The letter also includes a copy of their petition & proposal.
It all looks pretty innocuous. The verbiage of the proposed change to law is likely to be almost (if not completely) identical to what the City Council will put forward.
The pernicious aspect of this move is that with the SF 49ers' backed initiative, they can bypass CEQA.
The California Environmental Quality Act safeguards only apply to projects which are put forward by the City Council. So, the City Council could not put this on the ballot until everyone is satisfied with the Environmental Impact Report, proposed mitigations, as well as the City Council's acceptance of certain things that won't be mitigated (e.g., "Yeah, it will be loud & disruptive -- deal with it.")
This Tuesday's City Council (15 Dec 2009) has one agenda item (6B-1) which is basically a proposal for the City Council to step away from performing the due diligence for our city.
From the agenda report:
The Council can consider various options in how they review the stadium related materials on this evening's agenda:
Option 1: Take under review the staff's report dealing with the EIR's required Mitigation, Monitoring or Reporting Program and related ballot measure funding; or
Option 2: Have the 49ers present the initiative petition filed with the City Clerk and briefly address the substance of the initiative. If Council is satisfied with the community initiated petition process then it would not be necessary for Council to take action on the MMRP and related findings. Additionally, if Council determines that the Ordinance portions of the community initiative petition and the Council initiated ballot measure are sufficiently similar, then Council could continue discussion of their ballot measure language and the EIR's MMRP and related findings to a later date in January/February 2010 to allow the initiative petition process to proceed to qualification for the June 2010 ballot.
In other words, Tuesday night, the Council can vote to abdicate their responsibilities.
What can you do?
2 comments:
This stadium is a horrible deal for Santa Clara residents... we'll be paying for it forever.
See the link below for details:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/25/sports/25stadium.html
Wow, this is so deja-vu all over again:
"The teams received sweetheart leases... The team ... has to cover the cost of running the stadium only for game days... The Bengals keep revenue from naming rights, advertising, tickets, suites and most parking."
Sounds familiar? Cross out Bengals, and write in 49ers.
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