Lodge Hill Committee's Grant Frozen
ACTC To Respond To Plymouth Draft Traffic Impact Study
Support Grows for Propect Motors
Amador County – The Sutter Creek City Council today considers a resolution supporting Prospect Motors. The draft resolutions says Amador “communities are seeing higher unemployment, lower tax revenue, business closures, home foreclosures and other harmful effects from the current economic downturn.” It notes Prospect Motors and Amador Toyota sustain 80 jobs in Amador, “produce hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual sales tax revenue” and dealership and its employees’ spending recycles “many times in our local economy.” The resolution says the “federal government is spending taxpayer dollars supporting General Motors and GMAC, the large corporations that can keep our auto dealerships in business.” The resolution concludes that “Sutter Creek strongly supports the continued operation of Prospect Motors, Amador Motors and Amador Toyota; urges (GM and GMAC) to take action to restore the dealerships to operation; and urges our state and federal elected officials to ensure that the financial bailouts intended to help the national economy will also benefit our local businesses and communities.”
Also today, the council will discuss two legal documents for city business with developers. City Attorney Dennis Crabb will bring a “Developer Reimbursement Agreement” for application processing. Crabb in a report says “an area of continuing concern has been advancement of city funds for professional services related to development applications,” and noted new council policy requiring written, advance-deposit agreements with applicants. The agreement “may be complex for small projects,” but will insure costs are “paid for in advance and fully shifted to the applicant.” Another Crabb report will introduce an “Agreement for Indemnity” with Gold Rush Ranch & Golf Resort developers. It says as Gold Rush “moves toward council consideration, it is necessary to have an agreement in place to protect the city against the costs of any legal challenge to the project approvals, should such be given.” The report notes that the “agreement covers only the processing of legislatively based entitlements and extends only until the statute of limitations to challenge such decisions has expired.” Story by Jim Reece (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Lungren Appointed "Ranking Republican" in 111th Congress
County Layoffs Depend on State Budget
Black Ice Causes One-Vehicle Crash
Ione Considers Town Clean-Up Provision
Amador County – The Ione City Council discussed a new city provision that could help clean up the town. City Manager Kim Kerr spent a year-and-a-half studying “administrative enforcement provisions,” to make a city staff member a “city director,” who could issue tickets for violation of city code aimed at cleaning up the town. Kerr said an independent “Hearing Officer” could be used to conduct hearings on citations. Kerr said ordinances in place include “garage sale licenses” and other issues such as running a business in a home without a license. City Attorney Kristen Castanos said provisions were needed to enforce laws. Kerr urged the council to host meetings on educating the public on the new codes. City Councilman David Plank agreed, urging first education, then warnings before issuing citations. Kerr said issues such as yard clean-up could be part of the solution. Having the resident clean his or her own yard would be ideal, but if refused, the city could do it then charge the resident. If the bill went unpaid, the city could put a lien on property.
Mayor Andrea Bonham asked about the interpretive nature of ordinances, such as paint jobs being in “good condition.” Bonham said she would rather see the Rotary get involved in issues such as cutting a “little old lady’s 6-foot weeds.” Kerr said the vacant building section is based on state law. If an order is given in a notice to fix the building, and it is not fixed, the city starts the process of enforcement. For “yard sale licenses,” the city would make a list of those residents who did not sign up for a free license. Ione Police Department would then send them a letter telling of the rule, for one-time violators. Tickets would follow in other incidents. Vice Mayor Lee Ard said in running for office, people said if he gets on council, please clean up the town. Ard said “I think this fulfills that … we are finally cleaning up the city of Ione.” Plank said he would like to see the ordinances in a concise, easy-to-read format. Kerr said staff wants brochures and also a town hall meeting to discuss new ordinances. She suggested forming an ad-hoc committee, which she would like to include people who could look at the ordinance and say “whoa, you are going too far.” She said the issue could be brought before the public in early January and again in February. Story by Jim Reece (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Rare Celestial Event
Plymouth Looks At Forming Design Committee
Ione Discusses Reason For Late Water Reports
Amador County – City Manager Kim Kerr explained how Ione went without reporting samples from its wastewater treatment plant since 2006. The California Water Quality Control Board in a letter said the city could face a maximum fine of $2.56 million, and the Ione City Council discussed the matter Tuesday. Kerr said the fine amount is a “worst-case scenario,” and Councilwoman Andrea Bonham said it seemed to be based on a possible $1,000-a-day fine. Kerr said she did not expect the fine to be the full $2.56 million. Vice Mayor Skip Schaufel asked who was responsible for the failure to submit quarterly reports for 454 days. Kerr said the contracted chief wastewater plant operator, Julio Guerra, was immediately responsible, but she was ultimately responsible for the last 18 months as city manager. The problem spanned 3 years and she said the failure to report was blamed on “a multitude of various excuses … basically, it’s a health issue, it’s this, it’s that.” She said she “never got information to this extent.” Schaufel asked if Guerra ever “talked to you about getting reports on time.” Kerr said that did not happen, though since last February, they had talked about quarterly reports, but she “did not have totality to see that there were issues” from 2006 forward. Kerr said “we are now looking at trying to have everything done 10 days before the due date.” All past due reports had been submitted in the last week except 3, expected to be completed this week.
Councilman Jim Ulm said the board “doesn’t accept excuses” and “we need to have things done … I want it done, whatever it takes to do it. We have to have oversight on this, and ultimate responsibility is the council members’.” Ulm said it’s the city manager’s responsibility to take care of the reporting, and “if nothing is done, I don’t have any problem taking care of that too.” Ard said he saw the city following the process to right the errors. Schaufel said reports were 34 months late and he wanted to see “letters of completion on reports” and receive “a copy of the report that was mailed.” Kerr said reports are on file in City Hall, including every report issued since July 2008, and “you can see the due date and when it was submitted.” Schaufel said: “The people we are contracting with need to be talked to – I don’t want to use the word shot. If I contracted with someone who works like this, they would have been fired a long time ago.” The council directed staff to have a standing agenda item for wastewater plant operation status reports and also to look at options for hiring a contractor for the entire operation of the plant. Story by Jim Reece (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).