Writing Shotgun
MAYOR ON LOOKOUT FOR CONFLICT-OF-INTEREST IN BELMONT SHORE BOND
The Long Beach City Council unanimously took another step Tuesday night toward giving a small group of Belmont Shore landowner/businessmen/kinda-sorta-government officials another shot at a bond issue election that would pave the alleys around their properties and pay former city councilman Frank Colonna $1.5 million for a parking lot that serves his tenants.
But the 8-0 vote to hold a public hearing at the council’s Aug. 5 meeting came with some words of concern from Mayor Bob Foster. “I’m gonna flag this,” he said. “I just want to make sure that the property owners involved who may benefit from this, that there are safeguards—that there’s no conflict-of-interest here.”
The two quasi-governmental agencies that are pushing to put a bond issue to a vote of Belmont Shore property owners this fall—the Belmont Shore Business Association and the Belmont Shore Parking Commission—are headed by Gene Rotondo and Bill Lorbeer, respectively. Rotondo has financial interest in several bars, including Legends, while Lorbeer and his family constitute one of the biggest landholders in the Shore. Additionally, the vice chair of the Parking Commissioner is Kurt Schneiter, another principle landowner on Second Street.
The groups have already taken one run at a bond this year, but their proposal failed in March because it did not get two-thirds of the votes of local property owners. Now they want to try again under recently changed voting rules that would increase the weight of their votes. Instead of each property owner getting one vote per acre, the new rules give each landowner one vote for every dollar they would pay in increased taxes—thus giving the wealthier landowners more votes.
Jim McCabe, a retired Long Beach Deputy City Attorney, voiced his objections to the situation before the council Tuesday night, calling it “inappropriate and highly unfair.” McCabe was following up on a letter of complaint he sent on Monday to Foster and all nine city council members.
The District Weekly had obtained a copy of that letter, in which McCabe laid out the tightly knit politics of Belmont Shore—the relationship among members of the Parking Commission, the Business Association, former Third District City Councilman (and prominent realtor) Frank Colonna and current Third District City Councilman Gary DeLong.
“The Parking Commission is controlled by large landlords and it and the Belmont Shore Business Association behave as though they are of one mind,” McCabe wrote. “The Gene Rotondo-led Business Association rents its offices from a large Belmont Shore landlord, the Colonna family. The Business Association endorsed Gary Delong for election to the City Council. Gary Delong successfully proposed a $500,000 City loan for bar owner Gene Rotondo, a major tenant of [Bill] Lorbeer. Part of the proposed bond issue will pay Frank Colonna $1.5 million so that a Colonna owned parking lot can be used as a parking lot convenient to one of Frank Colonna’s buildings. Colonna is, of course, a large landowner in the Shore. Around and around we go.”
While McCabe was at the podium at Tuesday night’s meeting, DeLong took issue with his characterization that DeLong had “successfully proposed a $500,000 City loan” for Rotondo, insisting that the loan was brought forward and worked out by city staff.
However, minutes of the July 5, 2007 City Council meeting show that DeLong made the motion to approve the loan—$500,000 at seven percent interest for seven years (it was seconded by Second District City Council member Suja Lowenthal). Furthermore, before the council voted DeLong gave the loan a glowing endorsement, calling it “a great thing.”
Tags: Belmont Shore Business Association, Belmont Shore Parking Commission, Bill Lorbeer, gary delong, Gene Rotondo, Jim McCabe, Kurt Schneiter, Mayor Bob Foster, suja lowenthal
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John
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Mike Ruehle
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GoodGovernment 4 all
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GoodGovernment 4 all
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Mike Ruehle
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John
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Mike Ruehle
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