Sunday, March 31, 2013

Who is in charge?

City staff or the city council?



Fleener work originally published in The Coast News.

 What's missing here? Who is directing the bureaucrats.

How much free reign do they have and do they control council members? How much control of the city policies do they still have?

For years, staff were excused because people would say staff were just doing what the council wanted, even if the council didn't express those desires in public and even if they did things that were clearly biased or just plain wrong.

There is good evidence that staff were given information on the inclinations of the council in informal backroom conversations and communications, where the public could not hold anyone accountable and it made nobody accountable to the voters. Others would say that staff would force council members to submit to their will or not be treated nicely in those backroom interactions. If staff were not happy, selected council members would not get to direct staff to do things in the backroom anymore. If this was true, it was a barter system and nobody was accountable.

Shine the sunlight on those interactions. The legitimacy of the unauthorized and subversive actions taken by staff, that make some council members feel like they can't even ask questions or propose an idea, will only continue with the will of the council.

There is a new council. It is up to them to lead into the fundamental changes and do that is going to require a real clear effort. Anything smelling like business as usual must be addressed or citizens and staff will come to expect, business as usual. Peripheral fluff work is nice, but lack of clear responses from the council on those apparent business as usual activities wipes out the confidence of those who hoped for meaningful and lasting change.  


__________________

Longtime city watcher Deitmar Rothe writes in a TCN commentary:
The council then voted unanimously to order City Manager Gus Vina to hire a consultant for analyzing the impacts of the initiative. Gus Vina stated that he had already set the process into motion. How could he have done this, unless City Manager Vina had already agreed with council on how they should vote in, what many feel, was a sham public hearing?
Two LB contacts have said that one council member was asked about this. The CM said that Gus was just going off the information he gleaned from his conversations with the individual council members and was being efficient by getting the ball rolling.

Mayor Barth included a link to this commentary in her weekly email to supporters and followers. She often makes comments about issues in the links. She took the 5th and remained silent instead of addressing Dietmar's comments.

__________________

Comments in Barth's emails are like these:
Regardless of how you feel about the Right to Vote Initiative the meeting to craft the council statement at an public meeting was an unprecedented exercise in open government. This would have NEVER occurred with the previous council majority.

Encinitas tries to preserve small town character
When I spoke to the reporter I said we, meaning the council, would write the argument against. The council did include in the ballot statement a commitment to propose changes to the General Plan to require zoning changes and General Plan updates to be approved by a public vote.

If the commitment is for this to be a simple change to the general plan and not get a watered down initiative and not be bait for a bait and switch, then get this on the agenda and write the EXACT language. Simple. A couple weeks of work and done. They promise to do it anyways. Do it now. It is so simple and there won't be details that will water it down.

See Encinitas Undercover for more calls for this silly request for actually doing it rather than "committing" to do it. It would also build trust if all the members of the council stopped talking about abstract "possible" problems with the upzoning initiative and became specific. They should engage their supporters who wasted thousands of hours collecting signatures on a super lame and flawed initiative. Mayor Barth obviously knew about these flaws long ago before people wasted their time. That sort of things really calls for a big round table meeting.


Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Ends Justify the Means


Hitting the inbox:

(Former?) supporters of Barth claim they have to listen to KPBS to hear what she really thinks.

http://www.kpbs.org/news/2013/mar/27/encinitas-tries-preserve-small-town-character/

(Former?) supporters say they feel like Barth played them over the last year as the idea of the right-to-vote initiative was being contemplated, developed, and thousands of hours were spent obtaining signatures.  

Barth and company should draft their alternative initiative before the special election. Let's see what else she isn't telling people about the ends she is seeking. Drafting her version after the electing means being able to play all the voters. It is easier to force a smile, be vague and let people think they will get what they want rather than being specific and showing people they won't get what they want.

Drafting the alternative version before the election would force Barth to come up with a better initiative than the one that is actually going in front of the voters, rather than just being nice and saying her's will be better.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Leucadia Joy Ride in full effect

Happy bike riders enjoying the bike lane (while it last)

What would it take?



... to stop streetscape?
... to end the campaign against streetscape?

Wait, what do they mean by "streetscape"?

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

JOY RIDE Saturday 3/23



Here's an awesome event coming to a stretch of highway 101 near you. It's a celebratory bike ride along the newly tattooed, improved and safer 101. No discrimination: racing bikes, beach cruisers, mountain bikes, freestyle, bmx, flatlanders, fixies and even penny farthings are all welcome. Read on for the official word...




"The Encinitas Bicycle and Pedestrian Committee, in conjunction with the Leucadia 101 and Downtown Encinitas Main Streets and The San Diego County Bicycle Coalition would like to invite you to the upcoming community JOY RIDE, a free community bicycle ride on March 23rd at 11:30 a.m. The ride will begin at Leucadia Roadside Park and will follow a 9-mile loop through Encinitas. The event is open to riders of all levels, celebrating recent safety improvements made for bicyclists along the heavily-traveled and widely-popular Highway 101 corridor in Leucadia and Encinitas.

The JOY RIDE will follow Highway 101's new bike lane north from Leucadia Roadside Park up to La Costa Avenue, loop South down to the Cardiff Kook and back to Leucadia's HapiFish/Counter Culture restaurant located at 190 North Coast Highway 101. There the JOY RIDEcelebration will take place, including a raffle with great prizes from local bike shops and athletic eyewear companies. Along the JOYRIDE route, bicyclists will stop at participating bike shops including HI-Tech Bikes Leucadia, Nytro Multisport Encinitas and Ride Cyclery/Pink Peleton for raffle tickets, snacks and refueling goodies that have been generously donated. Spy Optics
and Arnette Eyewear will also be donating prizes for the raffle.  
 

To participate in the JOY RIDE, bring your friends, family and bicycle to Leucadia Roadside Park on March 23, 2013 at 11:30 a.m. The JOY RIDE is FREE. Bicyclists are encouraged to practice safe biking, obey all traffic signals and buy local in support of our local bike shops and other sponsors and businesses along the route."

In other words, try not to ride like Rob Deez and those other crazy bikers down in San Diego...



Sunday, March 17, 2013

The Initiative doesn't stop the developments everyone wants to stop

Everyone hates this high density development on Hermes.
It's basically dropping a mini-neighborhood into an old school neighborhood.
Hermes doesn't have sidewalks, it's got a rural feel. Most of the homes on Hermes are single family, maybe a granny flat, with a large yard.
Lots of weeds, lazy dogs sleeping under scrawny citrus trees, and the occasional car that hasn't been started in 20 years.
A classic Keep Leucadia Funky neighborhood.
Everyone on Hermes hates this new development, but the Initiative doesn't block these from happening.
It's under 30' and it's not an upzone.
The developer probably squeezed 2 extra units into it using the state affordable housing mandate.
So, if Leucadians really want to stop these kind of developments what would that piece of legislation look like?

Monday, March 11, 2013

The people of Encinitas need the right to vote on the "Right to Vote" Initiative

The Encinitas City Council is set to Review the "Right to Vote" Impact Report Tuesday evening. agenda

 In an ironic twist the "Right to Vote Initiative" creators want the fresh, new city council to adopt the ordinance on Tuesday without a public vote.

The council can decide to send the "Right to Vote" to a special election on June 18, 2013.

Valuable links:

The Encinitas Right to Vote
Quick link to the Right to Vote PDF page

Impact report of the Initiative The (Executive Summary begins on page 21)

A page out of the Impact Report 
 Encinitas Patch: Includes a report from the Committee to Preserve Encinitas Property Rights.

 *blogger's note - I encourage the city council not to adopt the "Right to Vote" Initiative on Tuesday night and let the voters of Encinitas decide for themselves in an election this summer.

Friday, March 08, 2013

New bike lane stripes washing away in rain

Um, I don't think they used the right kind of paint.

Yoga is totally a religion man

Editorial cartoon in this week's Coast News page A15 on the recent Yoga in schools lawsuit scam.