Having Ben Harvey On Staff Is Expensive!

So who/what could be the root cause of all the litigation?

Harvey honk

The city attorney’s office currently operates with an annual budget of $688,800 — of which it has expended $403,000 through Jan. 13 of this year. In fiscal year 2023-24, the city attorney’s budget was $398,180. In 2024-25, it was raised to $625,000 and again increased in April of that year by an additional $520,000.

Ojai City Manager Benjamin Harvey clarified at a Jan. 29 meeting of the city’s Finance & Budget Committee that rising legal costs were largely related to a number of pending litigation proceedings and that the city was presently working with as many as six law firms on a litany of unspecified issues.

Having Ben Harvey On Staff Is Expensive!

  • Ojai Valley News

Ben Harvey Ruined A Hometown Activity In Ojai, Too

Harvey managed to turn Ojai’s crown jewel — Libbey Bowl — into a ghost stage. He signed a contract that gave the city zero rights, let a promoter run one overpriced show for LA hipsters, and then… nothing. No concert series, no summer nights under the stars, just pissed off residents. Classic Harvey!

Harvey honk

Libbey Bowl has been silenced, the people have not
I miss…The sounds. The joy. The sight of people swaying together under the Ojai sky at the Libbey Bowl.

Our city manager has been called “the Grinch Who Stole Our Music,” and it’s hard to disagree when the stage sits silent. I miss — we miss — Michael McDonald’s velvet voice, the Gin Blossoms’ jangling guitars, Ben Harper’s soul, Vampire Weekend’s energy, Toad the Wet Sprocket’s harmonies, Dionne Warwick’s elegance, Oingo Boingo’s wildness, The English Beat’s ska rhythms, Lyle Lovett’s storytelling, Los Lobos’ fire, Jon Anderson from Yes (who brought 12 musicians from six countries, ages 23 to 73), Belinda Carlisle’s sparkle, Dave Mason and Eric Burton’s legends, Jacob Scesney’s sax with Postmodern Jukebox and much more.

And I miss the families — neighbors’ arm in arm — singing along to Queen Nation and countless other bands that turned the Bowl into a living, breathing heartbeat of Ojai.

Now, instead of music, I hear about a bumper sticker: “Honk if you’re suing the City Manager or the City of Ojai.” That says something about where we are — we have been referred to as “the best citizens with the worst (city) management” — and it stings because it feels true. I think we had more lawsuits filed last month than concerts.

Ben Harvey Ruined A Hometown Activity In Ojai, Too

Ojai Valley News