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July
8, 2003
[Sent by Email and FAX: 831-757-5792]
Sally
Reed, County Administrative Officer
230 Church Street, Building #3
Salinas, CA 93901
RE:
LandWatch Participation in Refinement Group
Dear
Ms. Reed:
Thank
you very much for your letter of July 2nd, just received today.
LandWatch appreciates being invited to participate in the General
Plan Refinement Group created pursuant to the Boards motion
on June 24th.
I
plan to be present on July 17th for the initial gathering of the
Refinement Group. If this group moves forward, and if LandWatch
decides to continue its participation, I will be the primary representative
for LandWatch. Our Deputy Director, Chris Fitz, may serve as an
alternate for me, if thats needed. Contact information
for both of us is listed below:
Gary
A. Patton, Executive Director
LandWatch Monterey County
Box 1876, Salinas, CA 93902
Website: www.landwatch.org
Telephone: 831-422-9390, Ext. 10
FAX: 831-422-9391 |
Christopher
Fitz, Deputy Director
LandWatch Monterey County
Box 1876, Salinas, CA 93902
Website: www.landwatch.org
Telephone: 831-422-9390, Ext. 12
FAX: 831-422-9391 |
The
LandWatch Board of Directors, which decides how the LandWatch staff
spends its time, has not yet had a chance to discuss whether or
not the Board wants LandWatch to participate in the Refinement Group
process. If the deliberations of the Refinement Group will be conducted
according to the motion adopted by the Board of Supervisors, I will
certainly recommend that the LandWatch Board authorize our participation.
I will not, however, recommend that LandWatch participate in any
effort that is aimed at supplanting the public process that we have
so strongly supported in connection with the General Plan Update.
My letter to the Board, and my testimony on June 24th, was quite
clear on thisat least I hope so.
In
view of LandWatchs commitment to a public process, I am concerned
about the questions posed in your July 2, 2003 letter. I will come
to the meeting on July 17th prepared to listen to others, and to
discuss LandWatchs views on these questions, but want to document
our position now, to be as clear as possible. I would certainly
appreciate it if you would provide a copy of this letter to the
other organizations invited to participate in the Refinement Group,
so they can be aware of our very strongly held views.
Why
does the Refinement Group exist?
The
group exists because the Board created it, pursuant to Supervisor
Calcagnos very specific, written motion. Creation of the Refinement
Group clearly responded to requests made by representatives of agriculture,
and others who have been most critical of the GPU so far. These
groups have argued that a committee process, in which a "broad-based"
group would get together to discuss the GPU outside of the public
hearing format, could lead to "consensus" on many
of the issues they are concerned about. The motion adopted by the
Board gives these groups an opportunity to prove this point, and
that they are truly interested in finding consensus, and that it's
possible for them to agree to some broadly-supported "refinements"
to the "second draft" document that the Board has now
approved for further public comment and environmental review.
What
results are expected?
The
results expected are spelled out precisely in the motion: "the
purpose of this 'refinement group' is not to challenge the overall
strategy and Guiding Objectives of the Plan, but to focus on specific
policies where there is disagreement, and to seek to resolve them
with specific recommendations for language modifications. Each invited
participant will be requested to identify issues for the group to
discuss.
What
will be done with the groups results?
Again,
the motion is very specific: "The recommendations from the
refinement group shall be made available to the Planning Commission
(and to the Board) and released for public review and comment, so
that the Planning Commission can review the recommendations of the
refinement group, and any public comments on the recommendations"
The recommendations from the Refinement Group, in other words, are
to be directed into the normal public review process, and are not
a substitute for that process.
What
is the time frame? Is it realistic?
The
time frame is also spelled out in the motion. It is linked to the
public process (and it's not completely clear how long that will
take). The group is to begin its deliberations once all of
the necessary changes have been incorporated into the Plan"
[#3 from the motion] and must be completed prior to the commencement
of the hearings before the Planning Commission." I, personally,
DO think that this is realistic. This "refinement group"
idea is either going to be productive, or not. If it is, then we'll
be able to complete our work pretty promptly, because the whole
idea is simply to "refine" specific policy statements,
to make them more broadly acceptable. If the group wants to get
into a complete redirection of the Plan, which I suspect some may
want to do (but that is NOT allowed under the motion) then we'll
quickly see that, and there will be no need for more extended meetings.
Policy
issues that LandWatch would like the group to discuss
Since
I have just received your letter, I do not currently have a complete
list of issues that LandWatch would like the Refinement Group to
discuss. However, I will come prepared on July 17th to provide such
a list to all participants.
Other
Comments on the Refinement Group
I
believe that the list of organizations invited to participate in
the Refinement Group is highly biased in favor of organizations
that have mostly stated their opposition to the current draft of
the GPU. In view of the way the Boards motion was structured,
however, this is probably appropriate. The Board essentially ratified
the public process as it has been carried out so far, and directed
that a second draft GPU be circulated for additional
public comment and environmental review. This is exactly what LandWatch,
and others who have generally supported the GPU, asked the Board
to do.
In
deference to those who did not support this direction, the Board
then established the Refinement Group process, to see if it is possible,
as GPU opponents have claimed, to arrive at something like consensus
on key GPU policy language, by putting both supporters and opponents
together in a non-public hearing setting. This is not something
that LandWatch either asked for or thinks is necessary, but its
what the Board did, and I will strongly recommend that LandWatch
participate in good faith in trying to accomplish that result, so
long as the Refinement Group firmly adheres to the directions of
the motion adopted by the Board.
I
have talked to a number of persons who represent organizations that
will be invited to participate in the Refinement Group. I think
all of the people I've talked to are willing to participate in good
faith, as LandWatch is, but only if certain things are true. Here
is my own list of "only if" requirements:
- The
group MUST follow the Boards motion, including operating
in the spirit of Supervisor Calcagnos remarks (the 40-acre
minimum is NOT for discussion as part of the Refinement Group).
- Also
critical (and really part of the motion, but worthy of highlight),
no negotiations on any of the "refinements" will begin
until there is an actual "second draft" document from
which to work. This group is not a group to rewrite the Plan that
will be circulated to the public. Pursuant to the Board's direction,
it is a group that will seek "refinements" to the policy
statements in the "second draft" that are of concern
to any of the participants. Therefore, it's critically important
that we all work from the same "second draft" document.
- Since
the list is overbalanced in favor of those who have mostly opposed
the current draft of the GPU, it's vital that there be a "critical
mass" of groups that have been generally supportive of the
GPU. Many persons I talked to were worried that a number of the
listed organizations would decline to participate (the Big Sur
Land Trust, the Elkhorn Slough Foundation, etc.). LandWatch will
not want to be in a process in which there are only a very few
groups that have a positive view of the GPU.
- Every
group invited will be able to put issues on the table for consideration.
Again, this is specifically stated in the motion, but I want to
highlight it.
- The
meetings of the Refinement Group must be open to the public--not
in terms of participation, but in terms of allowing the public
the opportunity to observe.
- The
process has to provide that each group will be able to consult
with its membership, constituents, Board of Directors, etc., prior
to final acceptance of any refinements agreed upon in group discussion.
- Finally,
it is absolutely vital that the group operate on the basis of
"consensus." This is what was requested of the Board
by many speakers, and this is what I believe the Boards
motion contemplated. If there is any idea that the Refinement
Group will seek to report out recommendations on the basis of
"votes," as opposed to consensus, then LandWatch (and
I believe other groups) would not want to participate.
Thanks
for allowing me to outline my understandings and concerns about
the Refinement Group, as the process begins. I will look forward
to the meeting on July 17th.
Very
truly yours,

Gary
A. Patton, Executive Director
LandWatch Monterey County
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Memo
on "Refinement Group" to Landwatch Members
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posted
08.02.03
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