I personally have had the best nights of sleep since Bobko announced his oil settlement in the Spring of 2012. Our Stop Oil grassroots movement is a very powerful force that completely influenced the outcome of this election without spending hardly any money. Unfortunately, we have another year to go until November 2014 unless the powers that be can simply make the problem Bobko and Divirgilio created go away.
Showing posts with label Kit Bobko. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kit Bobko. Show all posts
Friday, November 8, 2013
Huge Election Victories For Stop Oil Candidates in Hermosa Beach
I personally have had the best nights of sleep since Bobko announced his oil settlement in the Spring of 2012. Our Stop Oil grassroots movement is a very powerful force that completely influenced the outcome of this election without spending hardly any money. Unfortunately, we have another year to go until November 2014 unless the powers that be can simply make the problem Bobko and Divirgilio created go away.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Why Did The Hermosa Beach City Council Not Read the Mock Jury Trial Transcript Before The Settlement?
A former City Council member’s opinion
Mr. Bobko distorts the truth to make himself look better. He says the city was going bankrupt. This is not true. The City Council only explored conversations with bankruptcy attorneys to assist in the settlement negotiations; we never retained a bankruptcy law firm in a meaningful way except to inform the City Council on the rules and parameters of such an action. The City Council never reviewed the detailed mock jury information because our trial attorneys told us it was not a tool for settlement, merely an exercise for their preparation for the trial. Mr. Bobko said the city was “locked in the embrace of death” by Macpherson. That was in his mind; this was not ever discussed in open or closed session of the City Council. Residents should remember that Bobko’s settlement agreement will cost the city millions even if the citizens approve oil drilling.
Michael Keegan, Hermosa Beach
Monday, August 19, 2013
Don't Re-Elect Kit Bobko For Hermosa Beach City Council
- Kit Bobko
Here Are List of Reasons Not To Re-Elect Kit Bobko . . .
1) Lead Negotiator of Illegal Oil Settlement
2) Disruptive Behavior & Promotion of Personal Political Agendas
2) Disruptive Behavior & Promotion of Personal Political Agendas
11) 15 Ways Kit Bobko's Leadership Is Not Impartial To Oil Drilling
Read these letters to the Easy Reader Editor
Out with Bobko
Hermosa Beach city councilman Kit Bobko’s affection for the limelight has clouded his judgment over and over. His recent press release to the newspapers about the selection of Police chief was wrong. His judgment and his critical thinking process are way out of whack. He seems to be more interested in his name being published in the paper and heard on radio or TV than performing the duties of his city council post. His ego caused the city to retain a public relations firm to the tune of $10,000 a month and the city council has spent over $200,000 on this public relations firm over the last 20 months. Bobko wastes money further by going outside this highly paid public relations group and issues his own personal press release, touting his Mayors position for his pick for new Police Chief.
In doing so he went against city policy, a code of ethics and the established procedure for this city hire. He misleads the public as though his title of mayor was voted upon, which it was not. His need for media attention superseded all common sense. Worse yet, he does not understand that his actions actually cost his favored selection the job. The city manager would have appeared to be a stooge of Bobko’s had he gone with Bobko’s press release candidate for police chief. The reason the city council does not get involved in the selection of department heads is that it would lead to a poor selection process. Bobko knows this. He is currently serving as ceremonial mayor at the pleasure of his four other council colleagues. In addition to a resolution of censure, he should be voted to be removed by his other councilmembers as the ceremonial mayor as soon as possible.
Hermosa Beach has no use for such self-promotion and abuse of the ceremonial title of mayor. In November, the electorate can elect some less publicity oriented persons onto the dais.
Michael Keegan
Pure poppycock
Hermosa Beach Councilmember Kit Bobko’s self promotional letter about how he was instrumental in ensuring “that our City was not overrun on the 4th of July” is pure poppycock. First of all, he alone cannot authorize spending hundreds of thousands of dollars for 50-LA County Sheriff’s Deputies, a “35 foot ‘jail bus,’ and mounted horse patrol.” Secondly, the real reason such significant resources are required is because Bobko and his council colleagues have tolerated a party atmosphere with rampant drunkenness and out of control people for years. Moreover, when the city allows July Fourth to begin with the “Iron Man” event that violates Hermosa Beach’s prohibition of alcohol on the beach, it sets the “agenda” for a day of out of control partying and drunkenness. Residents should ask themselves if a more reasonable solution would be to close all our alcohol serving establishments at 6:00 PM on July Fourth and also cancel the illegal “Iron Man.” That would probably stop the city from being “overrun” on July and cost a whole lot less than the city is currently spending on public safety for July Fourth
Fred Huebscher
Read these letters to the Easy Reader Editor
Out with Bobko
Hermosa Beach city councilman Kit Bobko’s affection for the limelight has clouded his judgment over and over. His recent press release to the newspapers about the selection of Police chief was wrong. His judgment and his critical thinking process are way out of whack. He seems to be more interested in his name being published in the paper and heard on radio or TV than performing the duties of his city council post. His ego caused the city to retain a public relations firm to the tune of $10,000 a month and the city council has spent over $200,000 on this public relations firm over the last 20 months. Bobko wastes money further by going outside this highly paid public relations group and issues his own personal press release, touting his Mayors position for his pick for new Police Chief.
In doing so he went against city policy, a code of ethics and the established procedure for this city hire. He misleads the public as though his title of mayor was voted upon, which it was not. His need for media attention superseded all common sense. Worse yet, he does not understand that his actions actually cost his favored selection the job. The city manager would have appeared to be a stooge of Bobko’s had he gone with Bobko’s press release candidate for police chief. The reason the city council does not get involved in the selection of department heads is that it would lead to a poor selection process. Bobko knows this. He is currently serving as ceremonial mayor at the pleasure of his four other council colleagues. In addition to a resolution of censure, he should be voted to be removed by his other councilmembers as the ceremonial mayor as soon as possible.
Hermosa Beach has no use for such self-promotion and abuse of the ceremonial title of mayor. In November, the electorate can elect some less publicity oriented persons onto the dais.
Michael Keegan
Pure poppycock
Hermosa Beach Councilmember Kit Bobko’s self promotional letter about how he was instrumental in ensuring “that our City was not overrun on the 4th of July” is pure poppycock. First of all, he alone cannot authorize spending hundreds of thousands of dollars for 50-LA County Sheriff’s Deputies, a “35 foot ‘jail bus,’ and mounted horse patrol.” Secondly, the real reason such significant resources are required is because Bobko and his council colleagues have tolerated a party atmosphere with rampant drunkenness and out of control people for years. Moreover, when the city allows July Fourth to begin with the “Iron Man” event that violates Hermosa Beach’s prohibition of alcohol on the beach, it sets the “agenda” for a day of out of control partying and drunkenness. Residents should ask themselves if a more reasonable solution would be to close all our alcohol serving establishments at 6:00 PM on July Fourth and also cancel the illegal “Iron Man.” That would probably stop the city from being “overrun” on July and cost a whole lot less than the city is currently spending on public safety for July Fourth
Fred Huebscher
Here are the people endorsing Kit From His Web Site . . .
- South Bay Chapter of the LA County Lincoln Clubs
- Former Congressman Steve Kuykendall
- Don Knabe, Los County Supervisor
- Michael DiVirgilio, Hermosa Beach Mayor Pro Tempore
- Jack Burns, Hermosa Beach School District Board Member
- George Barks, Former City Council Board Member
- Richard Montgomery, Former Manhattan Beach Mayor
- Bob Holmes, Former Manhattan Beach City Council Member
- Art Yoon, Former Hermosa Beach City Council Member
- Greg Breen, Former Board Member, Hermosa Beach School District
- Bill Sigler, Former Parks and Recreation Commission
- Steve and Susan Blaco
- Danay DiVirgilio
- Doug Gneiser
- Bruce Greenspon
- Dorothy Harley
- Ken Hartley
- Manny Serrano
- Corinne Ybarra
Hermosa Beach Mayor Kit Bobko Offers No Apology & Smart-Ass Response
Bobko Offers No Apology & Smart-Ass Response To His Disruptive Behavior
George Schmeltzer Addresses Bobko Undermining Colleagues & City Manager
Kit Bobko Reprimand By City Council Colleagues For Destructive Behavior
Kit Bobko Offers Censure Amendment "I Not Believe in the Easter Bunny"
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Hermosa Beach Mayor Kit Bobko Would Rather Drill For Oil vs Raise Hotel Occupancy Tax 2%
Raising the Hermosa Beach hotel occupancy tax would could bring in an additional $400,000 for the city, staff estimated. The current rate has been in place since 1990 and is expected to generate approximately $2 million in revenue this year. It accounts for more than six percent of the budgeted income. The TOT tax is imposed on all people staying in a hotel in the city for 30 days or less.
According to the city staff report, the South Bay area average TOT is 11.6 percent. Redondo Beach is considering an increase from 12 percent to 14 percent. Manhattan Beach collects 10 percent, but has the authority to charge 12 percent. El Segundo charges the lowest hotel tax in the area at 8 percent.
Mayor Kit Bobko said that he did not feel that the government had a better idea on how to spend a consumer’s money than the consumer, particularly when it comes to tax increases, and made incendiary remarks comparing it to burning money in a furnace. He championed budget cuts over tax increases.
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Friday, May 31, 2013
KCAL9 CBS Story "Oil Drilling Proposal in Hermosa Beach"
Stacey Armato, Michael Collins from StopHermosaBeachOil.com
No Comment From E&B Natural Resources
No Comment From E&B Natural Resources
E&B did not comment on this story because news publicity is last they want in the Los Angeles area. E&B is attempting to take advantage of a vulnerable town and quietly drill into the Santa Monica Bay without waking up the powerful media groups that will make this a huge National story. The oil drilling proposal is not a story about 18,000 Hermosa Beach residents but more about maintaining the lifestyle of 11 million people that enjoy the cool breezes from Santa Monica Bay. Its about jeapardizing the integrity of thousands of plugged oil wells under homes in Redondo Beach, Hermosa Beach and Manhattan Beach that could leak and explode if they are come under pressure from new hydraulic drilling nearby.
This illegal settlement agreement was constructed by Hermosa Beach City Council Member Kit Bobko and he is obviously nervous in this video above doing his first TV interview on the topic. He will be forced to defend the illegal Hermosa Beach oil settlement it in order to save his political career. Look at Kit Bobko's horrendous environmental voting record. Watch these videos below which show Hermosa Beach City Council hypocrisy, lies, deception & intimidation.
This illegal settlement agreement was constructed by Hermosa Beach City Council Member Kit Bobko and he is obviously nervous in this video above doing his first TV interview on the topic. He will be forced to defend the illegal Hermosa Beach oil settlement it in order to save his political career. Look at Kit Bobko's horrendous environmental voting record. Watch these videos below which show Hermosa Beach City Council hypocrisy, lies, deception & intimidation.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Why I Don't Trust E&B Natural Resources or The Hermosa Beach City Council
Watch This Incredible Speech from Patti Sousa
"Why I Don't Trust E&B Natural Resources or the Hermosa Beach City Council"
"Why I Don't Trust E&B Natural Resources or the Hermosa Beach City Council"
There Is No Way An Oil Drilling Vote Will Ever Pass in Hermosa Beach
Lou Morris of Hermosa Beach says, ""There is no way an oil drilling vote will ever pass in Hermosa Beach.
"So many people have commented on the stupidity of our City Government. Parents give lots of money to the schools each year and there is no way they will sacrifice the safety for oil drilling. Newspapers write at an 8th grade level and we are making this way too complicated."
"So many people have commented on the stupidity of our City Government. Parents give lots of money to the schools each year and there is no way they will sacrifice the safety for oil drilling. Newspapers write at an 8th grade level and we are making this way too complicated."
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Is The City of Hermosa Beach Hiding Oil Related Expenses?
(Please excuse my typos below)
3) Request for clarification as to where/how the City is specifically keep track of the accumulating city expenditures which are not being reimbursed by E&B Natural Resources as related to the likely 2014 oil ballot measure.
When the settlement agreement between the parties was announced in March of 2012, it was indicated that E&B Natural Resources would be paying essentially all of the costs leading to an election for the purposed of determining if the people of Hermosa Beach would lift the City's ban on oil drilling.
Later it was announced that city staff time utilized for all additional work related to preparation for an election would be reimbursed by E&B at an amount equal to 10% of the cost of the EIR preparation. And further it was indicated that E&B would cover the costs of obtaining the EIR, and would pay not more than $50,000 of the actual election costs.
Since then the Council has approved hiring (at the City expense) consultants to do such things as the City's own "Economic Study", and for a "Community Dialog" process (some or much of which "Community Dialogue" will be oil drilling related according to the RFP for that consultant.)
There appears to be a significant amount of staff time being expended daily on various aspects of oil drilling. Thus, if the EIR preparation costs amounted to $800,000 in total, that would mean E&B would only be reimbursing the City $80,000 for all of its cots for consultants, meetings, reports, attorney fees, staff time and on and on for the extraneous activities leading to the oil drilling election.
The people were essentially told by the Council that the oil litigation was over and that their only costs going forward would be one of the following:
- If the electorate approved oil drilling at an election then the City's obligation to E&B would be $3.5M, plus the City's own costs ongoing attorney and staff time indefinitely, plus essentially the giving over to E&B for their use of a parcel of City Yard land presently worth $11M or more. In other words an approximate total city burden of $14.5M plus city expenditures of perhaps $500,000 indefinitely.
- However, if the electorate maintains the ban on oil drilling they'd simply owe E&B $17.5M and that amount could be paid over a period of years, ie. 30 years at "mutually agreed terms".
All need to be reminded that the settlement agreement requires an extremely valuable 1.3 acre city parcel, with a present value of $11M or more if properly zoned, to be handed over gratis to E&B, along with $3.5M cash, if the voters approve lifting the ban on oil drilling.
Further, all need to be reminded that the city and the school district are to be receiving relatively poor share of the hypothetical oil revenue (it should be not less than 50% in total of direct oil and gas sales revenue). This unfortunate fact indicates that past city councils really did give away the store to Macpherson. Why they so stupidly did that is past history.
3-a) The question here is, how is the city keeping track of its expenses month by month, and where can the public and the Council view and be aware of the ongoing escalating expenses in a manner, ie via a spreadsheet tabulation? Such tabulation should clearly indicate the ongoing costs being reimbursed by E&B from their deposits fund, along with the ongoing costs being reimbursed by E&B from their deposits fund, along with the ongoing city expenditures not being reimbursed by E&B from their deposits fund.
See Item 4 Brown Act
See Item 4 Brown Act
Have The Rights of City Council Members To Speak On Their Own Been Muzzled By An Agreement?
(Please excuse my typos below)
4) Request for clarification as to any other ongoing confidential agreements (other than the March 2, 2013 settlement agreement itself) which have also been made by the City's staff and/or the City Council, and/or with any other entity regarding the oil issue.
Has in any manner the rights of any individual council member to speak on their own, or on their constituents behalf, been muzzled via any agreement by the council in closed session or otherwise? This question has not been answered clearly in my and others' view and such is not specified in the settlement agreement, nor do I recall a debate on the agenda item in any public meeting where the council specifically voted to maintain a position of unanimous support to muzzle themselves. Something seems to be missing here and apparently has a lot do with the perception the public has of the Council regarding the entire oil matter? (See article: Did elected officials in Hermosa Beach violate the Brown Act.)
Complicating the issue is that rumors persist that more than one council member has made it very clear to some residents or business operators that they are either supporting or not supporting lifting the ban on oil drilling in Hermosa Beach.
Unfortunately, that all five council member appear to be stonewalling, on the record, the issue of what agreement they perhaps made behind the scenes indicates to many, if not most, that the Council is being disingenuous and playing politically coy, given that the oil drilling issue is far from new in the city.
Further, it is doubtful that even 1 in 20 of the electorate who actually vote on the oil drilling issue will make up their minds one way or the other, basis reading or understanding anything of the nuts and bolts of the EIR's likely mountain of esoteric data, E&B's application, the flood of mailers and propaganda barrages to be likely put out by E&B and others, or the underlying agreements with Macpherson that have been transferred to E&B or others, nor will they perhaps understand or trust the grandiose claims of revenue one way or the other or the safety or lack of safety claims E&B and others are making. Thus,
4-a) Are there any agreements written or verbal other than the settlement agreement as related to the question of lifting the ban on oil drilling, the election, confidential, or otherwise, that the public and press are not distinctly and formally aware, and understanding of? This could include any issues agreed to by the Council members among themselves, such as that they would not individually take announce a public position on oil drilling until "XYZ" occurs, etc. If there are any other agreements please disclose and clarify as best possible what purpose they are for, why they are needed, and when they are made.
4-b) Is each and every council member free at this time to speak his own mind regarding lifting the ban on oil drilling, both inside or outside of a public forum, and/or to the press on the record? Yes or No? If No, this due to a specific binding agreement made by the full council among themselves, and if so why such agreement required when the settlement agreement is supposedly the full and complete agreement?
See Hiding Oil Money Point 3
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
A Cry For Help From More Hermosa Beach Residents
Listen to what Kevin Sousa, Michael Collins, Hany Fangary, Allan Mason and Stacey Armato have to say at the Hermosa Beach City Council meeting on Tuesday, May 14, 2013. They are all speaking to the issue of E&B Natural Resources drilling in the Hermosa Beach City Yard without a County permit.
Hermosa Beach Residents Catch E&B Drilling Without a County Permit
Hermosa Beach Patch "City Cited For Lack of Drilling Permit
E&B Natural Resources Contractors Will Be Fined For Illegal Drilling in Hermosa Beach
The City of Hermosa Beach is among three entities cited by the Los Angeles County Public Health Department--Environmental Health Drinking Water Program for drilling on the public works yard site last Tuesday without the required permits.
Brycon, LLC, a consultant out of Newport Beach, and J & H Drilling Co. Inc. out of Santa Ana were also cited for their participation in the work, which was being done on behalf of E&B Natural Resources to test soil and groundwater for contamination.
In the "Notice of Violation & Order," the city, Brycon and J & H were directed to submit a Well Permit Application by today. J & H must also submit proof of a valid California C-57 Well Water Contractor's License.
All three will also be fined, according to Richard Lavin, chief environmental health specialist with the Drinking Water Program. The fine, due by June 10th, has yet to determined, he said late Tuesday.
Permits are required for any well drilling in the state, he said. His department oversees drilling in L.A. County, with the exceptions of Long Beach and Pasadena.
Former Hermosa Beach City Manager Steve Burrell and now $168,000 consultant to EIR process did not comment. Current Mayor of Hermosa Beach Kit Bobko creator of the illegal oil settlement had no comment. Michael Divirgilio also did not return Hermosa Beach Patch's calls for a comment. Current City Manager Tom Bakaly had no comment but issued the following statement below.
HERMOSA BEACH, CA - Hermosa Beach City Manager Tom Bakaly issued the following statement in response to a request from Los Angeles County for a permit for work at the city’s maintenance yard that is part of the environmental study of the oil production project proposed by E&B Natural Resources Management Corp. (E&B).
“The work at the city’s maintenance yard involved shallow borings into the soil to obtain groundwater samples as part of the information-gathering process for the environmental review of the oil production project proposed by E&B. This is a relatively routine sampling operation for a project of this type, and it required just one day of work and little disruption of the site. While the city staff investigated the need for a state permit for the water sampling process, it was unaware that a Los Angeles County permit was needed for such work.
“We apologize for any confusion this environmental data-gathering process might have caused. The city remains committed to providing residents and voters with thorough information about the proposed oil production project and will strive to communicate more fully in the future. As part of the ongoing communication, the City Council will receive an update at its meeting on May 28 about Hermosa Beach’s General Plan, its Community Dialogue and the environmental review process for the proposed oil production project. We invite all the city’s residents to become involved in these processes to help determine the future of Hermosa Beach.”
As is often the case after a Project Application is deemed complete, the city had asked E&B for additional information for the Remedial Action Plan (RAP) submitted as part of E&B’s Project Application. A contractor for E&B conducted shallow borings in the soil at the maintenance yard to obtain groundwater samples to address soil contamination known to exist on the site because of its historic use as a landfill. This sampling process did not constitute “testing” or sampling for oil at the site: It only sought information about groundwater and is much different from oil drilling.
The information from this sampling will help the city gain more information about the groundwater conditions underlying the site and to better evaluate the effectiveness and appropriateness of the proposed RAP. Groundwater information also is essential for an accurate description of baseline environmental conditions in the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) the city will be preparing to examine all environmental impacts of the proposed project.
The city had a license agreement with E&B that gave the company and its contractors access to the maintenance yard to obtain the samples. The work was completed on May 7. Before the work began, the city had asked and determined that no state permit was required. After the work was completed, the city became aware that the Los Angeles County Public Health Department’s Bureau of Environmental Protection required a permit and that the permit should have been obtained by the geotechnical contracting company hired by E&B.
The city notified E&B of its responsibility to obtain the permit. E&B’s contractor has now filed for the appropriate permit with Los Angeles County.Related Articles:
Hermosa Beach Residents Catch E&B Drilling Without a County Permit
Hermosa Beach Patch "City Cited For Lack of Drilling Permit
Monday, May 13, 2013
Kit Bobko's Long History of Wasting Taxpayer Dollars For Personal Benefit (Letter)
Not pleased with Bobko (Beach Reporter Letter April 17, 2013)
Hermosa ceremonial Mayor Patrick Bobko seems intent on endowing his own shallow worth with titles and accomplishments earned by others.
Bobko received a congressional appointment to the Air Force Academy around age 18. United States taxpayers expended some $500,000 for his four-year military education with expectation Bobko would serve as a career officer. But Bobko evidently scuttled the Air Force after serving the obligatory contract time, opting instead to return to regular college for two years and acquire a “philosophy” degree, followed by yet another two college years becoming a lawyer.
With his Air Force Academy “Captain” title and lawyer title in hand, but no significant private work accomplishment, Bobko then moved to Redondo Beach after obtaining a “go-for” municipal lawyer job, essentially again on the taxpayers’ nickel at the L.A. law firm Hermosa City Attorney Michael Jenkins then worked, while that firm was contracted with Hermosa Beach.
Bobko still works there, however, after working alongside Jenkins, Bobko moved from Redondo to Hermosa Beach and made his first failed run for Hermosa Council.
Recently Bobko used expensive council meeting time to, on his own, have a photo-op presentation ceremony for an El Segundo military officer, who had won an award and actually is making a career in the Air Force, and then further used that officer to ride with Bobko for more photo-ops in Hermosa’s St Patrick’s parade.
Now Bobko is using costly council meetings to “honor” Hermosans Bobko feels have distinguished themselves. It’s more Bobko photo-ops at city expense to self-aggrandize Bobko by using those who actually have some accomplishment.
Most offensive is that after wasting expensive meeting time and taxpayer money for smiley photo-ops in this council-election year, is Bobko’s clock-watching during the actual important business of council meetings.
Howard Longacre
Hermosa Beach
See this other Howard Longacre wrote about Hypocrites Bobko & Divirgilio Rant About Transparency
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Why Is Oil & Gas Corruption Rarely Detected?
Many oil and gas companies protect the identities of their equity holders and subsidiaries. This allows corrupt leaders to hide stolen funds unnoticed. Inadequate financial statements make it easy to disguise corrupt deals, and impossible for any of us to monitor them. Many oil and gas companies don’t publish information by state and city. This allows them to hide the royalties, taxes and fees they pay. But without this information, we can’t hold governments to account for the money they receive.
The entire oil and gas industry spent on average $400,000 each day lobbying senators and representatives to weaken public health safeguards and keep big oil tax breaks, totaling nearly $150 million.
Stolen oil and gas income has terrible consequences and is widespread through the United States and World. It benefits an elite few. But for everyone else, it fuels conflict over resources and health and safety. The solution? Would you trust these people based on their track record? Here is our list of suspicious E&B Natural Resources deals. Submit your anonymous suspicious below under discussion . . .
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
"Economic Benefit" of Oil Drilling in Hermosa Beach in Biased
Stacey Armato suggest the tittle "Economic Benefit" of oil drilling is biased
The economic benefit of oil drilling in Hermosa Beach is not just about the money we going to get and how we are going to spend it. We would like to understand the effects on tourism, real estate and other issues that are effected. We would like to see a more encompassing study on the effects and the costs.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
15 Ways The HB City Council Is NOT Being Impartial To Oil Drilling
Hermosa Beach City Council is Warned You Are Not Acting Impartial
In case you missed the meeting last night here is a summary of Stacey Armato, Barbara Ellman & Chris Prenter warning the Hermosa Beach City Council & City Attorney Michael Jenkins about the lack of impartiality with oil drilling. Here are 15 excellent points they bring up that the City has not address and has simply ignored. Are they acting impartial by not including our due diligence?
1) "Oil Drilling" is the proper term not "Oil Production" which makes it sound like you siding with oil. Lets not "sugar coat" it because it makes it sound like you are siding with oil.
2) Hermosa Beach web site discussing oil landing page is not properly updated. It says you are waiting on the project application but also says you are reviewing it? The project application is not properly displayed on the page. No current information is posted and no way to notify what has changed.
3) The illegal settlement agreement is buried in the site. How about a quick click? Its important component that needs more attention to detail and FAQs.
4) City is encouraging the timeliness of the EIR encouraging a quick and efficient process and the project timeline is of critical importance. Lets encourage the accuracy of the report not the timeliness. Lets not speed up the process unnecessarily
5) As the City Attorney, Michael Jenkins should be going through the settlement agreement that is not properly reflected in the FAQs.
6) Web and FAQs do not say anything about giving the City Yard up which could be valued at $8-10M dollars.
7) Web and FAQs do not not talk about a 35 year lease of the City Yard.
8) If the ballot measure passes and there is no significant oil royalties we are obligated to pay $3.5M within 90 days. How will the City pay for $17.5M if it does not pass? City says on their web site "they will undoubtedly need to issue municipal debt to pay E&B." How do we pay for it and you are scaring the residents by not explaining your plan. What you are implying is that we will need to issue municipal debt and that scares the residents. This is an overstatement because we have $30M in the bank and a $100M in real estate assets.
9) Web site talks about gross percentage sales goes to the City and schools without discussing the Tidelands trust? This is not true and illegal.
10) We would like to see a much more impartial analysis of on the web site because you sit there and have no opinion on the oil project.
11) E&B's propaganda machine has been advertising in the paper before a public hearing has been done is ridiculous?
12) The community of Hermosa Beach does not own the oil. Its out in the ocean and the resources of the City are not oil. Our resources are the beach, ocean, parks, people and health and safety.
13) Steve Layton has a poor environmental track record and no where does the City web site disclose his horrible track record.
14) Oil drilling is banned in Hermosa Beach and does not say this on the web site.
15) The planning application is hundreds of pages and hard to read. Its not easy to read and has not been discussed in public. You have to hire an attorney to understand it.
Here is the public information sharing slide in the video.
This is Tom Bakaly's slide on the public input process. Michael Divirgilio is looking into a tracking document to inform folks about the changes they are making to the web site. There is no way for anyone to know that they are adding any items. Track document changes, adds and edits. The web site is the minimum require to stay up to speed.
Monday, February 25, 2013
$2 Out of Every $3 From Oil Money is Wasted or Stolen
$2 out of every $3 earmarked for development from oil money is wasted or stolen.
How is this similar to what could happen in Hermosa Beach? Storm drains, schools and City infrastructure are all being used as "leverage" to try and convince people that we need the oil money. However, the State of California has a tide lands trust which restricts oil money. Are we supposed to trust the accounting of E&B Natural Resources based on the history of their management and founders?
Sunday, February 24, 2013
George Schmeltzer Easy Reader Letter: "Its Not Hermosa's Oil"
Daily Breeze front page, December 4, 1957. Easy Reader archives, scrapbook
Twenty years ago the issue of oil drilling in Hermosa Beach was put to bed by a vote of the people, or so we thought. Now, it’s back with a vengeance and the residents of this “best little beach city” must do battle once again with a very well-funded and determined oil company.
When I heard about the settlement agreement between E&B and the city my first thought was to weigh its possible financial benefits against the known risks and blight of oil drilling.
After several meetings with E&B’s president, I learned that calculating oil revenues is much, much more difficult than I had supposed. “Where’s the money?” is simple to ask. The answer is anything but. The promise of “several hundreds of millions” much trumpeted in recent E&B ads and letters to the editor is pure speculation.
In a settlement agreement some characterize as “a $30 million dollar loan with the health, safety, and property values of Hermosa’s residents used as collateral,” the City Council decided to give, without bid or review, to a small, independent oil drilling company, the exclusive right to stuff 35 wells, permanent storage tanks, oil production facilities, toxic and highly flammable chemicals, and a large trucking operation right smack down in the middle of the 20,000 residents who make up California’s most densely populated coastal city, and the 11th most densely populated city in the state. Fortunately, they must first obtain the voters’ permission.
“Let’s leave it up to the voters” is a phrase we will hear a lot in the coming months, as if the city and E&B decided that was a good thing to do. They didn’t. Oil drilling in Hermosa Beach is banned. They cannot proceed without a vote to lift the ban.
How can we expect an informed vote when it’s impossible to provide an answer to “where’s the money?” The money presumably being the only benefit the people of Hermosa Beach could ever hope for.
The three most important variables in calculating oil revenues are price, quantity, and location (on-shore of off-shore).
You can go to the newspaper to determine the price of oil, although what you’ll read today is that “crude and gasoline prices will drop through 2014, EIA projects,” (Energy Information Administration.) Quantity and location are a lot harder to get a handle on. If you’re an oil company that means your company takes a risk, but if you’re a small beach side community that means the people take the risk.
Macpherson estimated that anywhere from two million to nine million barrels of oil were available, all of it off-shore. This estimate was made by consultants hired by Macpherson to press his claim that the city owed him $400 million in lost revenues. The more recoverable oil the more money Macpherson could seek. Keep in mind that the City always thought Macpherson’s estimates were inflated, which is supported by his decision to settle. If he really thought he could have made $400 million, why would he settle for $17 million?
Along comes E&B with studies not available to the public claiming estimates of anywhere from six million to 43 million barrels of oil, according to E&B. Two of the studies were conducted by Entera for Shell Oil, and there are other studies. Not only do these estimates disagree with Macpherson’s by a factor of five, they don’t even agree with each other. It’s unlikely that dueling estimates will be cleared up in the coming year. Why? Because it’s in oil’s interest to keep the higher numbers out there and because until five wells are drilled no one will know how much oil there is, if any. But they don’t want the voter to know that. They want permission to drill. Then they can spend the next five years trying to find oil.
The studies don’t even agree on where the oil is. That’s important because Macpherson’s estimate say there’s no oil on-shore. Revenues received by the city from on-shore oil can go into the city’s general fund to meet the everyday expenses of running a city. Revenue from oil recovered off-shore is governed by the Tide Lands Trust, which lays out a very limited number of uses for the money because the oil itself is held in trust for all of the people of California. In other words, it isn’t Hermosa’s oil.
Some of the revenues from off-shore or tide lands oil may be used for things like harbors, fisheries, lighthouses, and piers. But, as far as I know, Hermosa has no plans to build a harbor, a fishery, or a lighthouse, and you can only rebuild the pier so many times every century. We cannot use this off-shore oil money to mend streets, pay police and fire personnel, or spruce up city hall, nor can it be used to help our schools.
The City Council tells us that the settlement agreement “puts the Macpherson matter behind us,” which sounds harmless enough. But the same elected officials weren’t nearly so blasé in their city-wide “Dear Neighbor” letter of September 7, 2010. They wrote about “30 oil wells” and “permanent storage tanks and production facilities” at 6th and Valley Drive “next to the Greenbelt, homes and businesses.” Back then, the City Council warned us about the risks of oil drilling. They concluded, there was a risk of “31 leaks, 2 major releases and 1 rupture over the 35-year life of the project,” and “risk of a methane gas cloud that could cause an explosion.” An they pointed out that “disastrous oil spill[s] . . . can and do happen.” They go on to say that “oil and gas operations in other urban areas have harmed people and property, and other California cities are now taking action to halt further drilling.” In 2010 this City Council wanted to “protect the residents and visitors from a potential disaster [which] was supported by substantial evidence.” Oil drilling, they declared, was “. . . too dangerous to proceed.”
Nothing about this project has changed since the City Council wrote that letter in 2010, but today the council has adopted a veneer of complacent neutrality.
When the subject of oil drilling comes up we’re urged to wait until the EIR is complete, wait until the data is in. But this doesn’t stop the council and E&B from advancing their arguments.
When it comes to costs ask yourself the following:
Who is calculating the cost of real estate transactions already being canceled or postponed because of oil?
Who is calculating the cost of sleepless nights wondering and worrying about the effects of oil on yours and your children’s health in what is supposed to be the “best little beach community?”
Who is calculating the cost of new and refinanced real estate loans denied because of the “environmental threats” to the area?
Who is calculating the environmental cost of hundreds of oil tanker truck trips?
Who is calculating the cost of visual blight? The drilling rig will be 80-feet high, visible from half of Hermosa residences.
Who is calculating the loss of peaceable enjoyment of property when vibrations impact the surrounding area 24 hours a day, seven days a week?
Who is calculating the ‘slippery slope” on the entire SouthBay of a drilling project going forward in Hermosa?
Who is calculating the multiplier effect of a new AES plant joining 30 oil wells to spew tons of pollutants into the atmosphere every year?
If you don’t have the time to study the thousands of pages of data that will be generated by the EIR process just remind yourself of the following: it doesn’t take a PhD, a degree in environmental studies, or a costly report to know that with oil drilling:
Air quality will not improve.
Noise will not decrease.
Particulate matter in the air we breathe, so damaging to our lungs, will not decrease.
Noxious fumes spewed into the air by increased traffic will not decrease.
Dangerous pollutants seeping into the air from stationary equipment, chemicals, etc. will not decrease.
Risk of a seismic event triggered by drilling will not lessen.
Risk of oil spills both great and small in the ocean and on the land will not lessen.
Threats to the health of our children and seniors will not diminish.
Risk of catastrophic fire and explosions will not decrease.
Risks of terrorist attacks will not decrease.
Need for increased police and fire protection will not decrease.
A City Council that cannot enforce the simple provisions of single page-long conditional use permits (CUPs) on bars and restaurants will suddenly be required to enforce a book-length set of complicated regulations on an industry that has shown itself capable of fighting the federal government to a standstill.
It is unrealistic to suppose that a small beach community’s City Council has the expertise to enforce a CUP covering hours of operation, truck routes, safety provisions, health protection, toxic chemical storage, fire control, security, noise levels, etc. on an organization having greater financial clout than the City itself, along with a boatload of attorneys well-trained in the art of evading the very provisions that public safety demands and requires.
If recent history is any indication the City is plainly not up to the task. A City Council that cannot get bar owners to honor their health and safety commitments cannot be relied on to enforce the far more serious regulations imposed on a large oil drilling, production tank farm, and trucking operation.
Let’s also recognize that E&B is “drilling for oil.” All of the fine words, all of the mitigation in the world by E&B will not produce a cleaner, safer environment than we have today. In this case “doing nothing” is the best alternative. E&B is not “recovering petroleum,” or “providing an energy mix,” or whatever the latest green-sounding euphemism is. They’re drilling for oil, one of the globe’s most dangerous, dirty, and risky industrial processes. The next thing you know E&B will be joining the Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council, and Heal the Bay, just before introducing a picture of mating sea turtles into their corporate logo.
If your readers have any questions I can be reached at g.j.schmeltzer@att.net
Thanks for the opportunity to address this very important topic.
George Schmeltzer is a former Hermosa Beach mayor and city councilman and retired Information Technology executive. g.j.schmeltzer@att.net