Election Results – No Taxes, More Cuts

“We’re faced with working with an additional $1.5 million in cuts.”

So said Pacific Grove Mayor Dan Cort on Wednesday as the City Council convened in the wake of an election that saw voters reject three tax measures the city hoped would bail it out of red ink.

The city had hoped passage of the measures would raise another $1.5 million, which, coupled with $500,000 in cuts made by City Manager Jim Colangelo through a staff reorganization approved by the council last month, would head off an anticipated $2 million deficit this time next year.

The measures would have lifted the business license tax ceiling, imposed a parcel tax and increased the sales tax.

The citizenry, Cort said, apparently chose cuts in city services over paying new taxes.

Councilwoman Lisa Bennett remarked on the low voter turnout. The city has about 9,000 registered voters, she said, and only 2,700 of them cast ballots.

Also, The editor of the Pacific Grove Blooper Bulletin lost in a bid for water boarding.
http://montereycountyelections.us/Election_Result.htm

Monterey Peninsula WD TA4
Vote Count Percent
NP – REGINA DOYLE 2,525 55.31%
NP – LEE YARBOROUGH 2,040 44.69%

Election Results – No Taxes, More Cuts

Gay P.G. Cop Alleges Discrimination

Smolinski joined the department in 1997, and the claim states his troubles began in December 1999 when parking enforcement officer Rhonda Ramey filed a complaint against then-Police Chief Scott Miller, alleging that Miller failed to discipline a supervisor who had harassed her for being “bisexual” and having an “open marriage.”

Smolinski, in the claim that does not specify the damages he is seeking, says he sat in with Ramey – identified in the complaint only as “employee X” – in a meeting with Miller in January 2000, during which Miller allegedly said Ramey would regret bringing the complaint.

Ramey sent a letter to the Hear-Old but it was not published. She later posted it on an Internet message board. In the letter, she writes:

Watch the clip from KION website, when they report Scott Miller’s response to Darrin’s accusations of harassment and Scott Miller is quoted as saying – “Sounds like a fairy tale to me”

Say what? Click to hear.

Gay P.G. Cop Alleges Discrimination

Mvsevm Goes Speakeasy

Mvsevm Speakeasy

Changes to city rules to allow wine to be served at the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History during special events will be considered Wednesday by the Pacific Grove City Council.

The master fee schedule adopted by the council in July includes a rental policy that prohibits serving alcohol at the museum.

Next, up for consideration is Casino Nights at the Library . .

Mvsevm Goes Speakeasy

Morrie Fisher Settles ‘Free Golf For Life’ Lawsuit

According to the agreement, Fisher will be allowed to purchase an annual golf pass at a fee not to exceed half of the regular senior citizen annual rate of $635 for unlimited golf.

Fisher had used a free golf pass signed by former City Manager Gary Bales for nearly 15 years before the council revoked what he said was a lifetime privilege and he filed suit to recover the benefit after the City Council rejected his claim.

The city contended that Fisher’s golf privileges were not authorized or enforceable, and that they ended along with privileges enjoyed by others in the past.

Letters From The Editor – the next day

Slow news day?

The front page for Morrie? Hard to believe that the news is so slow that we have to worry about the former mayor of Pacific Grove’s golf benefits.

On the other hand, it’s a good example of how the “good old boys” got our city into the mess it is now.

Charles Lee
Pacific Grove

A candidate for airline ad

Morrie Fisher and his good old boys got Pacific Grove into the financial situation it is trying to get out of and then he wins in a lawsuit he brings against the town. For all the money he has cost Pacific Grove, I don’t see how he can show his face around here or on the golf course.

Maybe he will be on the next Southwest Airlines commercials that get you out of town quickly and cheaply for making such stupid blunders.

Vicki Illgner
Pacific Grove

Morrie Fisher Settles ‘Free Golf For Life’ Lawsuit

Joy Colangelo vs. The Civilized World II

The opinion piece begins with a protest over noise.

Honk if you hate peace and quiet.

Noise trespasses into your quality of life. It changes your health every time a lawn mower runs at 90 decibels (85 decibels damages hearing). You may enjoy a motorboat ride, but you probably shouldn’t. From 50 feet away, motorboats, at 80 eardrum-pounding decibels, are louder than a semi.

We have 20 million leaf blowers whose only mission is to move your leaves next door, where your neighbor blows them back over again. What we’re left with is audible litter and leaves that never really go anywhere. (By the way, gas leaf blowers are prohibited in Pacific Grove, so cut it out.)

Most leafblowers in PG are used by gardening services for weekender homes or people that have to work long hours to afford to live here. But anyway, ok it’s a plea to be aware that your noise is not everyone’s noise. OK.

But then the tone shifts . .

While Vancouver is quieting the cars, some cities are eliminating cars altogether, making for quieter, walkable streets. Rome has closed more than 100 streets to cars. Copenhagen and Toronto were leaders in going car-free through the “pedestrianization” of their streets. There are more than 30 pedestrian, car-free outside malls in the United States, which have become thriving tourist centers. People flock to Santa Monica’s carless downtown, and if they miss it, they pay good money to visit Disneyland’s and Universal Studios’ carless artificial downtown Main Streets. We long for it. We’ll buy an admission ticket to see it.

So let’s see which will be the first enlightened city in Monterey County to eliminate cars from a street and not just during a farmers market. Every day. How about Pacific Grove, the first to sign the Environmental Accords? Picture Lighthouse Avenue closed to traffic like a perpetual, thriving, smaller Good Old Days. If 20,000 people can come to Good Old Days and find parking even though Lighthouse is closed, a few thousand can do it every day.

What? Cars are not the biggest noise makers. But Joy’s agenda is to ban them. Why not start with the street SHE lives on? See if her silence is not everyone’s silence.

Part of American’s freedom is the right to move about unabated. Becoming mobile was a part of the great revolution in freedom. Joy wants to put a stop to it.

Joy Colangelo vs. The Civilized World II

Traffic! Open Up The Presidio?

I always thought that the Presidio would be a better site for CSUMB and Fort Ord would be better for the Defense Language Institute.

Fred N. Nielson writes:

One solution would be to move some of the functions to Fort Ord, but such an expensive option shouldn’t be necessary. There are military bases all over the world with civilian roads running through them. A number of roads through DLI could effectively serve the same purpose.

A cursory study of the map reveals that Corporal Ewing Road and Artillery Street could be opened to civilian traffic without damaging the Presidio’s integrity. Lawton and Rifle Range roads could also serve as easily protected routes through the Presidio. Just opening two routes through the Presidio would increase traffic flow by nearly double.

There are solutions to this problem. New roadblocks, literal or otherwise, are not helpful. Let’s help our merchant friends in New Monterey and Pacific Grove. Contact your local officials and voice your concern.

Traffic on the high road
68 At Chomp

Traffic on the low road
Lighthouse Ave Traffic

Traffic! Open Up The Presidio?

Letters From The Editor

The proposed Pacific Grove parcel tax of $120 per year costs less than dinner for four at Passionfish, two pairs of shoes from Orlando’s, three fill-ups at Shell, four bags of groceries from Grove Market or Trader Joe’s, a new sweater from Prim & Proper or a new do from the beauty shop.

Put in perspective, this is a small annual amount to help our town recover from commitments and mistakes made on our behalf by prior elected officials and previous administrators.

Please vote yes on all three tax measures to help stabilize our town’s financial situation.

P.S. to Ron Schenk: Thank you for voting to hire Jim Colangelo.

The P.S. refers to the blame-shifting letter that the ousted city councilman sent to all the papers apologizing for hiring Colangelo.

Letters From The Editor

Tide Pool Nazis Attack Needed Taxes

“The city needs to look at another source of revenue,” said Jim Willoughby, who, along with his wife, Lee, has led the anti-tax charge. For the past several weeks, the couple has stood in front of the Pacific Grove post office collecting signatures in opposition of the tax measures.

It that the Willoughby’s old Mercedes parked in the handicapped parking all day? I know they have a right, but gee, they are making it hard for other disabled people to go about their business. But I guess the Willoughbys are nothing but grade A MFFYs.

Tide Pool Nazis Attack Needed Taxes