Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Ponte Vista prepares to re-tool development

The Contra Costa Times reports:

With Bob Bisno out of the picture, developers of the proposed Ponte Vista housing project in San Pedro say they are ready to launch a new push to find community consensus on a revised plan.

The 1,950-home development has been in limbo since late last year when Bisno, the head of the development team, was asked to step down.

Ted Fentin of Credit Suisse, Bisno's largest investor, is taking the lead in a move to find a compromise the community will accept.

"(He) is committed to working with you in developing a revised plan," development spokeswoman Elise Swanson told members of the Northwest San Pedro Neighborhood Council on Monday night. "There is a spirit of cooperation. We are moving forward with community outreach."

The project, likely in a revised form, is tentatively scheduled to go before the Los Angeles Planning Commission on April 9.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Trump omitted some facts

From Wednesday's Letters to the Editor, a letter from RPV Councilman Doug Stern:

Trump omitted some facts

The Daily Breeze reported that Donald Trump had sued the city of Rancho Palos Verdes, claiming that it had required too much geological review of portions of the Trump National Golf Course after the infamous 18th-hole landslide. Trump was apparently not happy with the Dec. 19 Daily Breeze article written by staff writer Nick Green, titled "Trump sues RPV for $100M." So he sent his response as a letter to the editor, chastising Green for "omitting" facts that Trump thought important. According to Trump, "As usual, your reporter, Nick Green, who is absolutely terrible, misstated the facts."

But Trump also forgot to mention a rather important fact himself.

Trump agreed (first in 2003, restated in 2004) to resolve all geologic disputes through a three-person panel of geologic experts, and to be bound by those decisions. The agreement states: "The Panel shall resolve disagreements between city's geological and geotechnical experts and the experts that are performing work on behalf of developer.

"City and developer agree not to restrict the areas that the panel may explore to make such determination and to defer to the judgment of the panel with respect to what additional geologic studies and tests, if any, should be conducted in order to permit such residential development.

"The parties hereby acknowledge that the panel is being retained to resolve differences between the respective geological/geotechnical experts retained by the parties in order to allow developer to complete the development of the project.

"City and developer hereby covenant and agree that any decisions and recommendations rendered by the panel shall be binding on both city and developer." Rancho Palos Verdes has complied with the agreement and accepted the determinations of the panel.

Yet Trump is now suing Rancho Palos Verdes and some of the geologic panel members as a result of the determinations of that agreed-upon panel of experts. He is claiming that the panel of experts that evaluated the geology, determined the necessary geologic analysis and directed that those tests be conducted required too much of him. So much for agreeing to be bound by the determinations of the panel.

- DOUGLAS W. STERN

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Anonymous Client Abandons Massive Document Request Directed to RPV

The Daily Breeze reports:
When a Sacramento attorney made a broad public records request to the city of Rancho Palos Verdes on behalf of anonymous residents last year, municipal staff members were thrown into a tizzy seeking to respond.

Eventually, more than 10,000 pages of documents were produced, and boxes of printed e-mails and records sat stacked and waiting to be picked up at City Hall.

But no one ever came for most of the documents, which had to do with the city's information technology provider, crime, city budgets and other matters.

"It was an arduous, arduous task for the city. To put everybody through this exercise for no reason, that really galled me," City Attorney Carol Lynch said.