Showing posts with label Rialto Administration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rialto Administration. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Rialto Police Cleared in Non-Fatal Shooting by Melissa Pinion-Whitt.. The San Bernardino County Sun Staff Writer

Rialto police cleared in non-fatal shooting

Posted:   03/28/2013 12:36:54 PM PDT



Prosecutors on Thursday cleared three Rialto police officers in the February 2012 shooting of a 24-year-old Rialto man.
The San Bernardino County District Attorney's Office said Officers Glen Anderson, Mike Martinez and Javier Pulido were justified when they opened fire on Huston Leron Parker because he pointed what they suspected was a gun at them.
Parker was actually armed with a replica gun. He survived the shooting.
Police came to a cul-de-sac in the 100 block of East Jackson Street on Feb. 8 after receiving a call about a man holding a gun and shooting at a car.
Officers later discovered that Parker called the police and armed himself with the replica gun. They found a note in his car with statements that indicated he wanted to commit "suicide by cop," prosecutors said in their report.

Reach Melissavia emailor call her at 909-386-3878.
Get the latest crime and public safety news on Twitter@IECrime.


Read more:http://www.sbsun.com/news/ci_22890632/rialto-police-cleared-non-fatal-shooting#ixzz2OvBD4Z6N


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The City of Rialto, Profiled in 'Strong Cities/Strong State' Campaign by Jim Steinberg

Rialto profiled in 'Strong Cities/Strong State' Campaign
Jim Steinberg, Staff Writer

Posted: 08/30/2011 05:31:12 PM PDT
RIALTO - This city joined the ranks of those
profiled as part of the "Strong Cities/Strong
State" campaign highlighting local government
success across the state.

The project, a joint venture of the League of
California Cities and the California City
Management Foundation, will eventually
highlight all California cities.
"We are glad the League asked our city to
participate in the Strong Cities/Strong State
campaign," said Rialto Mayor Grace Vargas. "It is
important to show what communities like Rialto
are doing to improve their communities, promote
economic development and create jobs in these
tough economic times."
The city's profile details projects that promote
sustainable economic development including its
award-winning Downtown Vision and Strategic
Plan and the proposed development of the Rialto
Eco-Industrial Energy Park.
The Eco-Industrial Park, which will occupy 9
acres at the city's wastewater treatment plant,
will create a "green collar" job sector, while
helping to improve the environment and increase
city revenues.
"Rialto is investing millions of dollars in the
community via its redevelopment agency. We are
expanding our library, making major
improvements in our parks, constructing a new
fire station and investing in large public
improvement projects that will make Rialto a
better place to live, work and play in the future,"
said City Administrator Mike Story.
The goal of the campaign is to promote the
innovation and experience of local officials in
delivering vital services at a time when this
expertise is needed by state leaders struggling
with fundamental issues of governance, said Eva
Spiegel, communications director, for the League
of California Cities.
"`Strong Cities/Strong State' seeks to position
cities as vital, necessary and equal partners in
building a better California," Spiegel said.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

San Bernardino International Airport Offers incentive to passengers airlines... Press Enterprise September 24, 2009


BS Ranch Perspective:

Does the Inland Empire need another Passenger Airport? The answer is Yes! Capitalism demands it! the more the better! That is right, the more competition that is offered the better the flights prices in the area and the more that people that travel will benefit from the airport or airlines for that matter will do great having an extra out in the Inland Empire! Either that or there is not enough people in this area to sustain a full on full service Air Port such as the one that San Bernardino is trying to offer the people of the Inland Empire! 

BS Ranch


San Bernardino International Airport offers incentives to passenger airlines


 Download story podcast

09:38 PM PDT on Thursday, September 24, 2009

By LOU HIRSH and KIMBERLY PIERCEALL
The Press-Enterprise

Looking to lure passenger carriers to a nearly completed passenger terminal, San Bernardino International Airport officials this week approved a long-discussed package of incentives, worth more than $2.5 million for each airline it can draw.

The incentives will be offered to up to four airlines that initiate commercial service. Officials during the past year have said that one major domestic airline is seriously examining the feasibility of starting service at the former Norton Air Force Base, while at least one more is considering it, though no carriers have been named.

The board of the joint-powers Inland Valley Development Agency, which oversees airport development, on Wednesday approved an incentive package that includes up to $1 million in revenue guarantees per year for the first two years of operation, and forgiveness of landing fees for five years.

It also provides for $500,000 in advertising and marketing funds, to help each airline promote its new services during the first year of operations.

"These amounts won't nearly pay all of the costs that an airline would bear to extend service, but it could make the difference in turning a profit on that service," said Don Rogers, interim director of the development agency.

Rogers said it costs an airline between $70 million and $85 million to bring new services to any airport.

Story continues below
Terry Pierson / The Press-Enterprise
The San Bernardino International Airport's new commuter terminal is nearly complete. Now the airport is moving to attract airlines.

He said money is already in the airport's budget to cover the incentives for the first two airlines that agree to start service, and funding for the other two will need to be finalized later by airport authorities.

Airport aviation director Bill Ingraham said the incentives will be offered only to airlines that can guarantee a minimum of 12 weekly departures.

Officials have said for several months that some kind of incentive package will likely be needed to attract carriers to the San Bernardino airport, in an economy where most airlines are cutting rather than adding services. "What we're doing here is formalizing that," Ingraham said.

Story continues below
Terry Pierson / The Press-Enterprise
San Bernardino International says one airline is considering landing at the airport and another might be interested.

Carriers have dropped flights over the past several months at facilities across the nation, including Ontario International Airport.

Ontario airport doesn't offer any incentives to new airlines, and the cost for doing business there is $14.50 for each passenger who gets on a plane, one of the highest in Southern California.

The Ontario airport's revenue relies on its airlines. As revenue has dropped and fewer airlines serve the airport, landing fees have risen to $2.76 per 1,000 pounds, and terminal rental rates have increased.

The San Bernardino facility's current landing fee is $1 per 1,000 pounds.

Thomas Nolan, aviation director at Palm Springs International Airport, said his airport offers incentives to new airlines on a case-by-case basis.

San Bernardino airport officials have said the main passenger terminal, which cost more than $80 million to renovate from its former military base use over the past two years, will be ready to accept commercial flights before year's end. Still being completed are final tarmac and parking lot improvements, as well as food and newsstand concessions.

Reach Lou Hirsh at 951-368-9559 or lhirsh@PE.com.

Reach Kimberly Pierceall at 951-368-9552 or kpierceall@PE.com.

What's offfered

San Bernardino International Airport officials this week approved measures to help encourage major airlines to add local service. Incentives would go to each of the first four airlines that bring in new flights.

Revenue guarantees: Up to $1 million per year for first two years.

Advertising and marketing funds: $500,000 during first year.

Landing fees: Forgiveness of payments for five years.

Source: Inland Valley Development Agency

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Rialto Votes to End Attorney Contract (SB Sun Jan 24, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

It's About Time!! The Rialto City Council is finally starting to listen to something other then the Common Stretched lies, or the stretched Facts in the cases that he has worked for the City. Every time that he has given a slide show presentation at a Council Meeting he has spoken so flat and mundane that it was putting everybody to sleep in the Council Chambers!! This was of coarse the presentation on what he was going to do in the court Case that he had worked up to save the City and Get the Sheriff's Department under Contract for Law Enforcement. It was a good thing that I was in Chronic pain or I would have been asleep through the meeting and not have heard any of what he had said. The Lawyer that was hired by the Opposition, RPBA (Rialto Police Benefit Association) & the Citizens of Rialto, whom hired him to protect the City Police Department, happened to be at the meeting and also heard what Owen's was saying, because he interrupted the little lessen that Owen's was putting on by Defending his Law Firm Against what Owen's was saying about him, & his partner.

See, in this City Council Meeting, Owen's Portrayed these two lawyers as not knowing Civil Labor Law, at which time the RPBA Lawyer would speak up and say, "We have beat you the last four times that we have been in court, how do you answer to that?"

At that time the Mayor would bang that gavel and yell out order order I will not have these outbursts in the City Hall!! Please Contain yourself or I will have to ask you to leave!

Owens was in front of a Judge two or three more times after that, Each time Loosing to the Lawyers from Riverside that were not Lawyers with any City, they were just Lawyers and worked out of their office. There was one person that was considered to be part of the Cities Administration it was this guy, I believe that he was crooked, from the get go, Now I don't mean crooked as a criminal, but I mean crooked as in not doing his job unless it was a benefit to his pocket book. He was one of the highest paid if not the highest paid Attorneys representing a City, and that was probably because he represented the city for fifteen years. Each year gaining 2% or more when he was a younger Lawyer.

Owens should have been let go by the city when he blew the contract with the Sheriff Department. When he attempted to fight the RPBA and the Citizens of Rialto, and then he cheated by hiding the Signatures that were legally collected by the citizens of the State of California, all legally collected by a Contracted Signature Gathering Agent. The So called "Miss Understanding" of the law that was later blamed on the City Clerk, by them was wrong to do. Because Owen's Knew Being a Lawyer, "one That understood, Voter Registration and Voter Law's" as he professed in a City Council Meeting!!

Yet when it was time to look to making a law that would END The Conflict between the citizens of Rialto, The RPBA, and the Rialto City Council. It took Two months and Pleading from Citizens to take the Signatures to the Registrars of Voters for a second opinion about the Signatures, and see if they were gathered Legal like. Finally out of getting tired of hearing about it the Mayor said that they would take them to the Registrar of Voters to get a second Opinion. It all took less then an hour and the city council upon the first five minutes into the meeting had to Reverse their previous stance on the issue, and Vote to keep the Rialto Police Department AS IS! Also to Vote the Police Issue into LAW Instantaneous without taking it before the citizens on a Special Vote. There was just to many Signatures asking for the Law to just say that they would put a special election they voted it directly into law. Once the Signatures were lawful They had almost three times the amount of Signatures they needed for a special election. So it was all lost right when the signatures were deemed to be collected legal.

Owens tried to hide them in a Drawer & say that they were collected Illegally!! That is the crooked thing I am talking of. I don't know if it was him or somebody on the Council that tried to trash the signatures.

Down through the years there was many things that he did to assist the council on stuff that occurred all was above and beyond the call of duty it was this that made him dirty too, instead of steering the person away from him he would make it his business to assist them, but keep it secret, and hold that information on his lap. Crooked.

I am just happy that this time it was is poor workmanship that got him taken out, but he has charged the city in untold amount of bills for the amount of time that he has spent working on the Perchlorate contamination in the water. If the city owes $28 Million, then you have to know that there is a great deal of that $28 Million that goes into his pocket, but it is to the service to the community.

I am sad that the Rialto City Council took the time to listen to Owens when it came to the Perchlorate Contamination!! I believe that they should have went to the Environmental Protection Agency. The EPA would have gone to the people that were responsible for the contamination and fined or discussed with them how much that they would pay. I am sure that a governmental Agency would get a better response from a business then a court room full of Lawyers, against a City with their Two Lawyers.

Then the Big Businesses all have to just stall stall stall, in court that is what they do. Stall stall stall. because they know that the Testing of water wells must go on all the time and that cost money, The closing of wells cost money. Each time that they go to court and hold their cases and then they get a method to prolong the case they get their stay, that costs money. I believe that Owens Knows this and wanted the more dosage of delays, because that meant more money in his pocket to run the case and well that is just the way that he wanted it. I can guess that his part of that last Quoted Amount that was passed in the papers as was spent by Rialto (The $28 Million) That Owen's Gets at least $5 Million of that for his home fix up's. I can say that he will not be hurting any time soon.

I am so happy that Rialto City Council made a good move and Gave Owen's his Walking Paper's!!

BS Ranch



Rialto votes to end attorney contract
By Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - The City Council has decided to terminate the contract of city attorney Bob Owen.

City Administrator Henry Garcia announced the decision following a 3-2 vote by the council in closed session.

Mayor Grace Vargas and council members Joe Baca Jr. and Ed Scott voted to fire Owen. Council members Winnie Hanson and Deborah Robertson voted against.

Owen was not present during the open session of the Tuesday council meeting.

Following weeks of rumblings that Owen's job could be in jeopardy, a review of his performance appeared on the closed-session agenda for Tuesday's City Council meeting.

Vargas said Monday that the city was spending too much money on legal fees.

"And I think now is the time for the change," she said.

Owen has taken public stances on two significant issues facing the city in recent years - drinking-water contamination and the council's failed attempt to replace the Rialto Police Department with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.

At public meetings, Owen has vocally defended the strategy by the city to get perchlorate cleaned out of drinking water - even as the price tag for the city's efforts has approached $20 million.

In 2005, the City Council voted to eliminate the Police Department, but the officers union won a court battle.

The union claimed the city violated state law by not following procedures to eliminate the department. The court ruled on the

union's behalf.

Owen was the city attorney at the time the council took up the matter.

Owen and his San Bernardino-based firm have a contract with the city that expires in 2010.

The contract requires the city to pay $500,000 to end it early.

When it was signed, the contract called for Owen's firm to be paid $729,402 a year, in addition to 2 percent annual increases.

jason.pesick@sbsun.com

(909) 386-3861

Friday, January 25, 2008

Rialto OK's Use of Eminent Domain (San Bernardino Sun Jan. 23, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

It looks like Rialto's City Council is Resorting to land Stealing to make some more of the Apartments that will house Gangs and Crime shootings in the next five to ten years! So, they are pre-planning the area that they want to house the gangs in the city, by building these places, in the first place, now they are Stealing the Property that People have worked hard to get, at a time when they will not get what they paid for the property, That is Land Theft if you ask me!! Eminent Domain is something that is called Legal Land Snatching!!

BS Ranch


Rialto OKs use of eminent domain
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - The city plans to use eminent domain if needed to expand an affordable housing project.

The unanimous vote Tuesday night by the City Council, acting as the Rialto Housing Authority board, will allow a 10-building, $14million expansion of the Willow-Winchester Revitalization project north of Base Line and west of Riverside Avenue.

"I think it's a good project," said Councilman Joe Baca Jr., who pointed out the neighborhood - home to a great deal of criminal activity - is close to Eisenhower High School.

There was no opposition to the vote, which will allow Rialto to purchase the buildings if it can't reach other agreements with the owners.

The city then plans to turn the neighborhood over to the Rancho Cucamonga-based National Community Renaissance, a nonprofit developer. The developer will renovate the homes and manage the community under strict rules.

The area's current residents will be able to stay in the project if their incomes don't exceed a certain limit, or they will be relocated. Residents will only be evicted if they commit a crime or violate the community's rules.

"So no one will be going homeless," said Rialto Housing Manager John Dutrey.

Rialto to Evaluate Its City Attorney (San Bernardino Sun Jan. 21, 2008) Owen Should Be Fired or Let Go, either way 15 years is just to long for his ma

BS Ranch Perspective

The City of Rialto is taking a path that I have been asking for since the Water Contamination Issue has started!! However I believe that this is just a Smoke and Mirror, The City Council is doing this to say that they have evaluated the issue and there was not a better suited Lawyer to take over the Water Issue or any of the other Awaiting Legal Issues that the City of Rialto Faces right at the moment.

Either that or Owen Himself is looking to Retire and he feels that he needs an out from his contract and has privately looked to Ed Scott his friend and asked for him to look into closing his contract to make a great Retirement Bonus of $500.000 ($1/2 Million & No/100). Wow, when I was killed by that Mazda MPV Mini Van I didn't Get a Half Million in Cash to separate from the City. I didn't got 1/4 of what I was making to retire. Everyone said it was half of what you made Tax free. but let me tell you when you get your medical taken out and it is going up every year. your COLA (Cost of Living Allowance) is taken right away. Gone, never get a raise.

Now Owen, has had his job for 15 years and he has never done his job above par, he knows basic City Laws, about the Brown Act. and that is about it. Other then that, when it came to the Dealings with the City vs. The RPBA (Rialto Police Benefit Association) with additional assistance from the Citizens of Rialto. When It came to support from the City, the RPBA and the Citizens only needed a very low amount, but they gathered approximately 4900 signatures, and I believe that there was only 1200 signatures needed to save the police department and reverse the City Council of Rialto's Vote. But their Decision to close the Police Department and Contract with the San Bernardino County Sheriff Department for Law Enforcement, was in serious question if they were doing the right thing that the City of which they represented Supported them anymore.

The Citizens & the Rialto Police Benefit Association (RPBA) Took the City of Rialto to Court to place a Stay order against the City Council and the City of Rialto since they didn't meet with the RPBA to have what is known as a Meet and Confer, on a decision regarding a change in the original Employment Contract that they were working under that was not expired for another eight months. Owens Obviously was not aware of these laws or Rules, but the Lawyer that he kept putting down in the City Council Meetings as not knowing what they were doing, constantly and pointing out how they didn't know what they were doing, yet when Owen was confronted in Court by the Judge and the Attorney that Earlier he was basically calling dumb, was made a fool of. The Judge all but called Owen Stupid for not knowing the basic laws of an employment Contract. As time went on Owen was in court and faced the Lawyers that was hired by the Citizens and RPBA, Four to six times and each time, Owens Lost his case. Each Argument was shut down and the Judge basically told Owen to better prepare himself before showing to court next time.
Now even though OWEN LOST EVERY TIME he faced the LAWYERS FROM RIVERSIDE, He would call the Riverside Lawyers Names and he would act as if he won in Court, but it was pointed out by the RPBA LAWYER or CITIZENS that OWENS LOST BY SOMEONE SHOUTING THAT THE LAWYER SHOWED HIM, even with that Owen would continue as if he was showing that he won the court battle even when he lost.

Now the Perchlorate Contamination Issue comes up and this is awful. Owen should have said to the city Let's Contact the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and see what they say about what we should do with the Plum of Perchlorate below contaminating underground water supply. Owen right away saw money for his pockets and saw green filling his pockets and his house, garage, bedroom, bank.... So he figured once Owen heard that Good Year Tire, and Black and Decker was two of the main Companies that might be part of the companies responsible for the Perchlorate Contamination, he again saw the Dollar Signs, & Recommended that they take these companies to Court.

Ed Scott, Winnie Hanson, and Debra Robertson, along with the Mayor should know that money doesn't come that easy, but on the Same Token the Lawyers of the County, and the other Involved Cities Were all using the EPA to clean up their main problems with the Perchlorate. Rialto Drug West Valley Water District into their Law Suit until the West Valley Water District Ran out of money and had to drop out, Once West Valley Water District dropped out they were able to Asked for help from the EPA and they were helped with the Filtration system that they needed, through Grants and assistance.

But it was a fight that Owen's could not let go, and he continued to struggle to fight and asked the city to continue to fight Good Year, and Black and Decker, and suddenly the court date was pushed back and they had all this money into testing and they are testing constantly to keep the case active and make sure that the water that they have is Terrible to drink. This all cost a great deal of money with no money coming in other then that of the regular Taxes and The Utility Tax that was voted in so nicely by the Citizens of Rialto.

Now they are up and over $30+Million Owen's is now being Evaluated and there is no hope of even coming close to winning this case. I know that Bob Sees, a case like that in the movie that made that woman a millionaire and she was just an Attorney's assistant, working on the case, as an investigator. Owen thought that he had a case like that, but little did he know that the Perchlorate was not put there as something to hurt people, it was not known that it was going to hurt people. It was the World War I After all The Great War, the Big one as they called it one day. Back when Miro Air Field was an Air Base for the U.S. Air Force, and they had an Air Field in most cities of the US. that was how spread out the Air bases were back then. Perchlorate was just dumped on to the ground into a pit when it was destroyed. all the way back passed the WWI and into WWII when there was more dumped there and that was that but when it was a hazardous waist it was stopped.

Now there was no laws broken at the time, But Owen is trying to make it sound like Good Year and Black & Decker did something wrong, when nothing wrong was done.
With the poor handling of the POLICE DEPARTMENT CASE & NOW THE PERCHLORATE CASE OWEN MUST GO FOR POOR HANDLING OF THESE CASES. There should be some lawyer hired to fight to not pay for the $500.000 separation cashiers check because of the poor handling of these cases and now the clean up the lawyers coming in must do to get everything right again.
Owen is a terrible lawyer, and should be retired or let go at least!! just by his track record he has now. I cannot believe that the City Council kept him after LOST against the RIALTO POLICE BENEFIT ASSOCIATION, when the POLICE DEPT. was being FIRED by the CITY COUNCIL! The City Council Looked to OWEN to CLEAN UP the RPBA Mess and get the SHERIFF DEPARTMENT INSTALLED as the LAW ENFORCEMENT!! But when taken to court, Not once, twice, but up to six times, and each time OWEN, LOST THE CASES!! OWEN SHOULD HAVE BEEN FIRED!!

BS Ranch

Rialto to evaluate its city attorney
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - The City Council will evaluate behind closed doors the performance of its city attorney, who is handling legal efforts to clean up contamination of the city's drinking water.

It is not clear if the council will take any action involving Bob Owen, who also had a hand in the city's court battle to eliminate its Police Department.

Mayor Grace Vargas said Monday that the city has spent too much on legal costs.

"And I think now is the time for the change," she said.

Rialto has a contract through 2010 with Owen and his small law firm to serve as city attorney.

The contract paid the firm $729,402 when it was signed in 2003. That amount increases by 2 percent a year.

The cost of breaking the contract now is $500,000.

Owen did not return calls seeking comment Monday.

"Obviously, the mayor is a little bit ahead of me, but I think there's going to be some - probably some frank discussions," said Councilman Ed Scott. "All options are open."

Owen, who has been city attorney for more than 15 years, has overseen the city's legal efforts to get contamination of the local drinking water cleaned up. The city has spent about $20 million on that effort. Only about $3 million of that money has been spent on treatment for the primary contaminant, perchlorate. The council has authorized an audit of all the perchlorate expenses, but it has not yet been released.

In 2005, the City Council voted to replace

the Police Department with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department - a decision it later reversed after a tough legal battle in which the city had to hire a Bay Area law firm. The city lost the court fight against its police officers union on a legal technicality because city officials did not meet with the union before voting to eliminate the department.

"I think there's just a number of issues that I intend to address with litigation, legal fees and those kinds of things," Scott said.

On Friday, Councilwoman Winnie Hanson said she would not support an effort to remove Owen.

"I'm very satisfied with our city attorney," she said.

"There's always times when people are going to second guess everything."

She characterized what she thought the discussions would be about: "We're looking at not so much performance but values and do we or do we not need a bigger or better or different-type representation."

She also said there are "developments" within Owen's professional life that she said are "exciting" but did not elaborate.

Vargas said it was Owen's responsibility to keep the city from spending so much on perchlorate.

"And I guess most of us are in agreement on that."


To get the latest

What: The City Council meets in closed session before its council meetings. When the meeting starts, it reports any actions that took place in closed session.

When: 6 p.m. tonight

Where: City Hall, 150 S. Palm Ave.

Work to Close Rialto Bridge (San Bernardino Sun Jan. 20, 2008) Road Widening Will Jam Traffic!!

BS Ranch Perspective

Later this year, anyone that drives, or tries to drive, across the I-10 Riverside Bridge after they start the expansion Construction, Should have their head Examined!!

Seriously, the crazy days are coming that the bridge across the Interstate 10 Freeway, @ Riverside Ave, one of the Busiest Freeway Bridges that Crosses the I-10. I mean since Riverside Ave is a Short cut to the I-60 from there and Now it is a Shortcut from there to the I-210, so then it will be terribly congested and just an awful way to go when the construction starts. If it is like the Rest of the bridges then it will take at least 11 to 15 months for the Concrete to dry and it will just be terrible, and just awfully congested and miserable.

But having said that, the Congestion around Sierra Ave had gone down and was a whole lot better when the bridge was finished!! Now, I hope that the Engineers that put the whole plan together for the expansion have a better Idea for Riverside then they did for the Traffic that is W/B on the I-10 intending to turn Right N/B on Riverside. You know the ones that have the idea to make an Immediate Right on Riverside and then an Immediate Left on Valley so that they can go down to Willow, Lilac, or Cactus, or even all the way into Bloomington and make a N/B turn onto Maple since it would be better if they used Cedar Ave. Yet they have the time to sit in the middle of traffic and wait until all of Riverside Ave to clear so that they can make it over to the Center of N/B Riverside and turn Left on Valley Ave.

People have got to learn how to get to their house other then the one way that they learned when they purchased their home!!

BS Ranch

Work to close Rialto bridge
Road widening will jam traffic
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - More vehicles are about to squeeze onto already packed north-south roads crossing the 10 Freeway.

Later this year, workers will close Riverside Avenue over the 10 to widen the road and the on- and off-ramps. Drivers will still be able to get on the freeway from Riverside Avenue from each direction.

Once the road reopens, it might not stay open long. In the next five years, officials expect to widen the Riverside Avenue bridge over the Union Pacific rail lines just south of the freeway bridge.

"It's really a bad situation," said Councilman Ed Scott, who said the city couldn't get the money to widen both bridges at once.

Although the freeway bridge will be widened from four to six lanes, it will merge back into four lanes to cross the railroad tracks until that bridge is widened as well, said Rialto's public-works director, Ahmad Ansari.

Ansari came to the city after plans for Riverside Avenue had been set.

"To say that it is not going to be a bottleneck, I would be lying to you," he said.

Nevertheless, congestion on Riverside Avenue should be eased after the initial $37 million bridge project because the on- and off- ramps, which generate much of the traffic, will be wider, Ansari said.

He said he hopes work can start on the second bridge within five years. It's not clear whether that work will require a full closure of Riverside Avenue.

Larry Mitchell, general manager of Hometown Buffet

just north of the 10, wasn't happy when he heard another bridge needs work on Riverside.

But he said his business will survive if the work is spread out enough.

"I think our patrons, our guests, will find a way if they want to come to Hometown Buffet," he said.

Greg Lantz, Rialto's economic development manager, said the bridge over the railroad could be widened as part of a project to widen Riverside Avenue to three lanes in each direction. A planned north-south route between Riverside and San Bernardino counties could dump out around Riverside Avenue, making the longer widening necessary.

The good news is that Riverside Avenue on- and off-ramps will get traffic signals as part of this year's project, Ansari said.

Councilwoman Winnie Hanson said that as a rule, work to improve the city's infrastructure won't be easy.

"I think our infrastructure is just way, way, way beyond quick solutions," she said.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Housing Crash Delays Rialto Project (San Bernardino Sun Jan 19, 2008) Who Knows when they will consider to Re-up the case and start the devlopement ag

BS Ranch Perspective

I know that the City of Rialto wants to get all the money that they can for the property that they have created through the seeming use of loop holes, to close the Rialto Airport. A Closure that was Brokered over a Breakfast Meeting in a Cocoa's Restaurant in Whittier, with a House Representative that just happens to have a Development Company, that got the job to develop the acreage as soon as the City Council, and City Planning decides that the time is Ripe to get the best price for the property that is there in Rialto.

It is the belief of this writer that the City has made their bed!! They should be able to lie in the bed, No matter what the market. So they should get on with the payment of $25 to $28 million to the City of San Bernardino for the moving of the Current Businesses that are at Miro Air Field or Rialto Airport.

Rialto City Council & Rialto City Planning has made their bed, lets see if they are going to lay in it at least a little, I doubt that the airport will close for at least the next five years.

BS Ranch


Housing crash delays Rialto project
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer

RIALTO - Though plans for the city's premier development are moving forward, they have fallen about a year behind schedule.

While the city still has to finish negotiations with Caltrans as well as the Federal Aviation Administration, the main reason for Renaissance Rialto's delay is the housing-market slowdown.

Last year, the project's developers - a team consisting of the Lewis Group and Ross Perot Jr.'s Texas-based Hillwood - redrew the project to cut half the housing.

"Even though we looked like we were on a fast track, I think the mud's gotten deeper," said Councilwoman Winnie Hanson, who thinks the alterations could make for a better project.

Renaissance Rialto, on 1,500 acres next to the 210 Freeway, will be developed into houses, retail and industrial space.

The heart of the retail center - which will be anchored by a SuperTarget - can't be built until the city closes Rialto Municipal Airport.

Officials originally planned to close the airport last year, but it looks like it won't happen until next year, said Rich Scanlan, airport director.

Four or five of about 200 tenants have left Rialto Municipal Airport, he said.

Rialto will eventually relocate many of the airport's tenants to San Bernardino International Airport.

By the fall, the Rialto City Council could approve plans for the Renaissance Rialto project and an environmental impact report, said Greg Lantz, the city's economic development

manager.

City staff will spend the next month reviewing and refining a draft plan for the project, he said.

The city and developers can then begin relocating tenants. Once they are relocated, construction can begin.

Stores could start opening in 2010, but not in time to meet the original goal of the 2009 winter holidays.

City officials would like to start developing the area to the west around Alder Avenue and the 210 Freeway even sooner. The area is far enough away from Rialto Municipal Airport that construction can begin before it is closed, Lantz said.

Though Congress passed legislation in 2005 allowing Rialto to close the airport, the FAA still hasn't given the OK to shut things down.

Before the airport can be closed, the FAA has to agree to a closure plan that it is reviewing, said Ian Gregor, an FAA spokesman.

He said the plan has to agree with Rialto and the San Bernardino International Airport Authority regarding airport land values.

An escrow account also needs to be established so revenue from the sale of the airport property can be transferred to the Small Business Insurance Agency for improvements.

In the next three to four months, Lantz said, Rialto also hopes to settle some land-rights issues with Caltrans.

Most notably, Rialto needs to get control of Easton Street from the state, so the city can move Easton a few hundred feet to the south to make room for the Target-anchored center.

If the city can this year get a sewer line built around Alder, Lantz said, development on that end of the project can quickly begin.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Rialto Selects Projects For Redevelopment Bond Funding (Press Enterprise Jan. 15, 2008)

BS Ranch Perspective

The Rialto Redevelopment Agency (Rialto City Council) has taken on a good Idea to extend Pepper Ave to Highland I-210, it will give access to Highland (I-210 Business route) and on ramps/off ramps to the I-210 freeway that is one thing that is needed since there is currently Three accesses to Rialto from the I-210 Freeway (Alder Ave, Ayala Ave, & Riverside Ave.) All the signs on the freeway indicate that there is four off ramps to Rialto, but since Pepper was not competed there is just the three. That completion will also allow the people that live in the Eastern side of the city better easier Access to the I-210 rather then fight the traffic that the currently have to fight from Riverside Ave. to the Two Lane Road Easton Ave. and then to Sycamore Ave and beyond is very difficult and causes a great deal of Traffic problems in the morning and afternoon just from the traffic that is trying to get on the I-210 in the morning and back to their homes in the afternoon. Now It is still quicker for them to gain access on the I-210 then it was to drive all the way down Pepper Ave to I-10 and then to work from there, then it does for them to just gain access to the I -210 and get on their way, however the traffic is pretty bad and that does take them some time.

So there is a great need for the Pepper Ave extension, and I believe that the extension will be invited once the construction starts.

BS Ranch

Rialto selects projects for redevelopment bond funding



Download story podcast

10:00 PM PST on Tuesday, January 15, 2008
By MARY BENDER
The Press-Enterprise

RIALTO - The city Redevelopment Agency will issue $88 million in bonds to pay for several projects, including an extension of Pepper Avenue to connect to Highway 210 and an expansion of Frisbie Park, the board decided Tuesday night.

The Rialto City Council, which doubles as the Redevelopment Agency board, whittled down a long list of proposed public improvements to several that the city could complete within three years.

The council had earlier agreed to set aside $20 million in bond funds for assorted economic development projects and $28 million for several neighborhood-revitalization projects.

At issue Tuesday was how the remaining $40 million would be allotted. The biggest chunk of the bond funds, $14.8 million, will go to the proposed Pepper Avenue link to the 210.

The Highway 210 segment through Rialto and San Bernardino opened last summer with three access points in Rialto, but the planned Pepper connection has met delays.

Pepper Avenue would have to be extended roughly one-half mile north to reach the freeway. Between its dead-end, which is in a residential neighborhood a few blocks north of Base Line, and the freeway are acres of vacant land that might be a habitat for two endangered species, the San Bernardino kangaroo rat and the Santa Ana River woolly star, a plant. Both are native to Lytle Creek, next to the freeway.

Rialto needs approval from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service in order to build the Pepper extension and 210 connection.

Redevelopment Director Robb Steel said Rialto recently received a credit rating of A-minus, good news for the Redevelopment Agency as it prepares to issue the tax allocation bonds, which are paid back by a property-tax increment that comes to the agency.

Such bonds are unlike general obligation bonds, which must be approved by local voters.

Mayor Grace Vargas missed the afternoon bond workshop but attended the City Council meeting on Tuesday night.

Councilman Joe Baca Jr. told Steel that he wanted $7 million of the bond funds used to develop sports fields and other amenities at Frisbie Park, and his colleagues agreed.

The council also allotted $5 million for rebuilding Fire Station 202, $4 million for expanding parking at the Metrolink Station and $4.7 million to go toward a project to widen the Riverside Avenue bridge over Interstate 10.

The Riverside Avenue bridge will be torn down later this year and rebuilt as a nine-lane road. The artery is Rialto's only connection to Interstate 10.

Fire Station 202 opened in 1963 on the northeast corner of Riverside Avenue and Easton Street, and it is now too small to accommodate some modern fire equipment. It will be rebuilt on vacant city-owned land across the street, and the current site will be sold.

The fire station is now next to the Riverside Avenue connection to Highway 210.

The Metrolink Station, which is at 261 S. Palm Ave., currently has 222 parking spaces. Initially, 154 spaces could be added, and the city eventually could build a 900-space parking structure.

Reach Mary Bender at 909-806-3056 or mbender@PE.com

Monday, January 14, 2008

Fwd: FW: Miller Wary of Dealings with his Doners (SGV Tribune 020807)


Just a little memory lane:
Miller wary of dealings with his donors
By Fred Ortega and Gary Scott Staff Writers

Looking back on the land deals now under review by federal authorities, Rep. Gary Miller maintains he did nothing wrong, but admits he would do one thing differently.

The Diamond Bar resident said he never should have turned to campaign contributor Lewis Operating Corp. when looking for an investment to shelter the proceeds from a 2002 land sale in Monrovia.

"Was it unethical or inappropriate? No," Miller said. "Am I going to buy things from former campaign donors? No. It is not worth being questioned."

A successful real estate developer before being elected to Congress in 1998, Miller expressed outrage at allegations that he abused his power as a congressman or misused tax laws.

Miller, R-Brea, said he is the object of a media campaign to smear him for doing what he has every right to do: make a buck.

In the run-up to the Monrovia land deal, now being looked at by the FBI, Miller said he acted as an anxious businessman trying to protect his investment and his right to develop his property - not as a powerful politician seeking to use his position for monetary gain, as he says he has been portrayed.

"I've been bashed in the press as though I've done something wrong," said

Miller, 58. "I can go out and make money like any American, as long as it is above board, ethically and honorably."

But political figures are held to different standards, said Dan Schnur, a Republican consultant. In the court of public opinion, he said, there isn't always a presumption of innocence until proven guilty.

"When a private citizen does something that some may find suspicious, there is a legal process that takes place before people come to a decision," Schnur said. "When you are a public figure, they come to that judgment before the process, not after."

Recounting the 2002 land sale, Miller said he sat on 165 acres of pristine hillside property for 12 long years, waiting as Monrovia officials and citizens tried to figure out whether to let him develop the land or buy it for a wilderness preserve. All the while, he said he watched his investment stagnate.

And after 12 long years, Miller said he had had enough. At a City Council meeting in February 2000, the congressman pushed back.

"I am sitting next to my attorney, with 300 to 400 people in the room, and he tells me: `Offer to sell them your property. They'll never buy it,"' Miller recalled.

Miller was "damn tired of the process" and was prepared to file suit against the city for inverse condemnation, saying long delays and government regulations had so diminished the value of his property that he was legally entitled to compensation.

To his dismay, Miller said Monrovia's mayor at the time, Lara Larramendi, "a registered Democrat," asked him the unthinkable: donate the land to the city.

"If you don't want me to develop in your city, then buy my property," Miller said. Two years later, in May 2002, the congressman and the city came to an agreement. The city, using a state grant and local funds, bought Miller's land for

$11.8 million, earning him about a $10 million profit.

Last August, the government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service accusing Miller of violating tax laws in the sale, as well as in land deals in Fontana and Rancho Cucamonga.

Federal investigators began poking around Monrovia, asking questions about the 2002 sale. In recent weeks, FBI agents asked Monrovia officials to turn over a video recording of that Feb. 29, 2000, council meeting. The FBI has declined to comment.

In October, Miller decided to ask the House ethics committee to review his dealings in hopes of ending a spate of news reports looking at whether he used his position to take advantage of a special tax provision to shelter profits from the deals.

Miller said he purposefully stayed away from business dealings when he first entered politics, but that concerns about providing for his children and grandchildren led him to dive back into investments again.

"I didn't do any business deals for 12 years, and every year I was worth less money," he said.

Miller is ranked as the 12th-wealthiest member of the House by the Center for Responsive Politics, with a net worth of

$12 million to $51.7 million.

Miller does not believe he receives special treatment; on the contrary, he says his political position has made negotiations more difficult.

"It has always been to my detriment to be a congressman" in putting deals together, Miller said, because of the higher level of scrutiny.

After the 2002 sale to Monrovia, Miller exercised IRS Code Section 1033 to shelter the proceeds from capital gains taxes. The code requires that the money be reinvested in property within two years. Miller needed to find property fast.

He had to look no further than Fontana, where Lewis Operating Corp., a former business partner and campaign contributor, was readying to sell land to the city there.

"I was looking for deals to buy," Miller said, adding that Lewis "said we have units we are going to sell to the city" of Fontana.

Lewis sold the properties to Miller in 2004. Miller turned around and sold the properties to Fontana in 2005 and 2006 for a small profit.

The deal has raised questions about access and influence, since Lewis Operating Corp. had given Miller a combined $18,100 in campaign contributions between 2003 and 2006.

Miller maintains the transactions were above board, but said he learned a lesson from the media fallout.

"Do I have any other projects with Lewis? No," Miller said. "I'm not interested in any joint ventures."

The confluence of business and politics is often problematic, said Bruce Cain, director of the University of California Washington Center.

"The general problem is when you come from a business background and enter politics, and your business begins to suffer because you are not paying as much attention to it anymore," said Cain. "They are not making the six-figure salaries they were making before, and that leads them to do things that are on the edge of the law."

With the focus on ethics in Congress nowadays, that attitude quickly becomes problematic, Cain said.

"They think that they are one-eighth of an inch inside the line, but why be one-eighth of an inch when you can be a mile farther away?"

Miller also insisted that his status as a congressman did not cause any conflicts in the matter of the closing of the Rialto airport.

Miller acknowledges that he met with an official from the city of Rialto and members of Lewis Operating Corp. about how to close the Rialto Airport before promoting a transportation bill that eventually shut down the facility.

In 2004, Rialto officials had signed a contract with Lewis giving the developer the first shot at developing the airport land. City officials have said they hired Lewis in part because of its political connections, since previous efforts to close the airport through the Federal Aviation Administration had failed.

Miller insists that the fact he knew Lewis wanted to build on the airport land did not influence his work on the transportation bill.

"I knew others were talking with Rialto \, KB Homes was talking, others were talking," he said, adding his motivation was only to assist the city of Rialto, which had asked him to help in the airport's closure. He said area representatives Joe Baca, D-San Bernardino, and Jerry Lewis, R-Redlands, were also in favor of the city's efforts to shut down the airport.

In the end, it was language inserted in the bill by Lewis that led to the shuttering of the facility.

Despite all the problems his connections with developers have caused him, Miller insists he will leave Congress either on his own terms, or through the will of the voters.

"I plan on running again," he said. "I am not going to be impugned by the press."

gary.scott@sgvn.com

(626) 578-6300, Ext. 4458
--
BS Ranch Perspective:

Looks like Miller is taking the high road in all this I would if I were him too. What Even If I was guilty in a similar situation I would stay with the not so guilty road, hoping that they don't find anything, or any wrong doing. Maybe they will find wrong doing and they will vote to work on the spirit of the law and not the Letter of the law, but I imagine in the spot that this guy is in they would have to act on the letter of the law and not the Spirit of the law, being that he was elected by the people with the people's Trust, to do the right thing, Legally and above board, not act above the law, and do what you want to get what you want to fill your pockets!! Even if you have your own employee's to pay, it isn't that you don't have the money to take the loss that you would have had the land gone the full circle that it would have, if you didn't cook up the emergency sale!!

Never the less, Miller had to have someone that he worked with on the other side that he trusted to make the Emergency sale work or he would find himself in this type of situation acting all cool, calm and collected. Be sides it would almost be the proof of the prosecution that the paperwork that Miller will show them regarding the Emergency sale of the property, are faked or not. We can only wonder. if they are real the above scenario certainly fits, and there is an inside man!!

BS Ranch
-----------------------------------------------------
There has not been a follow up to this story, so I wonder what the outcome of the Investigation was, or maybe there was no Follow up story, becuase the Investigation was not finished, and they are still working through Miller's tax refunds and his tax reports to find where he might have placed the payments for the favors that he has done for the Cities of Fontana and Rialto!

BSR
Jan. 14, 2008

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Water Supplies to Local Area Being Cut Drastically (Daily Bulletin November 29, 2007)This story follows the 14:30hrs update that the water supplies we

BS Ranch Perspective

I don't know what my thoughts are today that are different then yesterday, other then I have been thinking an awful lot about the Hydrogen Engine that is going on the market next year when the Water supplies to the Municipal Cities in Southern California are being Cut in Half!! If there is already an Oil Shortage, and we start to run our Vehicles on Hydrogen Engines that would mean that all oil sources would shift from GAS/DIESEL to plain WATER, if our FRESH WATER is cut in half and we are not using any of it for driving CARS what will happen when Honda, and Chevrolet gets their HYDROGEN ENGINES running at a full swing, and people buy into it!!

YOU THINK WATER SHORTAGES NOW!!! WAIT UNTIL NEXT YEAR OR THE YEAR AFTER!!!!

BS Ranch



Water supplies to local area being cut drastically
By Shawbong Fok, Staff Writer

The Inland Empire's water supplies from Northern California next year are going to be cut in half thanks to a drought as well as an endangered fish swimming in a delta near Sacramento that needs the water.

In the face of less water flowing locally, landscapers, golf courses and even citrus growers might get socked with higher water bills.

"We might hand water (with a hose) the dry spots," said Bill Henning, superintendent of Shandin Hills Golf Club in San Bernardino.

The water cuts are the result of some of the driest weather in years.

The Inland Empire's apportionment of water next year has been cut because of the drought hitting the state, according to the State Water Contractors, a nonprofit of 27 public agencies that buys water under contract from the California State Water Project.

San Bernardino Valley Municipal Water District, which serves about 600,000 residents in an area spanning Fontana to Yucaipa, is part of this water group.

In 2008, the water district is expected to get 58 percent less water than this year from the state, said Randy Van Gelder, water district general manager.

"I don't know if there'll be a raise in rates," said Joe Zoba, Yucaipa Valley Water District general manager. "Just because there's a shortage of water from the state doesn't mean there'll be an increase in water rates."

The California State Water Project includes reservoirs, lakes, storage tanks, canals, tunnels,

pipelines and pumping and power plants that move and store water in the state.

Collectively, the State Water Contractors deliver water to more than 25 million residents in the state and to more than 750,000 acres of agricultural land.

The water delivery cuts, which are among the largest since 2003 in the Inland Empire, are attributed to a legal ruling that is trying to protect an endangered fish, called the smelt.

That fish needs the water in the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta where it lives. The delta is located at the western edge of the Central Valley by the confluence of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers.

On Aug. 31, U.S. District Court Judge Oliver Wanger limited how much water could be delivered from the delta between December and June.

The State Water Contractors announced water cuts that will permit the statewide consortium to purchase only 25 percent of the requested water.

This will only supply about half of what's needed for the San Bernardino Valley Municipal Water District, officials said.

"We'll have to secure more water from Northern California," Van Gelder said.

Sixty percent to 70 percent of water from the State Water Contractors is used for landscapes, both commercial and residential.

The result of these cuts will be conservation measures, including everything from the showcasing of low water-retention plants and irrigation techniques to tests in San Bernardino parks on remote-controlled sprinklers that conserve water.

This isn't the first time a water shortage has hit Californians. Drought conditions in the early 1990s pushed water agencies to adopt conservation techniques.

"Conservation is a means to adapt to water changes," said Linda Fernandez, an environmental scientist at UC Riverside.

The Inland Empire is one of the nation's fastest growing areas, resulting in more water needs than ever.

Already, San Bernardino County has some 2 million residents, hundreds of thousands of more people than a decade ago.

Not all water agencies in California will implement the same water-saving techniques.

"Each agency will respond differently depending on local conditions," said Bob Muir, spokesman for the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which serves western San Bernardino Valley residents, as well as metropolitan Los Angeles and San Diego.

on Monday shawbong.fok@sbsun.com

(909) 386-3885

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

14:30 Hrs Today: Inland Empire's Water Supplies Cut in Half (SB Sun November 28, 2007) The Inland Empire's Water Supplies From Northern California are

BS Ranch Perspective

It seems that the Water Drought is catching up to the water public of the West San Bernardino Water District, along with the People that use the Rialto Water Department for their water, but reading this report it isn't the people of Rialto or the County Area Surrounding the City of Rialto, This report is covering the East Valley Water District, The West Valley Water District, the Rialto Water Department, the San Bernardino City Water Department as well!! Not only those cities but, Colton's Water Ranchio's water, Fontana, and Ontario's water Departments & or Supply agencies are going to have to cut their usages in half as well. Not only is my lawn going to be Brown, but everyone surrounding my block will be brown as well!!

There will not be able to have anyone to be able to wash cars in their driveways or as I previously stated the Automatic Sprinklers will have to be turned to the Off position to be treated to the super light water position. Soon, if this DROUGHT continues the way that it has, we will not be allowed to take a shower everyday. Dome people will be asked to take a shower once a week to avoid any further cuts from our water discomfort.

If the DROUGHT CONTINUES FURTHER THEN WE EXPECT IT TO, we could end up like that city in Mississippi, where they get their water turned on from 18:00 hrs to 21:00 hrs every Monday through Saturday for their whole water needs, they are forced to stock up on water for all their needs through the day, for example the three hours that their water is on is spent filling the bathtub, and then filling plastic Gallon Jugs, Bottles, and five gallon Jersey can's all are used to fill the toilet after they go to the bathroom. They cannot flush the toilet after each and every Urination, they must allow the yellow pool of goodness to stay in the bottom of the toilet and ferment until somebody has to have a Bowel Clearance, then when that is done they are cleared to use some water to clear the solid waist from the bowl. The showers that they take are done so, or tried to be done so during the three hours that there water is turned on, Since the water is being used all over town the pressure is so low that they are lucky to get any pressure to get the water to take any kind of shower. some or most households take an old fashion bath of the depression days when the most important bread winner took the first bath and the next one got into that dirty bath water on down to the children. they all used the same water because it not only saved money using the same water, but it would could save a great deal of money by taking that bath.

It is unfortunate that we are coming to this crossroad, but the talk of Global warming has come up, but I just have been wondering this Where has all the water gone, There is all kinds of documentation that the water isn't frozen in glaciers. if the water isn't stored in Ice and on Mountains were has the water gone, the drought is here, the water table isn't raised anywhere it is lower, the water is gone where is all our water gone, through that hole into outer space?? if so space has a hole bunch of our water.

THE NEXT THINK IS IF WE ALL STARTED DRIVING HYDROGEN ENGINES TODAY, WILL MAKE COUNTIES GO TO WAR OVER WATER AND NOT OIL, MARK WHAT I AM SAYING, BECAUSE WATER IS MORE OF A NATURAL SENSE OF THINGS THAT WE CANNOT DO WITHOUT!!!.

BS RANCH


2:30 p.m.: Inland Empire's water supplies cut in half

The Inland Empire's water supplies from northern California are going to be halved next year.

This is all thanks to a drought and an endangered smelt swimming in an inland delta near Sacramento that instead needs the water.

Landscapers, golf courses and even the food we eat might get socked with higher water bills, even in the face of less water flowing here.

"We might hand water [with a hose] the dry spots," said Bill Henning, superintendent of Shandin Hills Golf Club in San Bernardino.

The water cuts are the result of some of the driest weather in years. The IE's apportionment of water next year has been cut because of the drought hitting the state, according to the State Water Contractors, a non-profit group of 27 public agencies in California that buys water under contract from the California State Water Project.

San Bernardino Valley Municipal Water District, which serves some 600,000 residents in an area spanning from Fontana to Yucaipa, is part of this water group. In 2008, it's expected to get 58 percent less water than this year from the state, said Randy Van Gelder, general manager of the San Bernardino Valley Municipal Water District.

shawbong.fok@sbsun.com

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Closed-Door Water Talks Frustrate Rialto Council (SB Sun November 26, 2007) "What Goes Around: Comes Around"

BS Ranch Perspective

I know that this subject matter is not the thing that you want the anyone to feel what it is like to have all the business conducted behind closed doors, but sometimes the old saying "What Goes Around Comes Around" comes to mind with this story!!

The reason being is that the Rialto City Council is crying because the people in charge of the Perchlorate situation that THEY are in Charge of, are ignoring all their requests and going behind closed doors and having the meetings to discuss the Perchlorate problems. Ed Scott, Owen, and others are very confused why this is happening to them, Well I have to say that "What goes Around, Comes Around"!

The people of Rialto didn't speak out the last time and they are asking for the services that they are getting when it comes to the business of Rialto and what goes on there. The Perchlorate should have been turned over to the Environmental Protection Agency at the start, but the City Council listened to the Council whom is not working in the best interest of his Client, but the best interest of his WALLET!! He Recommended going to Court and filing a case against businesses that were probably not in control of the employees that were dumping the perchlorate in the first place. They were the companies that purchased the smaller companies that were responsible for the disposal of the Perchlorate. The EPA, should have been called to begin with, and then the EPA should have been the people that should have been after the responsible party for the DISPOSAL of PERCHLORATE!! It wasn't up to Rialto directly to be the police for the EPA. Owen just wanted to fill his wallet with a whole bunch of money that he would be using for this case. The other employees of the city that were on board were hired by Owen as experts for their testimony.

Now this is all coming back to bite the city Council in the butt and still nobody is up in arms against them, nobody is wondering why they spent some $23Million dollars of the Utility Tax to get through the first part of this Perchlorate Battle, and now that they are not seeing any recourse and any money coming back in, Owen is still not being fired. I don't get it??

BS Ranch




Closed-door water talks frustrate Rialto council
Jason Pesick, Staff Writer
Article Launched: 11/26/2007 09:35:13 PM PST


Rialto wants its groundwater cleaned up, but a local water board has cut the city out of talks with three companies who are in "closed-door briefings" on the remediation process.
The city, which wrote a strongly worded letter Monday to the state's Environmental Protection Agency headquarters complaining about the insider talks, views the negotiations as a slap in its face.

It wants to be at the table on the talks to clean up industrial chemicals discharged in its northern section because it did a lion's share of the legwork to build a legal case against the companies.

The three companies accused of contaminating a 160-acre site in Rialto are Goodrich, Emhart - a defunct division of Black & Decker - and Rialto-based fireworks company Pyro Spectaculars.

The purpose of the letter on Monday was to request that state EPA Secretary Linda Adams order the local water board to open the door to city officials on the talks with the companies.

"Rialto needs more than a prayer and a hope that the regional board staff will safeguard Rialto's water interests," wrote councilmembers Winnie Hanson and Ed Scott. "We simply want our underground drinking water supply cleaned up so it can be replenished in the future."

Rialto officials say that 720million gallons of water will become contaminated while the water board and companies "talk" over the next few months.

"I think it's totally ridiculous," said Scott, a member of the council's perchlorate subcommittee.

"Why are they doing it behind closed doors? It makes no sense to me," he said.

Scott suggested that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger should dissolve the regional board.

The staff of the local water agency - called the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board - and lawyers for the companies, recently agreed to negotiate a possible settlement.

"The parties have agreed to enter settlement discussions," said Bob Wyatt, a lawyer for Emhart.

The two sides only agreed to talk recently after a court hearing was put off last week that would have examined whether public hearings could proceed on who was responsible for the pollution.

"We are seeking a settlement that achieves cleanup of the perchlorate and TCE contamination ... (flowing down from) the 160-acre site," said Gerard Thibeault, the Santa Ana board's executive officer, referring to the Riverside-based Santa Ana board's recent cleanup efforts.

TCE, or trichloroethylene, is a solvent used in various industrial cleaning products.

Perchlorate, used to produce explosives like rocket fuel and fireworks, is flowing through Rialto from industrial sites first used by the U.S. military during World War II.

Perchlorate can be harmful to humans by interfering with the thyroid gland, which plays a role in metabolism and neurological development.

The state umbrella group that oversees the Santa Ana board, called the State Water Resources Control Board, was scheduled to hold hearings in August to determine if the three companies should clean up some of the perchlorate. Rialto and the staff from the regional Santa Ana board, headed by Thibeault, were going to act as prosecutors against the companies.

But before the hearings could start, the companies filed lawsuits saying that the state board process was flawed and asked Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Dzintra Janavs to keep the hearings from getting off the ground.

Janavs halted the hearing process. On Nov. 1, she consolidated the companies' lawsuits into one and made it clear that no matter what she decides, someone will appeal the case, likely up to the California Supreme Court.

On Nov. 21, the two sides - the companies versus the regional and state water boards, which are represented by the California attorney general - were scheduled to argue about whether Janavs should allow the state hearings to go forward. But Wednesday's arguments were delayed because the parties said they wanted to talk.

Rialto officials complained that they were not part of the discussions between the parties. Rialto provided a majority of the regional board's evidence against the suspected polluters.

"We can only hope that the regional board staff is going to obtain the emergency cleanup that this community needs," said Bob Owen, Rialto's city attorney.

Scott said at the next council meeting on Dec. 4, he hopes the council will vote to recommend Schwarzenegger ask the EPA to declare the 160-acre site a Superfund site.

Also on Wednesday, Thibeault ordered Ken Thompson, who owns land above the McLaughlin Pit, which is a major source of perchlorate contamination, to conduct a soil and groundwater investigation.