Letters to the Editor: August 1, 2018

Chanate Not
So Great

Your article on Chanate (“The Fate of Chanate,” July 25) was remarkable for its exposure of the pure cronyism taking place in Sonoma County government. You would think that elected supervisors would have more sense than to have closed-door meetings and make a deal that is a giveaway of public property and a betrayal of the public trust. Shame on them all. Astoundingly, a recipient of this giveaway was appointed by Supervisor Shirlee Zane to the planning commission and the main developer contributed big bucks to Zane’s election effort. This in itself doesn’t prove anything, but it makes you wonder.

It’s ironic that had Noreen Evans won the 5th District supervisors race, she might have been able to head off this very bad deal. As it is, she worked from the outside to represent the public interest and won the court case that stopped the deal. Thanks to the folks that led the effort and wisely hired Evans to represent them. It isn’t over, but this is a good start to getting it right.

Sebastopol

Thank you, Peter Byrne. Here’s another issue with all of this that doesn’t seem to get the attention it deserves. And one could argue that it is germane to the legal issues being adjudicated. It is astounding, jaw-dropping, appalling, pick your adjective, that Shirlee Zane appointed an employee/manager of Gallaher to the Sonoma County Planning Commission. And this after Gallaher contributed tens of thousands of dollars to her campaigns. It sure seems as though this presents a clear conflict of interest and should have had a bearing on voiding the sale. I’m curious as to why this wasn’t a point of contention.

Via Bohemian.com

Thank you, Peter Byrne, for two well-written and researched articles on the Chanate development. Your work shows the type of professional reporting that seems to be going by the wayside today. Hats off to you for reporting facts without prejudice.

Via Bohemian.com

Burned by PG&E

I am a retiree and stockholder in PG&E, and it is time to hold PG&E accountable again (“Taking Stock,” July 3). In 2001, Gov. Wilson held PG&E’s feet to the fire. The utility emerged from bankruptcy in April 2004 after paying $10.2 billion to its hundreds of creditors. Since that time, PG&E did not disappear and service to Californians continued. It makes no sense to relieve PG&E of inverse condemnation, as PG&E has not learned its lesson. As with San Bruno, PG&E failed to protect its customers yet sought liability protections in the absence of accepting responsibility. PG&E’s leadership cares more for its return on investment than adhering to the mundane operational duties they are paid to do. Passing the costs on to customers would allow PG&E to keep stockholders from sustaining a loss for their interests and holdings.

Santa Rosa

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Tuneful

0

Our annual NorBay Music Awards online readers’ ballot received its biggest turnout ever, and this year’s winners include a lot of new faces among the North Bay’s favorite bands, venues, promoters, DJs and more. The 2018 NorBay Music Award winners are:

Americana

Sean Carscadden Sonoma songwriter (pictured) effortlessly blends funk and blues into his electric and eclectic sound.
www.seancmusic.com.

Acoustic

Bloomfield Bluegrass Band While the band is only a year old, its members have been active in the Northern California bluegrass scene for decades. facebook.com/BloomfieldBB.

Blues

The Dylan Black Project Soulful band remains a fixture at community concerts and gets the crowds moving. thedylanblackproject.com.

Country

Third Rail Sonoma County outfit plays a hearty mix of contemporary country staples with splashes of R&B and classic rock. thirdrailband.com.

Electronica

Eki Shola Soloist dazzles North Bay audiences with her worldly influenced synthesizer melodies and jazzy vocal harmonies. ekishola.com.

Folk

Fly by Train Penngrove’s folky five-piece band can ride the rails with the best of them with a self-described railroad-roots sound. flybytrain.com.

Hip-Hop

Pure Powers Independent Santa Rosa rapper continues to impress with his new LP, Year of the Peacock. purepowersmusic.com.

Indie

Justin Schaefers & the Blind Barbers With a frontman who just enrolled at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, this outfit’s future is bright. blindbarbers.com.

Jazz

Acrosonics Catch this swinging band playing weekly on Wednesday nights at Sonoma Speakeasy.

Metal

Immortallica North Bay Metallica tribute act rips with a searing intensity. facebook.com/ImmortallicA707.

Punk

One Armed Joey Petaluma trio continues to build a following with melodic pop-punk songs full of infectious fun. facebook.com/onearmedjoey.

R&B

Stax City Big band led by saxophonist Cliff Conway blasts out a Memphis-inspired sound with a high-energy delivery. staxcity.net.

Reggae

Sol Horizon Seven-piece band is renowned for both their energetic live shows and powerful lyrical themes. solhorizon.com.

Rock

Two Lions Band Geyserville guitarist and vocalist Mitchel Slade leads the four-piece, displaying a wide range of rock music. twolionsband.com.

Singer-Songwriter

Dave Hamilton Veteran songwriter is a folk and Americana master. davehamiltonfolkamericana.com.

Live DJ

DJ Cal Sonoma DJ is a favorite of the North Bay nightlife and spins a dance party mix of EDM and hip-hop. deejaycal.com.

Radio DJ

Brian Griffith (KRCB) Start your mornings with music from Griffith’s weekday show airing 9am to noon on KRCB 91.1-FM. radio.krcb.org.

Venue

Sonoma Speakeasy Intimate music hall offers live music six nights a week just off the Sonoma Plaza. sonomaspeakeasymusic.com.

Open Mic

Tuesday Open Mic at Brew The coffee and beer house’s weekly open mic is inviting and often surprising. brewcoffeeandbeer.com.

Promoter

Jake Ward The North Bay Cabaret’s master of ceremonies is everything that’s awesome about the region’s music and arts scene. facebook.com/jakewardpresents.

Music Festival

Railroad Square Music Festival Outdoor event in the heart of Santa Rosa is summertime must for music lovers. railroadsquaremusicfestival.com.

Judge Spikes Chanate agreement

0

Less than a week after the conclusion of a three-hour trial to decide the fate of a deal to develop housing on county-owned acreage surrounding an abandoned public hospital complex called Chanate, a superior court judge has issued a deal-breaking decision.

On Thursday, Judge René Auguste Chouteaur ruled that the Sonoma County Board of Supervisor’s approval last year of an agreement to develop Chanate with developer William Gallaher must be “vacated.” The controversial deal cannot go forward as planned.

A lawsuit filed by the 200-member grassroots organization Friends of Chanate called for the development agreement to be overturned on several counts. Chouteau agreed with only one of the counts, but that was enough to send it back to the board of supervisors for the indefinite future. The deal can only be revived if the county and the developer conduct an environmental review of the proposed project, which is a lengthy, expensive process that doesn’t guarantee the housing and commercial project will be approved.

Attorney Noreen Evans successfully argued the case for the Friends against Gallaher’s Santa Rosa attorney, Tina Wallis and Deputy County Counsel Debbie F. Latham. Evans argued that the less than $12.5 million price that the county accepted for the land was so far below its fair market value that it was a “gift of public funds.” Chouteau disagreed.

It is true, he said, that a 2016 appraisal projected the worth of the Chanate improvements at $275 million, and the land at more than $30 million. But he was more comfortable with a 2014 appraisal of the property that did not consider the projected value of the improvements.
He declined to value the land at its fully developed market value because, he wrote, the improvements are not guaranteed to occur. Therefore, there was no gift of public funds.

Evans then argued that the supervisors had violated the Brown Act by holding secret deliberations on terms of the development beyond its price. Chouteau’s 25-page decision does not seem to disagree that the proceedings may have violated the spirit and letter of the Brown Act. But the proceedings were held behind closed doors, so there is no public record of what transpired, he noted. Because Evans could not present evidence of wrongdoing, such as a transcript of the secret session, she could not prove the facts of the suspected mischief.

Evan’s final and fatal argument was that the deal is invalid because the county sold the land to Gallaher based on his proposal to develop nearly a thousand homes in a forested, riparian area riffling with wildlife without doing an environmental review of the impacts.

The county’s and the developer’s lawyers argued that the supervisor’s approval of the Chanate development “agreement,” signed last year, is not the same thing as approving a development “project.” And since it is not a “project”, they parsed, it is not subject to environmental review. The judge laughed that argument out of court last week and in his written decision he eviscerated it. And that is enough to spike the deal for the time being.

We are reaching out to Gallaher, Wallis, Evans and the supervisors for comment and will keep you posted.

Just Cause

0

More than 20 labor, environmental and social- and economic-justice organizations banded together July 19 to endorse the Alliance for a Just Recovery’s 25-point plan to ensure a “just recovery” following last October’s unprecedented wildfires.

The self-described grassroots organization called for unity and action from community members and politicians to address problems plaguing Sonoma County, such as lack of affordable housing, good jobs, living wages, environmental sustainability and equality across language divides.
Local city councilmembers and representatives of Congressmen Mike Thompson and Jared Huffman joined more than a hundred other attendees in Santa Rosa’s Christ Church United Methodist multipurpose room, where chairs were added to accommodate the crowd.

In their mission statement, the Alliance for a Just Recovery (AJR) demanded Santa Rosa take immediate action to address income inequality by adopting rent control and implementing the state-mandated $15 minimum wage three years earlier than required. It also proposed penalizing construction contractors for exploiting immigrant labor and establishing a worker’s rights clinic to protect disenfranchised workers.

Marty Bennett, co-chair for North Bay Jobs with Justice and spokesperson for AJR, said the fires, which destroyed 5 percent of Santa Rosa’s housing stock, also caused a 36 percent increase in rents.

“Our Alliance for a Just Recovery is fundamentally about building a multiracial, democratic, grassroots movement for a just, equitable and sustainable recovery,” Bennett said. “Only through building a people-powered movement and a coalition from the bottom up can we address the root causes of inequality, the housing and homeless crisis, racial and gender discrimination, exploitation of immigrant labor, the climate crisis and the increased threat of more devastating wildfires.”

Sonoma County was already fraught with income inequality and skyrocketing rents when last year’s North Bay wildfires killed 42 and turned the region on its head. The loss of 5,550 homes across the North Bay exacerbated the already unstable housing market, which, according to a report by the Sonoma County League of Women Voters, posted a 1.5 percent vacancy rate pre-fire, a .5 percent vacancy rate post-fire and a lack of affordable housing.

According to the AJR, median-income families cannot afford to purchase median-priced homes; 44 percent of Sonoma County’s Latino families and 35 percent of total families are “working poor,” making less than $50,000 each year.

“We can start here in Santa Rosa to build a movement for a just recovery during the 2018 election cycle,” Bennett said.

Fire victims gave testimonials of their plight, some accompanied by translators; Spanish-speaking attendees received translations of English speakers through portable headsets.

Ofelia Alcala, housekeeper of 28 years at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Santa Rosa, spoke through a translator about the plight of Spanish-speaking workers in the hospitality industry. She said she recently attempted to unionize Hyatt employees, but the company refused to negotiate.

“My daughter has a dream,” Alcala said. “Her dream is to be able to go to Sonoma State University. I want to make sure that I’m able to help her achieve her dream, but I make so little wages that I don’t think I’ll be able to help her.”

A representative from the Graton Day Labor Center, which created the donation-based UndocuFund last fall to provide financial relief for undocumented residents not entitled to public assistance, said the undocumented still fall prey to wage theft and exploitative, illegal housing arrangements.

Laura Neish, executive director of the environmental advocacy group 350 Bay Area, said the wildfires were caused by climate change and underscored the need for sustainable policies in the recovery.

“The fires in Santa Rosa and the North Bay brought climate change right to our doorsteps,” Neish said. “Climate change has left its fingerprints all over these disasters. We must address these root causes now.”

Other speakers decried the insufficient insurance payouts for low- to moderate-income homeowners trying to rebuild and the increasing rents driving many Sonoma County citizens, including retired seniors, out of the region.

July 26: Show of Shows in Monte Rio

0

A tradition dating back over a century, the Monte Rio Variety Show has featured household names like Bing Crosby, Steve Miller, Clint Black and others, and this year’s lineup is another show-stopping set of performers. Peter Sagal of NPR’s Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! will be the show’s MC, and headliners includes Kix Brooks, of Brooks & Dunn fame, and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame blues-rock favorite Elvin Bishop. The family-friendly event also features comedy and other entertainment, barbecue, beer and wine and more happening under the stars on Thursday, July 26, at Monte Rio Amphitheatre, 9925 Main St., Monte Rio. 4:30pm. $15–$30. monterioshow.org.

Jul 28: Have a Blast in Jenner

0

The combination of history, culture, nature and community that makes up the annual Fort Ross Festival is second to none. Families can experience the California landmark and enjoy Russian, Balkan, Native American and other folk dances and performances, traditional games, a handmade craft and art fair, the famous Fort Ross beer garden and the best local food trucks. Back by popular demand, the Fort Ross Militia will also host a historical firearms demonstration complete with cannons. The Fort Ross Festival takes place on Saturday, July 28, at Fort Ross State Historic Park, 19005 Hwy. 1, Jenner. 10am to 6:30pm. $20 per car. fortross.org.

July 28: Local Lit in Novato

0

The North Bay’s prolific literary scene includes hundreds of published authors and several publishers, many of which have been highlighted in Copperfield’s Books’ ongoing event series, Write in Your Own Backyard. This week, Novato-based publisher New World Library gets the spotlight, and the New Age and self-help purveyor presents a reading of Breaking Up with Busy with author Yvonne Tally. Detailing real-life solutions for time-strapped women, Tally inspires mindfulness and a sense of personal power in the book, and she shares these notions with the audience on Saturday, July 28, at Copperfield’s Books, 999 Grant Ave., Novato. 5pm. Free. 415.763.3052.

July 29: Rock the Town in Napa

0

The first festival of its kind west of the Mississippi River, the Napa Porchfest is a city-wide block party that boasts dozens of local bands performing literally on the porches and front lawns of historical homes throughout downtown Napa. Spend the afternoon strolling on foot from home to home to see the eclectic lineup of rock, funk, folk, jazz, blues, hip-hop, classical and more. Not sure where to start? Post up at Fuller Park to grab a bite from the several food trucks that will be parked there and then walk in any direction on Sunday, July 29, in downtown Napa. 12:30pm to 5pm. Free. napaporchfest.org.

Debriefer: July 25, 2018

0

MEDICARE FOR ALL?

Last week, some 70 Democrats in the U.S. Congress, seemingly emboldened by surprise primary victories by the likes of progressive New Yorker Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, announced the formation of the house Medicare for All caucus, which pledged to push for a single-payer healthcare bill. It’s a noble if pie-in-sky push given the current Republican makeup of Congress, but these things could change come the November mid-terms.

A scan of the newly formed caucus, which says it will embark on a teach-in to educate members on the benefits of a single-payer system, finds Jared Huffman as one of the California representatives who signed on. He was joined by, among others, outspoken Trump critic Maxine Waters.

Mike Thompson? Nope. The other North Bay Congressman is not on board with the Medicare for All Caucus.

CANNA CRIME SLIDES

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra has just released the annual state crime report from 2017—and wouldn’t you know it, legalizing cannabis has led to a big drop in the number of pot-related criminal charges around the state. The AG reports that 6,065 people were locked up on weed-related charges last year—a 56 percent drop from 2016, when 13,810 were imprisoned for possession or consumption of the dread plant.

The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) ran the numbers from Becerra’s report in a press release from last week and noted that the decline in felony dope charges was even greater between 2016 and 2017. Those arrests “fell by a whopping 74 percent,” as 2,086 citizens were pinched on felony charges in 2017, compared to 7,949 the year before.

But NORML also cited the ongoing and disproportionate numbers of African-American and Latino citizens arrested on pot charges in 2017. For example, even as misdemeanor drug arrests dropped from 5,861 to 3,979 between 2016 and 2017, Latinos “represented the highest percentage of arrestees,” at 46 percent.

Whites accounted for 24 percent of all felony arrests, NORML noted—while Latinos accounted for 40 percent and African Americans 21 percent. California’s population, according to the U.S. census, is about 38 percent Latino and 6.5 percent African-American.

The Fate of Chanate

0

Jeremy Nichols is a board member of the nonprofit Bird Rescue Center that serves Sonoma County, and he is troubled. The county is kicking the bird hospital out of its Quonset hut in the middle of 82 acres of public property known as Chanate.

Forested hills straddle Chanate Road as it winds through eastern Santa Rosa toward the ashes of Fountaingrove. The county has promised the land to William Gallaher, a local banker who develops senior living communities and single-family homes.

Gallaher’s partner in the deal, Komron Shahhosseini, is a planning commissioner for Sonoma County—a relationship which may pose a conflict of interest, according to a Haas School of Business ethics expert who reviewed details of the deal.

Hundreds of Santa Rosans, including Nichols, have mobilized to stop the sale, objecting to its terms at public meetings, in letters to the editor and in a lawsuit that went to trial in Superior Court last Friday in front of Judge René Auguste Chouteau. The trial took three hours, and the judge is expected to rule within 30 days on whether the development deal can go forward.

In early July, Nichols and two members of the activist group Friends of Chanate took me on a walking tour. Since the 1870s, the Chanate property has been the dumping ground for the county’s social and medical ills. It was originally the site of a work farm for low-income residents, then a public hospital complex. Now it’s ragged and falling down.

In the cemetery where the county used to bury indigents rests Walter F. McCoy. His suicide in 1934 was headlined by the

Press Democrat, “Dying Man Slashes Throat to Avoid Entering Hospital Here,” notes Nichols, who restored the graveyard.

We stroll past abandoned, rotting medical buildings that served the leprous, the insane and the penniless. As we skirt a plywood-sealed juvenile jail, a line from Bob Dylan floats by: “And the only sound that’s left after the ambulances go / Cinderella sweeping up on Desolation Row.”

There are some signs of human activity. There’s a public health laboratory, a psychiatric clinic that processes the involuntarily committed. The unexpectedly dead of Santa Rosa await their autopsies, shelved in cardboard boxes inside an old boiler and laundry building repurposed as the city morgue.

We circumvent bottle-strewn homeless encampments. A pond stagnates, its outflow blocked by graffiti-swirled concrete. There is the tangy smell of nearby cannabis gardens.

For the Friends, Chanate is a historical treasure, a wildlife preserve, a public resource awaiting reassignment for social good. And for them that future is threatened by Gallaher, who they believe is being allowed to develop Chanate in violation of environmental regulations, open-meeting laws and on the cheap.

Last August, the Friends hired former State Sen. Noreen Evans of O’Brien Watters & Davis LLP to sue Sonoma County and Gallaher’s Chanate Community Development Partners LLC. The arc of the case highlights the county’s dire need for affordable housing, community-based healthcare services and, it must be said, smarter governance.

Gallaher proposes to construct up to 860 homes and apartment units with recreational facilities and a shopping center. The Friends of Chanate favor building fewer than 400 units and want to scale back any commercial development. They fear more activity will overwhelm traffic, water and educational infrastructures. And they are particularly concerned about traffic gridlock if future wildfires compel area residents to evacuate, as happened last fall.

Safety concerns aside, the Friends want Gallaher to pay market value for Chanate. They fear he will flip it to another developer for a quick profit. And they do not trust local officials to look after the public’s interest. Our tour guide, Carol Vellutini, is not joking when she says she will lay down in front of the bulldozers should the lawsuit fail.

THE BACKSTORY

In 2014, Sonoma County supervisors closed down the heart of Chanate, its public hospital, which had last been upgraded in the 1970s. They said it cost too much to seismically retrofit. Despite pleas from scores of medical professionals to keep the facilities operational, the supervisors put Chanate up for sale as a housing development at a minimum price of $15 million.

A nationwide request for proposals required that 20 percent of the homes be affordable to families with very low incomes. It required the developer to demolish buildings. Because the land is inside city limits, its building permits and zoning and environmental authorizations, called entitlements, must be approved by Santa Rosa’s council and planners.

Entitling a big development project is not a slam dunk, especially when there is substantial public resistance. Non-local developers were wary of becoming embroiled in a community slugfest. Two local builders found the moxie to push ahead.

Petaluma-based Curt Johansen spent $100,000 researching how to build 400 homes with sustainable bells and energy-saving whistles. He offered to pay whatever the fair market value of the land turned out to be after the entitlement process solidified development costs.

Sonoma County records show that only two supervisors perused Johansen’s proposal before the board rejected it, mostly sight unseen. Johansen blames the slight on his lack of participation in local politics, noting that he has never made a campaign donation to a Sonoma County politician.

In February 2017, the county’s real estate planners and lawyers began negotiating behind closed doors with the Gallaher-Shahhosseini partnership. The board of supervisors discussed the value of the project in closed sessions, the content of which remains secret.

Gallaher’s proposal was championed by supervisor Shirlee Zane, who had appointed Shahhosseini to the planning commission in 2009. It is worth noting that Zane has received $63,000 in campaign contributions from Gallaher, who is a prolific funder of local politicians. Zane declined to comment for this story.

[page]

In June 2017, the supervisors approved a Disposition and Development Agreement (DDA) with Gallaher and Shahhosseini. The property is priced substantially less than the market value of Chanate as appraised by the county. The supervisors accepted Gallaher’s offer of between $6 million and $12.5 million. The final amount is contingent upon the number of homes eventually permitted by Santa Rosa as the project drills through a mountain of red tape.

The supervisors also appropriated $300,000 to subsidize Gallaher and Shahhosseini’s quest to get the project entitled by Santa Rosa.

The Friends then filed a lawsuit to terminate the agreement, contending that the market
value of Chanate is more than
$30 million and that the county is not allowed to sell it for less.

How much is Chanate worth?

The value of Chanate partly depends on whether the land is sliced by earthquake faults. At present, there are two expert opinions: one says there might be fractures; the other, there might not be fractures. Nobody knows. The supervisors decided to value the land as if there are active earthquake faults, which made it cheaper, since fault-zones are harder to develop.

The value of the land also depends upon the value of the proposed improvements. And that value is contingent upon the development being green-lighted by county, city and state planning, permitting and environmental agencies. The county hired an appraiser. In July 2016, the Ward Levy Appraisal Group of Santa Rosa valued a “hypothetically” developed Chanate at
$30.64 million, assuming the existence of earthquake faults.

The appraisal assumed that permission would be granted to construct 600 units of housing and 33,000 square feet of commercial space. It calculated the value of a finished project similar to that later proposed by Gallaher and Shahhosseini at $275 million.

Appraisals are based on formulas that consider shifting market conditions and construction costs. Residential land is typically valued at
10 percent of the cost of building, so $30 million is a reasonable projection for 600 homes worth more than a quarter billion dollars. Increasing the number of the homes increases the fair market value of the land, of course.

The Ward Levy appraisal assumes that the hospital buildings would be demolished by the developer at a cost of $6 million. With a credit for demolition costs, the market value of the land for 600 units pencils to roughly $24 million. Adding 260 more units for a total of 860, as Gallaher has proposed, brings the bottom line land value to $34 million.

That amount is nearly three times Gallaher’s offer.

To recap: In 2015, the Sonoma County stated it would not accept less than $15 million for the property. During a series of
closed meetings, the price fell to $12.5 million for 860 homes. If Gallaher builds 400 residences, the agreed price falls to $6 million, which is also below market value projections for the land, which Ward Levy valued at $40,000 per residential unit.

A DAY IN COURT

The Friend’s lawsuit asks the court to stop the development agreement because the below market price is an unallowable “gift of public funds” to the developer. It asks for the deal to be set aside because the supervisors allegedly violated the Brown Act, which requires timely disclosure of what is discussed in closed sessions and with whom. It argues that the agreement should be terminated because the supervisors failed to conduct an environmental review of the proposed project before approving the sale to the Gallaher-Shahhosseini partnership.

According to the lawsuit, the agreement does not prohibit Gallaher and Shahhosseini from flipping the land to another developer for a “windfall” profit, without building anything.

Attorneys for the county and the developer have filed arguments disputing the core of the Friend’s claims largely by framing the Development and Disposition Agreement as a market value sales transaction and not as a development project with environmental impacts. Gallaher’s Santa Rosa–based attorney, Tina Wallis, told me that the $6–$12.5 million price is not a gift of public funds because those amounts are the market value for an unpermitted property.

Attorney Noreen Evans argues that the property is only worth money to a developer if it is fully permitted. Why buy it otherwise?

The county’s director of general services, Caroline Judy, told the supervisors in a hearing on June 20, 2017, “The sale price is below the appraised value.” The county has projected property tax revenue from the development based on a market value of
$275 million.

Justifying the below market value offer, county officials told the supervisors that the low price is offset by social benefits to the county, including 160 units of affordable housing, which they value at $71 million.

That’s an absurd calculation, say the Friends. The developer and its nonprofit partners will make money on the affordable housing element through sales, rents and state and federal subsidies and grants. The real question is how much money can Gallaher and his partners make if they pay fair market values for fully entitled land? What is his projected profit rate?

Gallaher did not respond to repeated email and telephone requests for comment.

[page]

CONFLICTED INTEREST?

Shahhosseini referred the Bohemian to the Chanate partnership’s attorney, Wallis, who declined to reveal the names of the LLC’s investors, if there are any, or the projected rate of profit for the venture. Wallis also pushed back against any suggestion that Shahhosseini’s county position created a conflict of interest. “Mr. Shahhosseini acted as private citizen, and this matter was not before the Planning Commission,” Wallis said.

Nobody disputes that, as a developer, Shahhosseini had a leading role in negotiations with Sonoma County for the sale of Chanate. According to Gallaher’s development proposal, Shahhosseini is a “partner and co-founder” and “principal” alongside Gallaher in Chanate Community Development Partners LLC. The Disposition and Development Agreement that governs the deal names Shahhosseini as project manager; he represents the partnership in community meetings.

“Mr. Gallaher is the sole and managing member of the LLC,” Wallis said. But in an October 2016 email to the city obtained by Evans, Shahhosseini clarified, “Bill is the managing partner; I am a partner and project manager.”

As a member of the Sonoma County Planning Commission, Shahhosseini regulates planning and zoning matters in the unincorporated areas of the county that surround Santa Rosa. Briana Khan of the county administrator’s office told the Bohemian that the planning commission has not been directly involved in negotiating the Chanate deal.

The Disposition and Development Agreement prohibits county employees and officials from having a financial interest in the Chanate agreement:

6.17 CONFLICT OF INTEREST. No County Party [defined as county employees and officials] shall have any personal interest, direct or indirect, in this Agreement, nor shall any such County Party participate in any decision relating to the Agreement which affects his or her personal interests or the interests of any corporation, partnership or association in which he or she is directly or indirectly involved.

The clause is a double whammy: it forbids any county employee or official from having any personal interest in the Chanate agreement. It then states that just in case a county official has such an interest, that person is not allowed to make decisions relating to the agreement.

Shahhosseini is a county official with a personal interest in the Chanate agreement who makes decisions regarding the Chanate agreement as its project manager and a declared partner in the development company.

After reviewing the agreement and Gallaher’s proposal,
Christine M. Rosen, a professor in corporate ethics at the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business, opined, “It sounds like a conflict of interest to me, and a violation of the agreement this developer and Sonoma County have signed.”

In a series of exchanges with the Bohemian, Wallis said that since Shahhosseini wielded no direct authority over the Chanate agreement as a planning commissioner, there is no conflict of interest. But the issue is not whether he acted on the agreement in his capacity as a planning commissioner, which he did not, apparently; the issue is that Shahhosseini is a county officer who has an interest in the agreement, and who makes decisions regarding it in his capacity as a developer.

Khan told the Bohemian that Shahhosseini could not have a conflict of interest because, quoting the development agreement, “as an [appointed] member of the planning commission, [Shahhosseini] is not an elected official, officer, agent, employee or representative of the County in any way.”

True, he was not elected; he was appointed. However, the planning commission’s bylaws clearly define its members as county officers and agents and representatives with official, quasi-judicial duties and as “part of the Sonoma County Planning Agency,” a government body.

Khan said that the county deliberately did not add appointed officials to the list of those who are not allowed to have an interest in the contract because no appointed official played a role in the negotiation of the development agreement. She did not respond to a query noting that the agreement was made with an appointed official in his private capacity.

Whether a conflict of interest exists is an issue that’s normally settled administratively or judicially. But is it OK for a county official, appointed, elected, or otherwise, to be awarded a county contract worth tens of millions of dollars?

Letters to the Editor: August 1, 2018

Chanate Not So Great Your article on Chanate ("The Fate of Chanate," July 25) was remarkable for its exposure of the pure cronyism taking place in Sonoma County government. You would think that elected supervisors would have more sense than to have closed-door meetings and make a deal that is a giveaway of public property and a betrayal of the...

Tuneful

Our annual NorBay Music Awards online readers' ballot received its biggest turnout ever, and this year's winners include a lot of new faces among the North Bay's favorite bands, venues, promoters, DJs and more. The 2018 NorBay Music Award winners are: Americana Sean Carscadden Sonoma songwriter (pictured) effortlessly blends funk and blues into his electric and eclectic sound. www.seancmusic.com. Acoustic Bloomfield Bluegrass Band...

Judge Spikes Chanate agreement

Less than a week after the conclusion of a three-hour trial to decide the fate of a deal to develop housing on county-owned acreage surrounding an abandoned public hospital complex called Chanate, a superior court judge has issued a deal-breaking decision. On Thursday, Judge René Auguste Chouteaur ruled that the Sonoma County Board of Supervisor’s approval last year of...

Just Cause

More than 20 labor, environmental and social- and economic-justice organizations banded together July 19 to endorse the Alliance for a Just Recovery’s 25-point plan to ensure a “just recovery” following last October’s unprecedented wildfires. The self-described grassroots organization called for unity and action from community members and politicians to address problems plaguing Sonoma County, such as lack of affordable housing,...

July 26: Show of Shows in Monte Rio

A tradition dating back over a century, the Monte Rio Variety Show has featured household names like Bing Crosby, Steve Miller, Clint Black and others, and this year’s lineup is another show-stopping set of performers. Peter Sagal of NPR’s Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! will be the show’s MC, and headliners includes Kix Brooks, of Brooks...

Jul 28: Have a Blast in Jenner

The combination of history, culture, nature and community that makes up the annual Fort Ross Festival is second to none. Families can experience the California landmark and enjoy Russian, Balkan, Native American and other folk dances and performances, traditional games, a handmade craft and art fair, the famous Fort Ross beer garden and the best local food trucks. Back...

July 28: Local Lit in Novato

The North Bay’s prolific literary scene includes hundreds of published authors and several publishers, many of which have been highlighted in Copperfield’s Books’ ongoing event series, Write in Your Own Backyard. This week, Novato-based publisher New World Library gets the spotlight, and the New Age and self-help purveyor presents a reading of Breaking Up with Busy with author Yvonne...

July 29: Rock the Town in Napa

The first festival of its kind west of the Mississippi River, the Napa Porchfest is a city-wide block party that boasts dozens of local bands performing literally on the porches and front lawns of historical homes throughout downtown Napa. Spend the afternoon strolling on foot from home to home to see the eclectic lineup of rock, funk, folk, jazz,...

Debriefer: July 25, 2018

MEDICARE FOR ALL? Last week, some 70 Democrats in the U.S. Congress, seemingly emboldened by surprise primary victories by the likes of progressive New Yorker Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, announced the formation of the house Medicare for All caucus, which pledged to push for a single-payer healthcare bill. It's a noble if pie-in-sky push given the current Republican makeup of Congress, but...

The Fate of Chanate

Jeremy Nichols is a board member of the nonprofit Bird Rescue Center that serves Sonoma County, and he is troubled. The county is kicking the bird hospital out of its Quonset hut in the middle of 82 acres of public property known as Chanate. Forested hills straddle Chanate Road as it winds through eastern Santa Rosa toward the ashes of...
11,084FansLike
4,446FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow