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Sunday, June 27, 2021

Tree Stumps on Horton Street Tell Us How Politics Works In Emeryville

 

The Stumps Are Telling Us How Broken City Hall Is


Emeryville Needs Tree Ordinance Reform 

The Ordinance is Too Weak to Save Trees


News Analysis

Tuesday June 15th 2021 has to go down in history as one of the low points in Emeryville politics.  That’s the date the City Council finally agreed to let the developer Lennar Corporation, kill every public street tree abutting their Sherwin Williams Horton Street project.  But this isn’t just a matter of a developer cutting our trees down.  That’s so common in Emeryville, it’s not even newsworthy.  Why the loss these particular trees is so notable is how revealing of the sycophantic culture at City Hall was the two year circuitous path that led to the stumps along Horton Street.  These stumps show us the how the government works at 1333 Park Avenue — how it works for developers, not for us.

Council members Dianne Martinez and Ally Medina
They're featured on one of the stumps their votes produced.
They steadfastly voted to cut all the Horton Street trees
over the years regardless of the wildly changing reasons
the staff has presented to them.

The final City Council vote to allow the developer to cut all the trees was 3-1 (Donahue dissenting).  The swing vote was delivered by the recently resigned Council member Christian Patz who changed his vote, his last vote as a City Council member incidentally, to allow Lennar to cut the trees.  Mr Patz told the Tattler he changed his vote after Mayor Dianne Martinez publicly announced right before the final vote that Lennar had before the Tuesday meeting, gone to the City staff to obtain a special ‘nuisance’ status for the trees that guaranteed the developer the right to cut the trees with or without the City Council.  Mr Patz said he felt at that point the trees were doomed and that the elected officials should take the heat for killing the trees, not the City staff.

Losing these street trees means a loss for the streetscape friendliness, the shade and cooling they provided and all the other benefits that can be said urban trees provide of course.  But it’s not that collectively we didn’t get anything in trade for agreeing to cut them.  What these stumps on Horton Street have bought us is the realization that our values in Emeryville, as codified by our ordinances, are only as strong as we live them.  As simple as it sounds, our ordinance meant to save our trees, the Urban Forestry Ordinance, can only actually save our trees if we vigilantly guard against developers who would cut them by living the life of the tree appreciators the UFO represents.   

That’s what’s missing at City Hall: tree appreciation.

Regrettable Backdrop

In 2018, Lennar went to City Hall seeking permission from the Planning Commission to kill all the street trees abutting their project.   The staff recommended the Commission permit the killing of all the trees along Sherwin Street claiming the existing trees didn’t match the developer’s desire for a different species and that Lennar had a right to a “unified streetscape” near their project (never mind this is not in the UFO).  After Planning Commission buy-in, the Council let that through and the Sherwin Street trees were all cut. 

Then there was the matter of the Horton Street trees, much grander and more visible than the Sherwin Street trees.  For those trees, the staff told the Planning Commission the Horton Street trees were all “unhealthy” and they must therefore all be cut.  But the Tattler pushed back and proved the City’s own arborist said the majority of the Horton trees were “fair” to “healthy”.  

Former City Councilman
Christian Patz

Frustrated by the vote, he said
'If there's a rule, Emeryville
will get around it'.

Undaunted, the staff, representing Lennar, still in 2018, told the City Council at the April 17th  meeting the Horton trees must all be cut because they would be in the way of underground utilities associated with the project.  Again, the Tattler led the drive to prove this was also false.  But not before the staff told the Council they must vote that night on the fate of the trees.  Council member Patz told the staff he resented the Hobson’s choice being offered that night and said he would therefore vote to save the trees. 

The vote that night was 2-2 with Council member Ally Medina joining Mayor Dianne Martinez in approving the cutting of the trees.  Council members Scott Donahue and Christian Patz voted against the cutting (Council member John Bauters is not allowed to vote on this because he lives too close to the project and state law forbids it).  The tie vote meant Lennar could not cut the trees. 

Backpedaling and still representing the interests of Lennar, the staff then reported the vote COULD be delayed and called for another vote at a later date.  

And delayed it was.  At the September 17th 2019 meeting, the matter of the Horton Street trees was back before the Council.  This time, the staff admitted the trees were not in the way of the underground utilities (save for one) and they had been wrong about that.  An “embarrassed” Council member Ally Medina publicly apologized for her earlier vote to cut the trees.  She said she had believed the staff when they said the trees were in the way of the underground utilities.

Undaunted, the staff, still working for Lennar in 2021, accepted the developer’s claim the Horton trees were “nuisances” before the final Council meeting on the 15th.  The nuisance designation meant that the trees would actually have to be cut by order from the City of Emeryville as an abatement against Lennar (never mind it was Lennar’s idea).  The nuisance designation also meant Lennar would not have to plant equal replacement trees as the UFO mandates.  The final deal was all the trees would be cut and a two inch sapling would be planted for each tree as well as five other small saplings planted elsewhere.

None of this stopped the two Councilwomen from claiming victory for the people of Emeryville.  Council member Ally Medina said the five saplings would make for a “greener and more beautiful city” while Mayor Martinez, told her colleagues she would not listen to their deliberations in the matter of the Horton trees, she said she had already made up her mind to kill the trees before the debate, “Let me indicate for you tonight, how I’m going to vote” she said.  Later, before the 3-1 vote, Mayor Martinez told everyone that despite her 2018 vote to kill the trees and despite her earlier in the meeting admitting she had already made up her mind, she told a shocked crowd, “Before, I was on the side of doing everything we could to save the trees, but now I’m on the side of having the healthiest and most vibrant trees we can”. 

The staff, working in the interest of Lennar Tuesday said the roots of the trees were close to the surface and that’s why they lifted the sidewalks there and that’s why they should be killed (the nuisance abatement notwithstanding).  The two Councilwomen seized that argument and ran with it but Christian Patz was incensed.  He admonished his two colleagues for their votes to kill the trees because there were no new facts presented Tuesday night he said, “The arborist said [back in 2018] these are known facts” he told his colleagues.  

It was after that, the Mayor, feeling the vote could be another 2-2 affair like the 2018 vote announced, “If we deadlock tonight,  the developer has the opportunity to go straight to our city administration and ask for waivers.  I just want to put that out there.”  And then Christian Patz changed his vote to a YES to allow Lennar to cut all our trees, his last vote as an Emeryville City Council member.  

Casting his last vote, Council member Patz, clearly pained, announced "I'm frustrated by the nature of Emeryville, which is, there's a rule, but we'll get around it".  And those were the final parting words to the people of Emeryville from the former Councilman.


The Former Sherwin Williams Horton Street Trees (on left)
The staff, working in the interests of the developer, falsely told the Council the trees
were unhealthy and in the way of underground utilities.  Those arguments weren't enough 
to convince the Council majority.  Only after the staff said the trees were designated as
"nuisances" and legally required to be cut, did Councilman Patz join his two women
 colleagues and vote to kill the trees
.

17 comments:

  1. Street trees primarily cause issues with sidewalks and buildings because like all things that aren't planet-burning urban assault machines racing through our cities, they're crammed into narrowest possible margin of the street, fighting for scraps.

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  2. Great piece. You always seem to know what's best for Emeryville. You should run for City Council. Maybe you won't lose so badly this time?

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    Replies
    1. I won't be running, but thanks. I think I can help better editing the Tattler. I ran in 1997 because the City Council were all pro-business right wing back then and no progressives would step up to challenge them. I did it not to win but to get something going within the progressive community in Emeryville. I ended up coming in fourth but getting the most votes per dollar spent in a field of seven candidates. The Green Party of Alameda County endorsed me as well as two Berkeley council members and progressive leaders in that town.

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    2. Stop wasting your time on this dog and pony blog and get the real power. Two Donahues in the city council? We would be the best town in the USA. That'll show those women not to fuck with the Donahue boys!

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    3. Blah Blah Blah, so good to hear from you again! The Tattler has been quite effective at changing public policy and the culture at City Hall over the years. We have certainly used our space here to take down Council member Donahue and the two Councilwomen. But don’t forget there were women Council members before these two. The Tattler took it to them as well. We take everyone on. So if I were on the Council it wouldn’t be the Donahue boys, more like the Donahue cis gender old white man taking it to the other Donahue and the two women (as well as everyone else). But just so you know, these women and everyone else in power in Emeryville’s government and among the business elite, already know not to fuck with the Tattler.

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    4. But you could do so much more for Emeryville! All those horrible decisions that City Council has made, you would make them. And you would know exactly how to vote because you have your finger on the pulse of Emeryville. I have never seen anybody be so correct all the time in everything they say, so why not be in City Council? I'd vote for you!

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    5. Good point, Blah. The Council HAS made many horrible decisions. And I DO have my finger on the pulse of Emeryville. Since the inception of the Tattler, every candidate the Tattler has endorsed for political office in Emeryville has won. Same goes for Emeryville ballot measures….every one the Tattler has endorsed has won. I literally have been correct 100% of the time..that’s a finger on the pulse. Unlike Rob Arias at the E’Ville Eye who’s candidates and measures he endorsed have almost all lost.
      However, the Tattler did take back one endorsement over the years: Donn Merriam on the School Board. The Tattler endorsed him, he won and then a year or so into his term, we took back our endorsement.

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  3. See? You're correct again. Why not cut the middleman and you run for City Council? And unlike that fake Rob Arias, you actually live in Emeryville! Why not run? Are you afraid of losing again? We need you, you're our only hope. One more Donahue (in City Council)! One more Donahue (in City Council)!

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    Replies
    1. Why not you run, Blah? You can repeal the Minimum Wage Ordinance and the Fair Work Week Ordinance as well as rescind the Measure C affordable housing bonds. The General Plan you could leave be since your Council colleagues don’t like the constraints in there, same as you….you know, the park mandates and all the bike infrastructure stuff. You could once again make this town a developer heaven! Even more than it is right now! Emeryville’s business community needs you! Rob would endorse you and you could help him have his first City Council victory. Run, Blah, Run!

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  4. I don't even know what any of those things mean! That's also why you should run, you're always the smartest person in the room. I couldn't run because I'm not savvy in local politics, but you are! I know you think I'm some person on the inside, but I'm really not. All I am is a person who sees this town going rotten, and our only hope being the person who is constantly correct. Am I missing something? Why not run!?

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    1. OK sure. If you see my name on the ballot, be sure to vote for me.

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    2. I'm gonna hold you to it, Brian. Imagine all those times when you would say that City Council members were wrong, with you on the Council those decisions would now be the right one. Please don't be deterred by that one time you lost, I'm pretty sure you would win this time.

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    3. You can hold me to holding them to account.

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  5. "Them" could be you, and then you wouldn't have to hold them to account. You would be able to correct those horrible decisions to wonderful ones. We would have trees, bike lanes, fire exit doors, etc. You could turn Emeryville around. What a bummer that you're reluctant.

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  6. The REAL Blah Blah BlahJune 30, 2021 at 2:52 PM

    Your critics are onto you Brian. As a cis gender white old man you've been outed as a misogynist and an anti LGBTQ homophobe. Nobody cares about these trees. This is something your kind cares about. REAL Emeryville people care about human rights, not saving some old dead trees. Grow up and start reporting on real news real people want.

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    Replies
    1. This story is very targeted for a specific tree loving demographic. It is not for women or LGBTQ people. This is for people that care about trees: cisgender men (of all races). The part of humanity you reference don't care about trees and so I don't expect they'll be reading it.

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    2. Wow, the real blah blah blah is heated. I'm sure they only represent a minority in Emeryville, though. You would still get enough votes to land in the City Council, I think. 3Blah doesn't know what they're saying, you would outsmart them for sure.

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