Thursday, August 16, 2007

John Waldo’s Trojan Horse

It was sad enough to see to see John Waldo’s temper tantrum over the 23rd legislative district’s endorsement in a letter to the Islander, but it was truly ridiculous to see it promoted to front-page news in Wednesday’s Review. Of course, editor Doug Crist is a big time Waldo fan, and we know from experience that when determining the prominence of a story for the Review, friend-of-the-editor is sure to trump newsworthiness

So aside from an endorsement, and access to Page One, is Waldo getting any other special treatment from The Review? That depends on whether or not you believe it's our local paper’s responsibility to investigate and report on a candidate’s potential conflicts of interest, or to at least scratch the paint on a candidate’s shiny new campaign platform.

John Waldo takes on the Comp Plan

In 2005, John Waldo wrote a legal analysis of the implications of the Growth Management Act (GMA) for our Comprehensive Plan (Comp Plan) and its goal of preserving our rural density outside of Winslow. Waldo’s position was that, while admitting our population allocation is not a “quota”, nonetheless “Bainbridge will need to engage in substantial upzoning sooner or later”. Why is upzoning inevitable? That Waldo does not explain.

Waldo admits, the law is in flux. Thus, he could have stated that the City should stand firmly by our Comp Plan mandates. But like many others at the helm of our city today, and those acting behind the scenes, Waldo chooses not to advocate for our unique circumstances as an Island and a rural city. Is this because he feels strongly that it is the correct and unavoidable interpretation of the GMA that we eventually upzone the entire Island to accommodate an endless stream of population growth? Or is it, perhaps, that Waldo has no interest in upholding the goals and intentions of our Comp Plan?

Consider Waldo’s recommendation in that 2005 memo:

Any way we look at it, then, we will have to upzone portions of the Island sooner or later. To me it makes sense to begin that process now. We could turn the process into a real positive by linking at least some of the upzoning to affordable housing.”

The Wind Beneath his Wings

Now, why would Mr. Waldo advocate for preemptive upzoning? Especially when he acknowledges that development today at one housing unit per 1 –2.5 acre lot would “effectively thwart future development at urban densities.” (Isn’t that what a majority of Islanders have asked for?)

Perhaps the explanation lies in who John Waldo is and what interests he serves. Check out his profile on Lawyers.com which lists as his “representative clients”, Samson Family Land Co, Madison Avenue Development and Hillandale Homes, and his areas of practice as Zoning, Planning and Land Use, Real Estate and Environmental Law, in that order. Any guesses as to which side he represents when the issue is the environment?

Who Needs Zoning Laws Anyway?

It so happens that Waldo currently has before the Planning Commission a proposed amendment to the Comp Plan that may shed some light on what he means by turning upzoning into “a real positive”. With the stated goal of creating a new affordable housing program, it sounds downright altruistic at first blush. That is until you take a closer look at what is being proposed.

It turns out that the plan is to:

provide an incentive to build affordable housing on Bainbridge Island by allowing such projects to be exempt from the development standards applied to the underlying zone in which the project is sited”.

Just in case you are thinking that that couldn’t mean what it sounds like (a complete gutting of our zoning laws), take a look at this section of the proposed amendment:

Qualified Affordable Housing Projects may be exempt from the development standards of the BIMC Title 17 Subdivision and Title 18 Zoning, including density, lot coverage, permitting requirements for a specific type of housing ... building-to-building setbacks, building height, on-site parking requirements, tree clearing requirements and required open space.” (emphasis added)

In other words, today you may reside next to a vacant five-acre parcel, zoned one single family home per 2.5 acres, with mandatory setbacks, limited building heights and limits on tree clearing, but under Waldo’s proposal, you could wake up to a three-story, multifamily complex on a clear-cut lot.

And who will benefit from this affordable housing development (besides the developer)? We don’t know. As City staff points out in its analysis of the amendment:

Typically affordable housing programs specify which household income groups are targeted to benefit from the program...The proposed (amendment) does not indicate what level of affordability would be required for a Qualified Affordable Housing Project.”

Nor does the proposal “identify how the relevant properties would remain affordable over time.” Apparently Waldo saw no need to work out those minor details before submitting the amendment to the City.

So what’s the moral of the story? If it walks and talks like a representative of the development community, it probably is one.

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...

The staff memo and proposed amendment you linked to is well worth reading. Thanks. The city planning department expresses numerous concerns about this amendment, like the legality of turning over government functions to private developers, the lack of clarity about definitions of income levels it will serve, and conflict with the Comprehensive Plan, especially the neighborhood character elements. This amendment looks like it will still cost the city a lot to administer, without having much control.

My question is, how can Waldo participate in any Planning or land use decisions if he's elected to City Council? His list of clients would seem to present a conflict of interest every time. Kind of like Dick Cheney and the energy companies...?

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much for the truth. An informed electorate is essential for a working democracy. This web site is helping us inch back towards one on this Island.

Anonymous said...

How true...Waldo on City Council is like Dicky Cheney and the energy companies. Don't forget to vote.

Anonymous said...

please do not condemn all developers and attorneys. nice people come in all professions. try to educate and include. it works better. at best, pls be nice.

Anonymous said...

Point taken frog. Some of my best friends are attorneys and there have to be some environmentally friendly developers out there. Certainly there are forward thinking, 'green' builders in our own community.

The relevance of this piece about John Waldo, doesn't depend on whether you harbor ill will towards 'developers' as a class. The point is that the goals of most developers on the Island are likely to be contrary to the goals of the majority of the community, and so citizens should know if they are electing someone who quite literally represents the voice of the development community. Is Waldo going to quit his day job and live off the $600/mo Council stipend? Probably not.

Perhaps even more important to take from this piece is that we as a community need to keep our eyes open for this Trojan Horse -- using the promise of affordable housing to attain upzoning. Get informed about affordable housing, and you will find that the only way to accomplish affordable housing that stays affordable and benefits the economic class we all have in mind (teachers, police officers...) is the community land trust model (city or another entity owns the land forever). Developer incentive based affordable housing doesn't work.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...

If you want any evidence of how journalistically weak our local publications are, you only need to look at their tepid coverage of Waldo's very last minute decision to switch races. I certainly would like to have known in greater detail why he waited until the last possible moment to throw the election to Barry Peters. No one else was interviewed on his decision and no tough questions were asked. I guess we will never know. It could be that Barry Peters will make a great councilman but it would have been nice to have an election to put him in the seat rather than have Waldo appoint him.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous to Anonymous about Anonymous:

Waldo knew that Peters had a deep election war chest ($5K and counting) and his own endorsement group. Why take that one when you can challenge Councilperson Knobloch who was being reviled as the "rouge" councilmember for his stand on the Pledge.

Anonymous said...

Keep shining the light on the dark deeds of the developers.

Anonymous said...

Thunderbird -- are you saying the only dastardly deeds on BI are being done by developers? I think not. The list of individuals and groups (many special-interest) who are selling BI down the Sound is vastly larger than your "developer" list.

Shine the sunlight on all of them.

Anonymous said...

To anonymous, you are right, the list is larger than developers. And yes, shine the light wide and far.

Anonymous said...

We read in the Saturday papers that Mary Jo Briggs is open to negotiating a differently structured deal with Kelly Samson. What makes her think she has the right to do that? Maybe it is the same attitude that had Samson sitting with the City at the side table at the Council meeting, separate from the other citizens in this community.
I don't recall that we elected Samson or that he was annointed or appointed to a government office, but the access and familiarity are nothing short of incredible.
Why would a single citizen be granted this kind of treatment? And how has influence worked?

Anonymous said...

Regarding the posting under "Draw Your Own Conclusions" -- NICE TRY, but there are no conclusions to be drawn, other than Curt Winston is part of a neighborhood watch group, as are many others. You need to get your facts straight and say what you believe rather using innuendo and aspersions to impugn someone's character. As far as Kim Brackett is concerned, I make no secret about opposing her for City Council, or any other public office, which doesn't automatically mean that Curt Winston has anything other than my de facto support. Whether you agree with Gary Tripp, or not, at least doesn't hide behind anonymous blog postings, and neither do I. He has the guts to express himself publicly at City Council meetings where he calls it the way he sees it, and signs all of the articles he writes.

Jeffrey Sneller,
Bainbridge Island resident.

Anonymous said...

RE: the last comment

Do you mean like the "guts" is took to blanket this community with personally anonymous, hate-filled, libelous smear campaign phone calls and mailings? The hypocracy here stinks worse than those mudflasts.

But really, thanks again for opening the door to public comment on important topics, like the viability of various media outlets.
I find this blog to be exceptional and did not comment until independently sifting through. The stories are supported by facts and give us a chance to see something in more depth and light than we as a community have in a long time.I could care less who the authors are - just keep these articles coming. We need and have a have a right to know.

MichaelK said...

Re Jeff "Diz" Sneller:
There certainly are conclusions to be drawn. Membership in a political organization (this ain't just some blockwatch) implies agreement with many or all of the political positions of the organization. As a voter, I'm real interested in Winston's position on docks in Blakely Harbor the liveaboard situation in Eagle Harbor, and other land use issues on the island. If his views parallel those of Gary "8 ball" Tripp, Jim "Nutcase" Olsen, and youself, I certainly won't be voting for him.

Unknown said...

The editorial positions taken by Bainbridge Citizens are solely those of its Director, Gary Tripp.

Curt Winston was a Neighborhood Representatives for Bainbridge Citizens. Neighborhood Representatives program was intended to gather ideas and concerns from various parts of the Island. The program has been relative inactive for two years. Curt Winston willingness to represent his community and their concerns should not be viewed as support for every stance Bainbridge Citizens has taken.

Great American Energy is a renewable energy company founded by Gary Tripp in which Jeff Sneller has invested. GAE is focused on geothermal power production in Nevada.

Jeff Sneller has no connection with Bainbridge Citizens other than his plight with the arson of his house on Battle Point and the subsequent mistreatment by the City was a subject on which Bainbridge Citizens commented. Sneller also has agreed to contribute to a legal defense fund that will be managed by Bainbridge Citizens to help defend homeowners who have been treated unfairly by the City and for whom defending themselves would be financial struggle.

Gary Tripp, and only Gary Tripp, uses gary@tripp.net for his business, community service work and as his personal email address.

If you have any questions about this matters please call Gary Tripp at 206-383-2245 or visit our websites

Great American Energy LLC, http://www.greatae.com and Bainbridge Citizens, http://www.bainbridge.cc

Anonymous said...

I'm not buying. Winston presumably knew he was a neighborhood rep of your organization and you wrote and signed an e mail, FROM YOUR ORGANIZATION, full of vindicitive hate and unconscionable libel. This was no "editorial" and even if by some fantastic stretch it could be so construed, Winston did nothing to distance himself from this or disavow a word. The logical conclusion is right along with Michael K's.

MichaelK said...

So Gary--
Obviously, Winston is part of your group, as is Sneller. And Sneller has made no secret of wanting to undermine Kim Brackett's run against Winston for City Council (to the point of accusing her of arson at public meeting). So, y'all aren't in this together? I don't think even a professional lying SOS like Karl Rove could give that story wings, much less a local hack like you.