Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Committees, Commissions & Boards, Oh My!

Two controversies brewing on the Open Space Commission raise questions about much more than the process by which the City selects and negotiates potential land acquisitions. They are representative of a disturbing trend in Bainbridge Island politics. From Winslow Tomorrow to the 2025 Growth Advisory Committee to the Open Space Commission, the City seems to take a casual approach to preserving an appearance of fairness when it comes to involving potential or even current, financial stakeholders in policy development and planning.


The Inside Scoop

The most troublesome of the recent Open Space incidents involves the relationship between Tim Bailey, a member of the Open Space Commission, and developer Kelly Samson. Bailey, an Island realtor, is Samson’s partner in at least two real estate investment companies, including Bainbridge Community Development LLC, which pulled off a real estate coup earlier this year when it purchased the much sought after Government Way property before anyone even knew it was on the market.

At some point during the time that the Commission was contemplating its most recent, and somewhat controversial, open space recommendation, known as the Williams Property, Samson was notified of the potential purchase and was presumably informed that the Commission was considering working with a developer to make the purchase possible. The subject property was neither on the market, nor did the Commission openly seek participation in the purchase from the community, the Land Trust or any other developers, investors or organizations. Yet somehow, Mr. Samson had knowledge of the proposal, made an offer the property, and the Commission looked no further for a purchaser with whom to partner.

Under the most recently publicized version of the deal, the city would buy a portion of the property in conjunction with Samson’s purchase and agree to numerous restrictions that will benefit the developable lots on Samson’s portion. (That deal, which was turned down by Council in August, is currently being renegotiated.)

While we may never know if it was Bailey who brought the deal to Samson, the fact that there is any question about a potential conflict of interest on such an influential commission is troublesome. We will also never know what other possible scenarios might have been available to the City with the involvement of another developer, the Land Trust or any other potential community partner in the purchase.

In other cities, the business relationship between Mr. Bailey and Mr. Samson might be considered an unacceptable conflict of interest. However, one need only look to the membership rolls of certain key citizen Commissions, Committees and Boards to see that this is simply business as usual on Bainbridge Island.


So Many Familiar Faces

Winslow Tomorrow, heralded by its supporters as a broad-based community effort, is in fact arguably another circumstance where the lines between private and public interests have been blurred. At the project’s inception, the Winslow Tomorrow Community Congress was the focus. While there have been some allegations that portions of the Congress were overly directed or predetermined, in particular the Parking Committee, the Congress appears to have included a reasonably fair cross-section of direct stake holders and other citizens.

Unfortunately, as critics have noted, the process became increasingly exclusive and non-public as it progressed into the "recommendations" phase, where citizen involvement was largely distilled down to staff, consultants and the Feasibility Group. Given the significance of this phase, where specific goals were to be set based upon interpretations of the earlier processes, the composition of the Feasibility Group is worth noting.

While it is not easy to discern the real estate holdings or other relevant financial interests of every participant in the Winslow Tomorrow project, or any other City endeavor, a cursory search reveals that at least three of the eleven members of the feasibility group are major Winslow landowners with plans to develop their properties, and another of the eleven is a land use attorney who has represented at least one of the landowners on the committee. Of the remaining seven, at least six are either planning, development or real estate professionals, work for the City or have another direct financial tie to the Winslow Core.

It’s worth asking whether this group, which appears to have operated largely out of the public eye, is a reasonable mix of community interests. How can City staff and consultants working day in and day out with the same financial stakeholders*, and other interested parties, maintain a reasonable professional distance and properly evaluate their participation in light of the potential, or obvious, conflicts of interest? Should our City staff and consultants, and indeed our elected officials, be put in the position of having to make these evaluations?


Who you gonna call?

All of this leaves one wondering what checks and balances exist for vetting potential conflicts of interest within any of the Citizen Commissions, Committees or Boards. The recently empaneled ethics board will not have jurisdiction over these appointed citizen advisors, so it will have to be by some other mechanism that alleged conflicts of interest or improprieties are investigated and resolved.

This brings us back to the other simmering controversy on the Open Space Commission. The last open space purchase proposed by the Commission and approved by Council, the Meigs Farm property, has come under some scrutiny following the release of a new appraisal suggesting the property may be worth less than 50% of the value paid by the City. The Open Space Commission has appointed two of its own members, Tim Bailey and former mayor Dwight Sutton, to investigate the conflict between the two appraisals. Some in the community have raised concerns regarding a possible fox guarding the hen house scenario. We’ll have to wait and see what the investigation reveals and whether the Mayor or Council will call for an additional independent study. In any case, the broader issue remains, and demands that the community take a much closer look at how the deals are being made and who is pulling the strings.


* Tim Bailey : 2025 Growth Advisory Committee (chair), Open Space Commission, Winslow Tomorrow Feasibility Group
Tom Haggar: Winslow Tomorrow Congress, Winslow Tomorrow Streetscape Committee, Haggar-Scribner/City Garage Study
John Waldo: 2025 Growth Advisory Committee, Winslow Tomorrow Congress –
Committee Chair, Winslow Tomorrow Feasibility Group, Winslow Tomorrow Streetscape Committee



11 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have often wondered about this very issue. And why does the open space commission still exist, since its funding has run out? And what are the ties between these panel/commission members and the city council?

Thanks for the GREAT work - please keep it up!!!

Anonymous said...

This isn't a very big island. I'd be surprised if someone had NO ties to any issue or interest on the island. But ... wasn't our city formed so it wouldn't have to be a cityt?

Anonymous said...

It takes about 40 minutes on-line to note the names of board members and senior staff of COBI,Housing Trust Fund/Kitsap County Consolidated Housing Authority/Housing Resources Board/Community Housing Coalition and their umbrella organization the Health, Housing & Human Services Council. The same names keep reappear ing. Land is power, it is not?

McCoy said...

Tonight five people stood up at City Council and asked Council to give them their Streetscape, and though it took a tie breaking vote from the mayor,they got it. Who were they?

Tom Haggar (major Winslow Way land Owner); Bruce Weiland (major Winslow Way landowner); John Waldo (land use attorney, attorney for major Winslow land owners, member Winslow Tomorrow Feasibility Group, member of Winslow Tomorrow Congress, member of 2025 Growth Advisory Committee -- Mr.Winslow Tomorrow himself); Don Willot (Winslow Tomorrow congress member, advocate for increased accessibility downtown -- we admit, one of the only real benefits of a redevelopment); Howard Kirz (member of the Winslow Tomorrow Feasibility Group, member of Streetscape Advisory Commission)

Who spoke against it? A couple of members of the community with no apparent ties to Winslow. Where was the rest of the community? At home with no idea what is going on down at City Hall.

Tonight we saw with great clarity that yes indeed our city is run by a handful of special interests. When we have gotten over our disgust from tonight's incestuous farce, we need to work harder to spread the word across the Island about what is going on and incite our friends and neighbors to take back the City.

Anonymous said...

I don't know ... you're making it sound like *they've* taken over when all *they've* done is get involved because of their own interests. What's the alternative - *us* taking over to exercise our interests? It's only an incestuous farce because the opposition doesn't participate. No surprise if you require *us* to hate and vilify *them* rather than work together as neighbors

Anonymous said...

Speaking of last night's farce -- or Orwellian play, did you see the young girl (12 years old)who owns the goats testify.

Maddie gave a presentation at COBI Council last night that was a tour de force against govermental overreach, civilian snitches and a broken government.

Looking at the faces of the august body sitting there on their little thrones, they would have elected to snap the cyanide pills in their mouths in shame had they had a soul to feel shame.

Great job Maddie. I do hope you are home schooled or they will drive that good sense out of you by 12th grade.

A must-see on BITV. Check out the looks on Knobloch and Tooloee — man, oh, man.

Hearing the rush to Winslow Neverland was pathetic. It was a love-fest on Viagra with these landowners going on for 10 minutes ad nauseum with nary a word from the Mayor except for her bobbing in joy. I had to delouse after sitting through the event for my 3 minutes to the second.

Anonymous said...

ms curmudgeon,

The reason the public doesn't participate more, and is not represented, is because, unlike the well connected men of leisure with all the influence:

1) we are not informed by the City
2) we are not informed by our
newspapers
3) most of us have jobs and/or
family obligations that do not
allow for attending 5 or 6 (or
even 7 o'clock) meetings week
after week, let alone attending
midday committee meetings or
spending hours hanging out at
the planning counter or having
lunch with the Mayor.

Our community-minded, well educated populace would probably be beating the doors down at City Hall if they had any idea what is going on down there.

Anonymous said...

There is stench at COBI; one of back door deals, financial perks, personal interests.
Want to see some hypocrisy in action? Take a look at the Mayors' and executive's statements (written and oral) as to why the committees were "cancelled" not enough money for staff to keep the government going BUT enough to have a giddy vote on a coll 20 million at the taxpayers expense.
Also take a look at the BITV of the Council debate on cutting the funding from the week when they sided with benchmark study. Watch Jim. Now I wonder...who/. what got him to flip flop, flip flop in favor these well healed special interests? Who is greasing what and where?
This one takes the cake - unfortunately, it is filled with rats and maggots. Don't know why, but we're just not feeling too hungry right now

Anonymous said...

Rats and Maggots, I too was surprised that Llewellyn went along with this--so I got to thinking, what's his stake? Maybe he thinks he can use the same arguments supporting this funding to get the City (read "all of us") to pay to extend the necessary infrastructure to upzone and develop Island Center, where I believe he owns some property. After all, the comp plan calls for density in the NSCs just like it does Winslow, so we should all pay for it, right?

Anonymous at 9:17, I, too, disgusted at how the Mayor makes sure to hold speakers who oppose her plans to 3 minutes but allows anyone who agrees with her to go on and on and on.

When is the next mayoral election?

Anonymous said...

I believe that the City council needs somebody, whether paid or volunteer, who works for them, and only them to make sure they really know what is going on at these public workshops and open houses. I don't think the problem is that people are sitting on the fannies and not doing anything. My experience in trying to be involved in some of the process is that the staff COMPLETELY twists and spins what the public is saying to make it seem as though everyone's on board. Some staff members are very sneaky, and manipulative. I'd like to stop short of saying downright dishonest, but from what I've recently experienced (I won't go into it here), unfortunately, I can't.

At the streetscape workshop the cost of fixing the utilities was $14 mil. At the council meeting it mirraculously dropped to $10+ mil.

Also, they told us the big decision was whether to do the $16 mil plan, or the $18 mil plan for the street. And the engineer that did the presentation said that Islanders who are not on the utilities only have to worry about paying for either $2 mil or $4 mil.

A week later the proposal to the council is for $20+ mil, and instead of only worrying about $2 or $4, those of us in the green areas are paying a much bigger proportion.

I loved the comment that was made by Wrzbicki (sp?) to an older, Winslow resident. He told her if people in Winlsow were smart, they would come out in favor of the more expensive plan because that way, they'd be paying proportionately less than is they cheaper plan went forward. Talk about manipulation and scare tactics.

Anonymous said...

I'm delighted to see the deep looking demonstrated by this column and those who comment. Also delighted to see someone willing to identify the names of deep pocket players in the tragic ruse being played out on this community.

In the early days of the 2025 Committee I raised objection to Tim Bailey's roll as a clear conflict of interest given his official role with one of the largest realty (read "developer") companies on this island - i.e., Windermere - which seems to be propagating itself like rabbits across the island.

In the early days of Winslow Tomorrow, I remember being told by then project coordinator, Sandy Fischer, that "Density is not the same as growth!" Right!

Of recent, I am told by WT's new coordinator, Kathy Cooke, that "The City is not responsible for the human impact of WT!" Oh really?

Whether we're talking Winslow Tomorrow or Winslow Streetscape, my concern is that a multi-million dollar highly political, self-invested effort is underway to further "upscale" this once intimate, rural community into something that will attract ever-more tourists, land buyers and $$$$$. Anyone with half a brain and reasonable global consciousness can see that this formula has spoiled precious communities around the world. Why else would the tourist industry advertise "The latest 'unspoiled' paradise"?

Finally, I am also appreciate of the straight talk in this article re the highly questionable integrity of the WT "congress," manipulation by this administration, and why this public feels so impotent even when they do show up at public meetings that they eventually see doing so a waste of time.

I spent four hours gathering signatures in behalf of putting WT to a vote, gaining in that time more signatures than the WT congress itself (so much for the City having a "mandate to continue WT", Kjell). Stopped after that since I found myself spending so much time explaining what WT was to those who didn't have the foggiest idea about it.

I maintain that continuing to spend another dime on WT is "illegal." This growth agenda project does NOT have the consent of this community despite having spent $2M+ in admin expenses to date and allotting another $2.7M+ for a design study of a parking garage the public has yet to approve.

WT needs to be brought to a dead stop - including the salaries spent to further it - and should not proceed without a wholly informed vote of this community.

In fact, my vote is to take it back to improving sewers and water pipes - saving us an unfathomable amount of money and community erosion in the process.

Indeed, has anyone tallied the secondary costs to this venture - e.g., what it will cost this community in city services simply to address its social impact? Noting WT spent $500K for consulting from urban planners and landscape architects without a dime spent to study social impact - and that Ms. Cooke doesn't consider social impact the responsibility of the COBI - who's going to pick up that part of this project?

In 2005, BI lost 40% of its families earning under $70K and had an 800% increase in families earning over $70K. The former intimacy of this community is rapidly giving way to increased anonymity as even teens working retail stores note there are more and more "strangers" in town. Given this community already has the highest per capita rate of teen suicide in the state w/substance use by teens ranking 20-25% above already dysfunctional state norms - are there not some dots to connect between what our priorities are (ever-increasing growth/$$$) and what we are seeing as a consequence?

Dear Readers, if you'd like to add your name to the petition to bring WT to a vote, please email "Put_WT_to_Vote@Yahoo.com" for an auto-response link to do so.