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Council Moves Forward to Secure Funding for Sewer Design Plans

David Reznik of the Malibu Bay Co. said he is interested in working with the city to find "creative ways" to fund the design costs for the proposed Civic Center Wastewater Treatment Facility.

The Malibu City Council voted Monday to continue with the formation of a Community Facilites District and call a special election for the levy of special taxes on select commercial property owners as part of an effort to fund the cost of sewer design plans. 

In a 4-1 vote, the council agreed to move forward, with Councilman Skylar Peak dissenting.

"I don't think anyone of us wanted this, but ... it's the law," Malibu Mayor Laura Zahn Rosenthal said, adding that she hopes the discussion around the issue keeps to the facts.

The city declared its intent to form the district on June 27, the first of many steps needed to finance the design of the proposed Civic Center Wastewater Treatment Facility. The city has already spent $2.6 million on the plans, with up to $4 million more needed for the final designs.

Under a Memorandum of Understanding with the Regional Water Quality Board, the city is required to meet strict timelines to ensure that progress is being made on the design and construction of the sewer. The MOU requires commercial properties in the Civic Center Prohibition Area be connected to a centralized wastewater treatment facility by November 15, 2015.

Only 15 property owners within the CFD would be allowed to vote. If at least two-thirds of the property owners approve the tax, the $6.5 million in bonds needed to fund the design plans could be issued by December.

City Manager Jim Thorsen said two property owners did not sign the waiver, meaning the election cannot be held until Nov. 20.

During a public hearing, David Reznick of the Malibu Bay Co. said he believes property owners support the CFD and hopes the city can stay on schedule.

“I wanted to offer to see if we could find some creative ways to create some funding prior to the vote of the CFD,” Reznick said.

Steve Soboroff, who is developing the Whole Foods in the Park project, said he supports the CFD.

“Come hell or high water no matter what happens, this civic center has to stop polluting the ocean,” Soboroff said, as he was interrupted by protest from the audience.

Malibu City Attorney Christi Hogin said the city does not agree that Civic Center is polluting the ocean based on new science that was submitted to the Regional Water Quality Control Board.

Hogin said the amount of development that is allowed on property in the Civic Center is governed by the city's Local Coastal Program and its zoning ordinances.

"The city does not believe the Civic Center is polluting the ocean, but we are committed to phase one," Hogin said. "It will not be growth inducing for the Civic Center."

Mayor Pro Tem Lou La Monte said the city is not a bank and that property owners, who will benefit from the centralized sewer system, need to pay their fair share.

"I think this particular solution, while we are not positive it is going to work, this $6.5 millionis a way to find out," La Monte said.

Both Councilmembers Joan House and John Sibert reiterated the need to make sure the city does not pay any more for the design costs.

Lester Tobias August 14, 2012 at 12:11 pm
The last sentence in the article is the most important. In the May 30th, 2012 Patch, in an article titled "City Moves Forward on Design Plans for Sewer" the article stated, "Malibu has already paid $2.5 million for ongoing design costs and that cost could rise to $4.5 million to fully cover all of the costs, according to City Manager Jim Thorsen." So 2 1/2 months later the design costs have gone up to $6.6 million. That's a 32% increase in design costs in less than 3 months. I am glad that House and Sibert were hip to this issue, especially if the citizens end up footing the bill, either directly or indirectly.
Cindy Vandor August 14, 2012 at 12:30 pm
Please name names. Who are the 15 property owners within the CFD who are allowed to vote?
Terry August 14, 2012 at 12:38 pm
"the city spends"----thats our tax dollars. that is u and i spending. there is not one residence or house in the civic center. this is something the commercial property owners should be spending. not u and. people living in phase one should insist that
the commercial developers who bring more traffic to our city pay for these improvements. whatever happened to just say "no." thank you skyler
John Mazza August 14, 2012 at 01:37 pm
The city has already spent $2.6 million and will get $1million if the CFD passes. The remainder ($1.6 million) is described as a "contribution:" by the city staff reports. When I asked at the last hearing when we would get that money back I received a "don't worry " answer. Those are our tax dollars not the developers.
Cindy Vandor August 14, 2012 at 04:22 pm
Thank you Skylar for voting NO vote on sewers!
J. Flo August 14, 2012 at 05:16 pm
Why is it that out of town developers are the ones deciding the FATE OF OUR CITY???????? Does anyone in their right mind question where they want to take Malibu?
"During a public hearing, David Reznick of the Malibu Bay Co. said he believes property owners support the CFD and hopes the city can stay on schedule." "Steve Soboroff, who is developing the Whole Foods in the Park project, said he supports the CFD." NO SH*T.
Andy Lyon August 14, 2012 at 05:50 pm
Only Ryan E. and myself spoke against this last night.
WHERE WAS EVERYONE ??? THE PLACE WAS EMPTY !!! Hogin said. "It will not be growth inducing for the Civic Center." YEAH RIGHT. If Christy says so it MUST be true. big joke. And Sibert with his go to argument of what has happened with Los Osos from 1983 and why we shouldn't fight this sewer being shoved down our throats. Well, we are NOT Los Osos and it isn't 1983... I guess in this instance he doesn't want to look at facts or the newest science. State of the art septics are great and every property in civic center should have there own separate system.
Marcia Hanscom August 14, 2012 at 07:35 pm
Thank you, Skylar. Thank you, Ryan. Thank you, Andy. You represented many who either did not know the item was on the agenda or are in summer vacation mode.
Andy is absolutely right about the science. Install sewers, expect sewage spills. We get them all the time in Ballona Creek. STOP THE SEWERS. SAVE THE OCEAN. STOP THE SEWERS. SAVE THE MALIBU COAST.
PCH Commuter August 14, 2012 at 07:57 pm
This is awesome, Malibu will keep wasting money, go bankrupt and cease to be a city. The City of Malibu should think about its financial future, cut back on expenses and not rely on the possibility of future growth to pay its current expenses.
Also, what's this Memorandum of Understanding in which the City agreed to requires the City to meet strict timelines to ensure that progress is being made on the design and construction of the sewer? Why did the City come to that understanding with the Regional Water Quality Board? When Mayor Rosenthal says, "...it's the law", is she referring to adhearing to the Memorandum of Understanding?
steve dunn August 14, 2012 at 10:33 pm
http://dontinject.org/ This is a MUST READ AND WATCH
steve dunn August 14, 2012 at 10:39 pm
Jessica will you please do an article on how we got in this position in the first place. It is time that people understand that this OLD outdated science is being shoved down the cities (many of them) throats.
J. Flo August 14, 2012 at 10:55 pm
If our City attorney is saying on public record > "Malibu City Attorney Christi Hogin said the city does not agree that Civic Center is polluting the ocean based on new science that was submitted to the Regional Water Quality Control Board." then WHY is the City of Malibu caving to old, outdated science? And what can we do as citizens to stop this?
I'm asking - how to stop these sewers? We all know that new septics are as good if not more effective than sewers and they don't pump more water into the ground onto seismic fault lines or send fresh water into a salt-water ocean. As a community we need to come together and do this on our own. Our City, as proven again last night, is not going to stand up for preservation.
Marcia Hanscom August 17, 2012 at 02:22 am
Go to representatives running for Assembly, Senate. They are looking for votes. You are looking for leadership. Which of these candidates will represent the voters of Malibu?
R Y A N August 17, 2012 at 03:25 am
Something about Christi not wanting to cause a train wreck. The whole point is to derail Regional's ILLEGAL train. Case in point: Talk of the State putting a freeway through the center of South Pasadena began atround 1960. Stately homes and tree-lined streets were to be converted into a freeway -- NOT! Fifty years later, THERE IS NO FREEWAY in South Pasadena. The elected councilmembers fought the freeway legally with resources that did not bankrupt that bedroom community next to San Marino. Focus and determination saved the City of South Pasadena from a catastrophe of the State. There will be no freeway in South Pasadena in the next 10 years for sure. Leadership made the difference. The councilmembers there protected the residents.

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Max June 18, 2013 at 09:02 am
Firemen are my true heroes. Not once, but twice, have they saved my house over the years, as wellRead More as where I worked most of my career. We cannot thank them enough for their yeomen efforts and hard work. When they are on the lines, we always provide them with food and drink, which is the least that we can do. We also welcome them when they make their annual inspections of properties here to ensure that homeowners clear their brush. When I was in school, we were visited by Firemen, who handed out badges and booklets on fire safety. I was proud to wear my "Junior Fireman" badge back then, and feel the same today!
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Dear Burt, A very toughing piece about your dear father. If only more fathers these days had theRead More values and character that your father had, this world would be a much better, more caring and loving place. I, too, had a father that was very giving and supportive of me. As both of my parents were holocaust survivors, my upbringing was greatly influenced by their horrific experiences in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Germany: losing 80% of our families, being in over a dozen different concentration camps and facing death and torture continuously. It’s amazing that they were able to lead “normal” lives upon immigrating to the US. Never finishing high school in Poland and not speaking a word of English, he attended night school (Fairfax High), worked during the days in the subcontractor business (he manufactured venetian blinds, screens and louver windows, all from scratch, decades before they were imported), became a citizen (as did my late Mom) and raised a family. They eked out a living (lower middle class), sent my younger brother and I to Hebrew school every day after public school classes, encouraged us to strive in school and somehow supported my hobby of being a radio amateur and my brother in violin studies. My parents always wanted me to become an electronics engineer (probably based on the dream my father had before WW2). Several of his proudest moments were when I got accepted into the physics grad schools of Princeton, Harvard, Caltech, Stanford and UCLA; when I received my PhD from Caltech; when I authored a cover feature article in Scientific American; and when I married my Beshert (soul mate). As a kid, I had a mild connection to you, Burt. I loved rulers, be they the fancy compact metallic ones that retracted by the push of a button, the ones that had a mechanical crank to reel in the ruler or the foldable wooden rulers (that I always associated with a magic trick), which I would use in school, the lab and measuring Ham radio antennas that I built as a kid. All this was influenced by my dear father, equipped with rulers of all kinds, which he used on a daily basis when precisely measuring windows and door frames, manufacturing venetian blinds, screen doors, etc. As a 5-year old, my father would take me to his 2-man shop and, as they worked, I would run around the place with various rulers and magnets in tow, measuring everything in sight and picking up nails and hardware. I guess the only difference between us is that you became a ruler and I became one who is ruled. Happy Father’s Day, Burt!
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