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Murphy: Lowe's project brings county to another turning point PDF Print E-mail
Written by Philip Murphy   
Thursday, 21 January 2010
Once in a great while Lake County comes to a turning point in its history, and with the decision whether or not to let the Lowe's project proceed without an environmental impact report before the Clearlake City Council we are at one of those junctures once again.


Supporters argue that the project will bring jobs, competition and sales tax revenue lost to other counties back to Lake County, and the city administrator claims it's the city's only hope to avoid bankruptcy.


These commonly held beliefs have a common thread, as when examined more closely they all fail to pass muster.


This debate isn't about simply whether or not a new hardware store will be good idea, as this project will mean several new businesses will be located at the Pearce Field site, which will likely be more national chain retail stores and fast food restaurants, meaning other local businesses besides lumber yards will get hammered too.


We need to decide if we want to follow the model of many areas across the country where they've replaced their local economy with a generic corporate American version, which leaves one town indistinguishable from another with their cookie-cutter like sameness.


It must also be considered if sending many more millions of dollars out of the county every year to giant corporations forever is better than investing it in our own communities where it gets recycled many times over, creating more jobs and growth.


Local hardware stores have stepped up and done a good job of keeping the losses to Mendocino stores down to a minimum by making big investments in their stores without enormous government handouts, so a new Lowe's store will do little to keep tax dollars here and will mostly just take them out of the county's coffers and cripple or kill off local competitors – meaning less variety and competition.


It seems likely that few if any jobs will actually be created by Lowe's since there will certainly be many jobs lost at their competitors, plus the best-paying management jobs tend to go to people who transfer here, not locals.


For the city of Clearlake there is also the question if they want to spend their last redevelopment dollars available to further relocate their center of commerce to the highway and ruin the chances of the merchants along Lakeshore Drive to survive by reducing travel down that street while completely ignoring the Vision Task Force's plea to make saving downtown a top priority.


It is almost beyond comprehension that spending millions of local tax dollars to help national chain stores bankrupt local businesses would even be seriously considered by anyone here, but sadly that is the case.


If the city was really serious about saving money they would cut the lush benefits for council members, lower the city administrator's pay and hire the sheriff's department to do policing.


It's time to decide, folks: Do we put our fate in the hands of our friends and neighbors on Main Street or do we entrust our future to the people sitting in corporate boardrooms in far-off places?


Philip Murphy lives in Lakeport.

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From local stores
written by Raphael, January 22, 2010
to corporate box stores and impersonal franchises to online shopping, it seems we are loosing the local control of our social frameworks and being run from the top by a "profit at any cost" corporate model hell bent on destroying all competition. It is no longer the free-market but merciless warfare.

When Blockbuster opened in Lakeport, within a couple of years all competition went out of business, which was predictable...and so did non-mainstream choices in videos.
I read a comment that no one complains about the Lakeport Safeway.
Their employees are obviously drilled to make an extraordinary effort to be extremely friendly and personal (to fight off the corporate image), but their prices are outrageous, they raises prices by over 50% overnight on some items while blaming it on the cost of gas or some other cause out their control, and some of their "fresh" produce need decent burials. And all this while they still have some competition!

It seems difficult for the public to fight off a global trend...and for politicians to stand up to the overwhelming and unjustifiable power of the corporate world.
But it appears that the more we are ruled by corporations, the dumber we become, perhaps because we become like cattle when treated like cattle (like mindless and powerless consumers).
I am not sure what the answer is...from the customer viewpoint, I know big box stores are nightmares...try to find an employee who knows anything about any of the products that are sold in them, if you can actually find a body...you might have to start a fire to get some attention!
By the way
written by Raphael, January 22, 2010
for those who believe in the power of "competition", the free-market, etc...
One of the businesses that quickly went under (ultimately under the pretext of retirement) in Lakeport was offering videos that were a lot cheaper to rent than at Blockbuster. But they did not have the inventory, or the big shiny new corporate store with the bright lights, uniformed employees, etc, that seem to attract customers like you-know-what attracts flies...
And blockbuster confidently priced its rentals much higher than the competition right from the beginning, obviously knowing that it would wipe them out regardless.
It's not even warfare, it's a massacre.
Great!
written by Raphael, January 22, 2010
The supreme court just made a 5-4 decision, this morning, to give corporations even more power to influence Federal elections, as if they did not have enough control over government already!...

Corporations can now spend unlimited amounts of money in independent expenditures, in television ads, direct mail and phone banks to specifically defeat a member of Congress who might be threatening them through regulations, etc...
Let's say a politician dares pushing for clean air, clean water, consumers' rights, alternative energy, more efficient cars (or health care reform!), out the door s/he goes when Big Industry put its foot down with hundreds of millions of dollars (literally as much as they are willing to spend) to specifically defeat that individual...
Visit www.fairelectionsnow.org and http://youstreet.org if you want to put a stop to this stealing of our republic by corporate interests.
the fundamental confusion
written by vbrandon, January 22, 2010
In light of all these considerations (and also the fact that moving ahead without an EIR violates state law) it's hard to understand how this project is even being contemplated. The reason became clear during a brief exchange at the marathon meeting on January 7: I suggested that light industry on the old airport site -- as originally contemplated -- would be an excellent alternative, and was told "but it wouldn't bring in nearly as much tax revenue!" There's the confusion: instead of promoting the welfare of the COMMUNITY, Clearlake's leaders seem to think their primary job is to enrich the coffers of MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT. There's a big difference.
You say "...it's time to decide folks"
written by herb, January 22, 2010
But unfortunately the folks aren't getting much of a say in this one. The city's officials have shut down the discussion and the council/RDA majority has made it pretty clear how they are going to vote.
We need to vote these people out of office. It is the only hope of saving this town.
Not a Legal Document
written by thekattb4u, January 22, 2010
Yep,

The current Airport Redevelopment Negative Declaration does not comply with California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) regulations. It is not a legal document.

CEQA regs. stipulate that the decision to either issue a Neg. Dec. or require an EIR can't be made until the entire project has been inspected for cultural resources and those resources have been evaluated for significance (CEQA sec. 21083.2). That means the entire project; not only the actual building site, but the proposed HWY 53 interchange, Old HWY 53 access road, the water improvements, drainage improvements, and proposed wastewater pipeline route.

During cases involving similar projects, the California Courts have held that an agency cannot treat one project as a succession of smaller projects. If a project (such as the Airport Redevelopment Project) requires multiple governmental approvals (such as for a shopping center, an interchange, new wastewater line, new water delivery system, new drainage system, etc.) then the environmental analysis for the first approval must analyze the impacts of the entire project, not just the particular approval at issue (CEQA Sec. 15378c) (Citizens Association for Sensible Development of Bishop Area v. County of Inyo (4th Dist. 1985).

Haven't heard anything about the obvious conflict of interest yet. Years ago (at least 30) it was determined that it was a conflect of interest for a developer to write their own EIR or Neg. Dec. And I have never heard of a developer writing their own EIR or Neg. Dec. and then also issuing themselves their own permit. But this is the case in Clearlake. The City is the developer (or at least has a significant monetary interest in the success of the development), the City has written the Neg. Dec., and the City will be issuing the permit.

I am obviously in the wrong business. I need to get myself hired on as a city manager/planning director/redevelopment agency director of a small town somewhere.
Searching for answers
written by P51Mustang, January 22, 2010
Pierce Field is an excellent place for light industry, but then we'd have more big trucks on Hwys 53, 20, and 29. Lakeport would be a great location for industry, as Hwy 20 is improved to the 101 corridor. Who's opened manufacturing in Lakeport lately? Does our county attend manufacturer's conventions and trade shows to promote Lake County? I believe true community wealth arises from production and manufacturing, not service and retail. Part of the American and global recession is because people were getting rich borrowing against assets, and buying bigger homes, SUVs and TVs, renovating, and redecorating. We should have been restoring our infrastructure, city and town centers, and building high-speed rail links. Banks used to invest in those projects, but since the citizens stopped saving, and started credit card and mortgage borrowing, the investment pool shifted to moving factories abroad so we could have more and cheaper consumer products. As for service industries, if the communities are broke, there's less need for services.

Yes, a big new power mall by the freeway would make our town "look" good, like so many others in California and elsewhere, but it wouldn't "function" any better now or down the road, as one writer pointed out, when $5 gas comes back. The real wages and American standard of living compared to the world is dropping. Cannibalizing existing businesses in favor of giant corporations that profit by importing more from less-developed countries and then taking that profit elsewhere is a no-win for the community.

As for Clearlake redevelopment, thanks for the new pavement overlays, but why isn't Lakeshore Drive walkable, which every "tourist" community is. Why did Rite-Aid and the dialysis center build on Olympic and not Lakeshore? Don't these big out-of-town developers have money for smaller store-front projects that might fill in the empty lots around Olympic and the Austin Park area? Could Austin Park have a performance, dining, and boutique plaza added to part of it that is mostly unused grass? How about the structures around Burns Valley School that are uninhabitable due to sulfur emissions? Wouldn't Burns Valley School make a good centerpiece for the arts? Every good town has a walkable and bikeable center- Clearlake's now avoiding that issue and actually making it unattainable.
Build it and they will come...Just build what we really want.
written by Wckdgrl, January 22, 2010
The issue hear is money. In order to improve downtown Clearlake, there needs to be money spent. Where will this money come from? The City. Where will the city get the money from? Revenue from taxes. What revenue? That's right! What revenue? There is none. Let's turn to redevelopement funds, oh that's right there isn't enough to do any real good. How can we get more revenue? By having more tax dollars spent in city limits. How do we do this? We try and build it or better yet we get someone else to build for us because we don't have the money ourselves. The truth is it takes money and there apparently isn't enough for whatever reason or another. At this point we really need to move forward and make do with what we have. Clearlake needs a lot of help,and for that matter, so does the County, in developing a prosperous long term economic outlook that will benefits it's citizens, and it's citizens need to do what is right for the county, by keeping local dollars local, even if local means the neighborhood big box store. I mean they are employing locals after all. Pearce Airport was purchased years ago with the intention of turning it into a shopping mecca, unfortunatly that has not happened, due to many, many issues, but the truth remains it was intended for developement and that need to occur. I'll be honest I am a supporter of developement of that property, my objection is to the tenent, Lowes. I mean of all the chain stores, a hardware store? ARG! My out of county dollars do not go to hardware, they go to clothes, electronics, dining, entertainment. Why not a Best Buy, Game Stop, Kohl's, Old Navy, Olive Garden, Applebee's, Quiznos, Office Depot? I know I am not alone in my thinking here. Once a regional shopping center is established, and tax dollars are flowing in, then Lakeshore can be rehabilitated. Until then, feel free as a citizen, to open a business on Lakeshore, to help achieve a downtown to be proud of. Remember "Build it and they will come...Just build what we want"
City Council
written by a guest, February 20, 2010
and local control will and are the deriders. That is the only county that matters.

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