault.


Carla Borchard is clearly a Republican. She donated $800 to the Republican Central Committee.


unlisted BFD


Yeah, but I hear that Borchard money isn’t as Republican as that Biaginni money. I hear that Biaginni money is the best stuff on the street.