A crooked road to Arroyo Grande?

October 21, 2014
Mayor Tony Ferrara

Mayor Tony Ferrara

Editor’s note: The Arroyo Grande ordinance limiting how the mayor and city council members may legally interact with city staff is at the bottom of this story.

By KAREN VELIE and DANIEL BLACKBURN

Business owners and city staffers in Arroyo Grande have come out with accusations of graft and corruption by Mayor Tony Ferrara and other city and county officials.

The charges leveled against Ferrara and others include theft of public resources by public officials, threats and harm to political opponents using city resources, attempts to get kickbacks from contractors and misspending city money to support a favored developer.

Ferrara also is the newly-elected president of the League of California Cities. He did not respond to detailed questions from CalCoastNews.

As a member of the Arroyo Grande City Council, Ferrara is permitted by state and city laws to work with the council to set policy — and then may instruct only the city manager to carry out the council’s orders. Mayors and council members are prohibited by law from acting alone in giving orders to the city manager, or from instructing other city employees to do their bidding.

But several developers, business owners and Arroyo Grande employees accuse Ferrara of ordering staff to do work for him using city equipment. California law makes the personal use of equipment and city staff for personal use a crime, theft of public services.

On Sept. 27, Ferrara had three public works employees, two city trucks and one city backhoe at his home to remove a pear tree that had fallen over. The team cut up the tree and took the wood to the city corporate yard for disposal. A week earlier, Ferrara had another public works employee at his home moving a television set from his living room to his garage, employees said.

Tony Ferrara's fallen pear tree.

Tony Ferrara’s fallen pear tree.

Shortly after CalCoastNews began asking about the use of public services for his private home, the city issued a bill to Ferrara asking for $196 for the tree removal. The bill came on Oct. 6 and Ferrara paid the bill on Oct. 10.

Three days later Ferrara told the city council that he had been charged a hefty fee for the removal of the tree. But a half dozen local tree specialists gave estimates all starting at a higher rate than the mayor paid the city.

City Clerk Kelly Wetmore explained why the city had staff work on private property saying that because a portion of the tree was on the sidewalk, the city was responsible for its removal.

However, Commander Kevin McBride, a 30-year veteran on the Arroyo Grande Police Department, said that in some cases city employees will remove a limb dangerously obstructing the sidewalk. But city staff does not chop up and remove entire trees for homeowners, he said.

Last week, CalCoastNews contacted public works staff at five local cities. Each of the staff said that, in their city, removal of a tree was the homeowner’s responsibility. However, if a dangerous situation has been created and the homeowner is not able to remove a sidewalk obstruction, those cities will remove limbs covering the sidewalk, and require the homeowner to remove the remainder of the tree.

In addition to allegations of theft of public services, business owners accuse city officials of using threats of withholding contracts in order to promote their political opponents and squelch critics.

Several mayoral elections ago, one of Ferrara’s critics had SLOCO Data and Printing print and mail out pamphlets that painted a negative picture of Ferrara.

Julie Tizzano, the owner of the Arroyo Grande business, said she was approached by Councilman Jim Dickens and told that if she did not mail out a correction, she would no longer do business with the city. She refused Dickens’ demand.

“They threatened me for political gain,” Tizzano said. “Aside from several small jobs that only I have data for, I never received another job from the city.”

Other business owners contend Ferrara works with the city manager, city attorney, and community development director in a convoluted, dysfunctional fashion that has cost those owners millions of dollars. Most said their biggest problem has been receiving specific directions from staff, complying with those directions, and then having city officials or other staffers change the direction delaying the project adding to costs for the developer.

Many say they will not work in the city of Arroyo Grande as long as Adams and Ferrara are in charge.

About 10 years ago, former Community Development Director Rob Strong promoted several changes to the city’s general plan to alter land use policies. Several months later, he entered into a short-term escrow on a property that included a large parcel of land and two older homes, known as the Cherry Creek property. Strong did not have the money to purchase the property, according to a disclosure that he made.

Strong then contacted San Luis Obispo businessman Cliff Branch and recommended Branch develop the Cherry Creek property with a neighboring property owner, Branch told CalCoastNews in an email. The development required Branch to carry on a dialogue with Ferrara, Adams and City Attorney Tim Carmel, he wrote.

“Over the course of a year, we communicated extensively about the project,” Branch said in an email. “As the months passed, I realized I had landed in the twilight zone of the city government, where I felt continually misled, misinformed and/or intimidated.”

During the period, Ferrara sought a meeting, Branch wrote.

“At one point, Mayor Ferrara asked to ‘meet privately,’ and the two of us sat alone in the council chamber,” Branch wrote. “The mayor proceeded to give me a stern lecture on how to conduct myself during ‘his council meetings’ and strongly implied that it would be inadvisable to ignore his advice.

Strong later asked Branch to provide him with a purchase agreement for a lot with one of the existing homes on the Cherry Creek property at a favorable rate. He told Branch that he supervised the Arroyo Grande staffer who would be the city planner on the project. City planners can either expedite permits and other requirements or delay and possible destroy projects.

“It had always been a questionable situation because the city planning director had negotiated an option to purchase an existing house in the development, at a set price, which was highly unusual,” Branch said.

The city took no action, Branch said.

“The planning director warranted that he had made all proper disclosures to city officials. Ferrara had later said that it was ‘not an issue’ because a disclosure form was filed and approved by the city attorney,” Branch told CalCoastNews.

About seven years ago, while the project was still in the approval process, Strong left the city and the developers began working with Adams and Teresa McClish, the city’s new planning director.

“It was my impression that Adams simply ‘took orders’ from Ferrara, so a bad situation became even more dysfunctional,” Branch wrote. “It was also my experience that that City Attorney Tim Carmel conducted the city’s legal affairs with remarkable arrogance. Mr. Carmel once stormed out of a meeting called by the city in a truculent fashion while other city staff members remained at the table, stunned by the city attorney’s behavior.”

In the end, San Luis Obispo County Supervisor Caren Ray, a former Arroyo Grande city official who was involved in the projects approvals, purchased the home that Strong had optioned. By that time, the home had undergone extensive remodeling.

Then, on March 4, 14 days before the closing of Ray’s home, the Arroyo Grande Planning Commission, which includes Ray’s live-in boyfriend Randy Russom, noted an administrative decision in the meeting minutes to designate the recently purchased home as historical.

Because of the Mills Act, this decision will lower Ray’s property taxes by as much as 90 percent as compensation for limiting future remodeling and construction work on the home.

Several years ago, Rick Loughead, another prolific developer and the owner of Dolphin Bay in Shell Beach, was working on a project in the village area of Arroyo Grande. However, because of issues with misdirection from city officials and staff which stalled project approvals, Loughhead said he sold the project at a loss and that he will no longer work with the city.

“It was a difficult and convoluted deal with Ferrara, Adams, and the planning director,” Loughead said. “I couldn’t work with them and I sold the property.”

In 2004, when John and Beatrice Spencer agreed to convert a vacant building in Arroyo Grande into a Spencer’s Fresh Market, they did so at a cost of several million dollars with assurance from the city that the Courtland Place parcel across the street would include courtyards and small size shops and not a large supermarket, John Spencer said. However, several years later, developer Nick Tompkins began negotiating a deal to place a large discount grocery across the street with the city manager’s support — prompting the Spencers to close their Arroyo Grande store.

In 2011, Doug DeBerti approached city planners to get pre-approval for his plan to put a surf shop in the former home of J.J.’s Market. After receiving assurance from McClish that the project would sail through quickly, he purchased the building from Tompkins.

ag mura 3

The mural the city denied and then approved.

Then city officials asked DeBerti to share his parking lot with Tompkins and he declined.

“After that things went south,” DeBerti said.

Nine months later, city officials rejected DeBerti’s proposal because of issues they had with the driveway, as well as a mural he wanted to place on the side of the building. In the end, the building went back into Tompkins’ name. City officials then approved Tompkins’ request for the same mural and driveway that DeBerti had proposed.

“If this isn’t corruption, I don’t know what is,” DeBerti said.

City Manager Steve Adams and Teresa McClish

City Manager Steve Adams and Teresa McClish

In addition to complaints of the financial and emotional cost of attempting to deal with the city, residents question the cost to taxpayers for sweetheart deals to favored developers.

In 2010, Arroyo Grande was dealing with a deficit. The city council was looking at cutting money from after-school programs and reducing the budget for police.

The council then voted to buy the former Farm Credit building from Tompkins to use as City Hall. The $2,020,000 purchase price was almost twice the market value for the building. The council paid about $1 million too much to Tompkins, local appraisers said.

 

Arroyo Grande Ordinance 2.08.080, administrative relationships:

The council and its members shall deal with the administrative service of the city only through the city manager, except for the purposes of inquiry, and neither the council, nor any member thereof, shall give orders to any officer or employee of the city under the supervision of the city manager. The city manager shall take his or her orders and instructions only from the council as a body, and no individual member of the council shall give any order or instruction to the city manager. Any subordinate officer or employee receiving orders or instructions contrary to the provisions of this section shall report the same in writing immediately thereafter to the city manager, and the city manager shall promptly forward a copy or summary of such report to each member of the council. He or she shall likewise promptly advise each member of the council of any order or instruction received by him or her contrary to the provisions of this section. It is not intended by the provisions of this section to restrict unduly the privileges of a member of the council to request the city manager, but not any other officer or employee under his or her supervision, to prepare a report dealing with any matter of city business, or municipal affairs generally, if such report can be compiled without the undue dislocation of city activities and without the expenditure of considerable quantities of time by city personnel.

 

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sounds like Tony has been extorting people from their money for a while…..awe, yes, power has it’s privilages.


So here is my dilemma:


Everything in this article and all the South County Sanitary, Verdin, City Hall etc. has been reported in the past. The negatives of the Ferrara administration have been building over time, and the only new negative is the possible cover up of the July 3 incident. I do think Ferrara has done some really good things for AG, but I also think he has been here too long and has been allowed to get too powerful. I also think this stuff is going on, or has gone on, in most of our local cities. The root of the problem is that anyone that runs for these political positions has flaws that often include a desire for power.


My question is: why is he unopposed on the ballot? Everything in this article has happened in the past and previously been reported, yet nobody thought it was important enough to get someone on the ballot. This “Jim Hill write-in” drive is great in that it the people getting are getting involved, but it is almost sure to fall short. For every Jim Hill sign, there are 10-20 homes or business without Jim Hill signs. I’d guess that outside of this forum the numbers are not what most here think they are. Most voters that think for themselves, like me, are not swayed by counting signs, or honking horns, or having someone knock on my door. I want to vote for someone that I know has been scrutinized over time, and that will not be worse than what we have. If Jim Hill’s heart was in this, he should have been on the ballot.


So Ferraro will get a no vote from me, but I will not vote for someone that wasn’t committed enough to go through the process of placing himself on the ballot, nor finishing the job in his past political position. Jim Hill could be just the man for the job, and given time he could get my vote, but I’m not ready to go there. The writeup on Jim Hill at his Write-in website is generic political talk that leaves me wondering what he truly believes in.


Jim did not wan to do this he was drafted


WHAT??? Drafted???? Who has the burning desire to be in office? Thank goodness that someone had the balls to step up at all. Yes, he was asked, by many. Not many folks want to be Mayor.


Jim has experience from the OCSD, has a law degree and has a good head on his shoulders, which is a lot more than I can say for the bozo’s sitting in the seats now!


Write-in campaigns are uphill battles for sure but with the few that do succeed there are a couple of common denominators – the write-in candidates file late and there is public interest in the person in office. We here in Arroyo Grande have those two factors in our favor.


I’ve personally never seen such enthusiasm for any candidate as we’re seeing for Jim Hill. As a pessimist at heart I’m having a heard time remaining so. This movement is unprecedented.

If everyone will write in Jim Hill and fill in the bubble next to his name we can get a fresh start at getting our city back together.


ITA, Mike. What really impresses me is the number of businesses backing Jim Hill. The first one I saw was in front of the B&B “House of Another Thyme,” and it seems there are more and more every place I go in AG.


Businesses are well aware of how vindictive Mayor Ferrara can be. So for them to stand up against Ferrara is not without risk for them…yet they are backing Hill, anyway.


You’re correct, Mary. It needs to be understood that businesses in particular have been strongly “encouraged” by some to remove their signs. Some have given in to the pressure, and no one can blame them, but many others have said, enough is enough. It takes courage and conviction and, personally, I’m proud of each and every one.


You’ve raised some valid concerns. From what I’ve seen Jim Hill is intelligent enough to root out some of the “politician” types that are now strangeling our town. He doesn’t specialize in politics yet has a mind for whats right and loves A.G. He’s got my vote and if you don’t vote FOR him you’ve voted for Tony and you know what goes along with that.


What if only HALF of what has been said about our mayor is true? Can you live with some more years of that?


Not voting for Tony is one less vote for Tony. One less vote that Jim needs to get to surpass Tony.


When I’ve been asked what Jim Hill is like I say, a very smart Boy Scout. Though I’ve been acquainted with him from the media for years, I’ve only known him personally for a relatively short time. He’s as smart, ethical and principled a person as I’ve ever met. And he’s calm, thoughtful and respectful as they come. He’s just what we need to put our city back on track and heel the sad, unfortunate divisions all this has created.


Thanks,


I respect your opinion.


Then you must not be ready for change.


Not change for the sake of change.


How about Jim Hill coming on here and writing about what he stands for and what his vision for Arroyo Grande is. I would be very open-minded to reading that instead of the cheerleading for Jim Hill and the name-calling of anyone that isn’t a blind faith backer of Jim Hill.


I know one positive thing about Jim Hill — he is against the charter. I thank Jim Hill for putting his opinion out there and I hope to see more of that.


There is a lot more to running a city than being local and being transparent.


Jim Hill has written a couple of articles for CCN (Op-Ed section) which clearly state what he stands for, and what he sees as issues for our city.


Thanks for the heads up, I had missed one article. But it didn’t have much substance to it. His agenda or platform seems to be focused entirely on the current problems with Ferrara, and not on his vision. I agree with him about the few issues he addresses because they are sort of slam dunks right now. Limit the terms and limit the power. But there is more to running a city than that.


I also read the comments on the 2011 article and came away with a bad feeling about Hill and his resignation.


If you have questions for Jim, or would simply like to speak to him, you can reach him at home @ 481-5654.

He is working the PG&E outage now, but will return each and every message in the evening.


Visit http://www.WriteInJimHillMayor.com or facebook/writeinjimhillmayor for information.


Thanks for the links. I’m always trying to make a educated vote when possible.


I understand your point of view. I got burned by voting for Obama the first time around because I was convinced that McCain/Palin would be as bad as Bush/Cheney and that Obama might be somewhat better. As bad as the status quo in politics is, it is usually possible to replace it with something equally bad or worse.


However, Jim Hall has expressed some good ideas on this website — these are more than just platitudes from his acolytes. (Otis Page is a different matter.) In addition to that, he has one positive verifiable political record. While on the South County Sanitary District Board with Ferrara, he questioned and opposed Tony’s efforts to clear the way for his crony, John Wallace, to rip off the SCSD and its customers with both overcharges and under-performance leading to massive fines.


Given the fact that Jim Hall would probably have mixed support from the AG City Council (at best) if elected mayor, I doubt he could do much damage even if he turned out to be a poor choice. Of course, he may not be able to get much accomplished either for the same reason but at least he could set a good example and get some transparency in the way the city works.


He does not belive in Ferarra and Adams and right now that is enough. If in two years he hasn’t done well we can replace him


Check out the October 8th meeting of the City Council on Wed at 9 AM on SLOSPAN.


What is going on with the investigation?

Who has been interviewed?

When is the meeting to certify the report to the Council?

Will this be before or after Election Day?


Where is the agenda item for hiring a new City Manager?

They should be hiring a search firm by now and approving a timeline.


Wow…


I won’t stoop to your level, but I’d be curious to hear what the other Jim Hill supporters have to say about your post. It certainly doesn’t help Jim’s cause that you are in his camp.


Has the FBI public corruption unit been notified? If this type of corruption is so easily revealed what else is going on? And if other city employees know of this type of corruption is occurring and say nothing they are just as guilty.


I doubt if this is enough to get the FBI’s interest. They want cases that have big money changing hands in obvious and easily verifiable ways so that they can make a big splash in the news. While the amounts here seem big to you and I, they aren’t in the same class as those spent at the State level and the evidence, while fairly obvious, is more circumstantial than something that would be difficult to explain away in court.


Voting Ferrara out is the quick way to get this done. It may not be as satisfying as seeing him face courtroom justice but it will give results sooner and the DA (or FBI) can still proceed at their leisure if they choose to do so. Personally, I think that Tony’s ego is so inflated that a repudiation by the voters might be enough to pop it and maybe he will just leave the town in a fit of anger.


Need a sign for the Jim Hill campaign?

CALL or TEXT 805-440-0738 and say if 1 sided or 2 sided, big or small.


Did you see the one on Traffic Way at the Taxidermy? Vet Clinic at Elm and Grand? DeBlauw, Vons Groceries, Alphys, Rontal, Motel on Traffic Way? Beachside Auto….

The list is growing of merchants ready for CHANGE.


CALL or TEXT for a SIGN. Be the CHANGE you WANT A.G. to be!


I like the mailer that was recently sent because it is perfect to put in a smaller place, like a vehicle side window.


And this is why everyone should make a donation to CCN to help offset their costs. $25.00 every couple of months would help I am sure! We need CCN more than we need coffee, the Fibune, etc. Please donate them to keep this news coming.


why not earn it


what would you pay to read a story that you can read nowhere else? how does one determine the value of journalism? What is this worth to you to your community?you volunteer to read the story how about paying for those who created the story.


Google search ” blood on the press_room floor “


So AAADADDYO, are you saying this story as well as the others reported on this site during the years is not worth something? Maybe you should go read the Fibune, it only costs $250 or so a year for nothing but deceit and lies.


well, you must be a government employee. Don’t know much about private business.


This needs to go Viral!!!! Share it on facebook!!!! Have your friends share it.. This is a way to help Cal Coast News…


This is an excellent piece Karen and Dan! As usual….


Any odds on if the mayor will cancel next weeks city council meeting?


Also, regardless of the outcome of the election, I will remember those businesses with the guts to stand up to the mayor and his bullies (i.e. city inspectors and such) and display a Vote For Hill sign and continue to spend my money there instead of those that support the mayor. Plus, developments by those favored developers will not get my money.


I am a big proponent of “voting with your pocketbook.” This is especially true in the situation we face where the Mayor and his City Manager can be quite vindictive.


Agreed. Jamie Irons is running Morro Bay into the ground and driving businesses out of town. While driving all other development out of Morro Bay he’s quietly working to make his own commercial property more valuable. Someone should be investigating what’s going on with this City Council under his leadership before it’s too late.