Developers Borrow Politicians’ Tactics to Campaign for Projects
With the straw hats, helium balloons, lapel buttons and political slogans, the first day of baseball at the Northridge Little League field last month looked more like Election Day than opening day.
At one entrance, neighborhood residents passed out sodas and lambasted a developer’s proposal to use the league’s fields as the site of a 250,000-square-foot office complex, known as Evergreen Park.
In the league clubhouse, other adults handed out key rings bearing the slogan “We love Evergreen Park and Northridge Little League” and argued that the only way to ensure survival of the fields was to build the complex and rearrange the diamonds.
In between--literally and figuratively--were the youths, unaware that their playing fields had become the turf for a high-stakes game.
It was not an isolated incident. Like scores of developers across Southern California, those proposing Evergreen Park were fighting community opposition with a sophisticated political campaign.
Countering Opposition
Borrowing ideas and highly paid advisers from the world of ballot initiatives and congressional campaigns, Los Angeles-area developers are spending millions of dollars to counter public opposition through the use of opinion polls, direct-mail campaigns, focus groups and “spin doctors,” who try to portray a project in the best light.
“The old-style approach would be to deal with just a couple of council members and to lobby them,” said Hardy M. Strozier, an attorney and planner with the Planning Associates of Costa Mesa. “The person who thinks it works that way today is very naive.”
Instead, developers start wooing neighborhoods long before proposing projects. Later, they may try to persuade elected officials that a project has neighborhood support.
Builders and their consultants say the approach emerged in the San Francisco Bay Area about eight years ago and has spread only recently to Los Angeles.
The approach is more subtle than one highly publicized tactic of area developers to win over opponents--paying them off. Such was the case with the developer of a swank Westside hotel who recently contributed $250,000 to a homeowners group, which had dragged his project through months of tedious hearings, and put another $800,000 into an account to find more parking in the area.
Tell Their Story
Without resorting to such extremes, consultants say, builders can use a carefully planned community campaign simply as a way to tell their side of the story or to find allies among neighbors who might not agree with the established homeowner groups. Often, they say, the effort to reach out to neighbors results in a project being altered to respond to the community’s concerns.
“It’s more a matter of developers getting their side of the story out, whether it be truth or fiction,” said Los Angeles City Councilman Hal Bernson, whose district includes the Northridge baseball fields. “I don’t see anything unhealthy about the current process. It’s good to have dialogue on both sides.”
But others remain skeptical. In some cases, critics say, methods such as polling, mailers and hiring professional organizers are designed to persuade rather than communicate, to distort the real issues in the neighborhood or to present the illusion of support for a project.
Flyers, mailers and door-to-door campaigns, when designed to manipulate rather than inform, are “just terrible stuff and, yeah, it goes on all the time,” said Allan Jacobs, a former San Francisco planning director who is a professor at UC Berkeley.
A handbook issued by the Urban Land Institute, a developer-oriented think tank based in Washington, emphasizes “the importance of pre-battle maneuvering; the gathering of intelligence concerning the enemy’s activity; the uses of deception, surprise and propaganda, and the launching of counterattacks” in winning a zoning change.
The book, however, also counsels builders to stick to the facts and avoid conducting large meetings that use fancy models and slide shows that could give the appearance of a high-pressure sales pitch.
The Northridge dispute, in which Little League opening day was but one chapter, is over a proposal by ASL Financial of Encino to build seven office buildings on 24 acres. Other chapters in recent months have included the use of petitions, lawn signs, bumper stickers, cocktail parties and, some charge, dirty tricks.
Seven Little League diamonds occupy about 13 acres of the site. ASL has promised that approval of the office project would allow the league to stay put. It has also pledged more than $1 million to improve the fields.
Before a November public hearing, ASL had won the support of the Northridge Little League and Bernson’s Community Advisory Committee. At the hearing, however, the proposal met fierce resistance from homeowners, who presented a petition signed by 2,500 opponents. “We were caught unawares,” said Connie Levin, ASL’s project manager.
Framing the Issue
ASL then hired a well-connected West Los Angeles political consulting firm, the Dolphin Group, which immediately set about framing the issue as a battle between the Little League’s interests and those of the homeowners.
Fred Karger, a Dolphin Group executive vice president, is the point man for the ASL project. And he quickly found a local ally in George Hall, 68, a former test pilot and longtime champion of the Little League.
Hall’s name and address have appeared on several letters financed by ASL and mailed to Little League parents seeking support for the offices. Hall is not an employee of Dolphin or ASL, but both have referred questions about the office project directly to him.
Hall said his only interest is in seeing the Little League stay where it is. “I’ve been accused of being a pawn in the hands of ASL,” he said. “But I don’t give a damn about the developer.”
Hall has done research, on his own time, showing that 10 San Fernando Valley Little Leagues have lost fields or been forced to move in the past 25 years, some by neighboring homeowners. That demonstrates that homes and Little Leagues do not make good neighbors, he said.
The developer’s opponents prefer homes to office buildings on the site. The residents, who call themselves the North Valley Homeowners Federation, contend that all the debate over the Little League’s fate diverts attention from such issues as increased traffic and a land use ill-suited to a residential area.
“Using a fine, nonprofit organization deeply involved in the community as a vehicle to achieve personal financial gain is wrong,” said Jack Cox, the homeowners’ chief spokesman and a one-time aide to former Republican Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr.
1987 Agreement Cited
Cox argues that a 1987 agreement giving ASL the right to build 50 additional homes on an adjacent piece of land protects the Little League fields forever.
“They have simply not told the parents of the Little Leaguers what the truth is,” he said. “The Little League in no way, shape or form is in danger from this.”
Cox said dirty tricks have been used against his group, noting that several hundred of its lawn signs disappeared March 14.
On April 1, a man requested permission from the assistant manager of a nearby Lucky grocery store to sign up youths for the baseball league. In fact, the man and Debbie Goff, a Dolphin Group employee, were collecting petition signatures in support of the office complex, according to David Rascia, the store’s assistant manager.
Asked about the incident, Karger said Goff and the man had permission to gather petition signatures.
Edward Blakely, who is chairman of the city and regional planning department at UC Berkeley, said developer campaigns can be constructive if used in an ethical way to explain a project to a community. But he said they can easily be subverted to serve the needs of a developer rather than the interests of the neighborhood.
A common tactic, which Blakely said he has seen several times recently in the San Francisco Bay Area, is to tell opponents that if the project fails, the land might be used for something that they would like even less.
Developers “bring up issues that are scary or frightening to people, which will divide the community,” he said. “When the community is divided, they can win at the Planning Commission because . . . the community is so divided it can’t fight it.”
$200,000 Price Tag
Blakely, who is helping a developer make a case for a $500-million industrial park in the San Bernardino County community of Loma Linda, said his campaign will cost nearly $200,000. Other consultants usually charge from $2,000 to $10,000 a month.
But Los Angeles developer Jack Spound said he has spent “hundreds of thousands of dollars” campaigning for his proposal to construct office buildings near Pierce College in Woodland Hills.
Just as a political candidate might walk the streets seeking votes, Spound spent eight weekends going door-to-door in the neighborhood during 1987 and 1988 trying to build support for his $150-million proposal, known as Warner Ridge. The campaign also included 18 mailers sent to 1,500 nearby residents and dozens of kaffeeklatsches, cocktail parties and other events.
Before going door-to-door, Spound was booed and not allowed to present the merits of the project at public meetings, said Sydney Knott, his Malibu-based public relations consultant. Afterward, Spound revised the project and won the backing of a smaller homeowners’ group, nearby condominium dwellers and the local Chamber of Commerce. Joy Picus, the council member who represents the area, however, remains opposed. A Planning Commission hearing is scheduled on the project Thursday.
Some developers resort to organizing “focus groups” to find out how best to respond to residents’ concerns. And Arnold Steinberg, a Sherman Oaks pollster and political consultant, said polls costing $7,500 to $25,000 are useful for identifying community concerns and preempting sources of attack.
One of the most comprehensive Southern California campaigns for a controversial project was put together by a political consultant hired to build support in Santa Monica, which at the time had an anti-development City Council, for a 194-room luxury hotel now under construction.
The consultant, Richard Lichtenstein, provided substantial poll data that he had gathered earlier to R. E. International, the hotel’s developer. He knew, for example, that residents were concerned about homeless people and drug dealers using the vacant lots where the Santa Monica Beach Hotel was to be built. So he promised the project’s neighbors that, if the hotel were built, 24-hour security guards would be hired.
‘Don’t Have to Tell All’
“No. 1, you never lie,” Lichtenstein said. “You tell people what’s going to happen. Be as honest as you can be. You can be selective about what you say. You don’t have to tell all, but you have to tell enough so that people know what’s going on.”
But to some people, a selective use of facts is itself manipulative. Developer Brian Heller has been accused of trying to shape public opinion by presenting selective facts in an effort to win Los Angeles County approval to build 150 homes on the former site of the Renaissance Pleasure Faire in Agoura.
Heller told the Board of Supervisors that “the community overwhelmingly endorses this project,” citing the strong support of the 50 or so households in an adjacent Medea Valley area.
But those 50 households did not include the strongly opposed Malibou Lake neighborhood about two miles to the south. That neighborhood of about 125 homes uses the same access--Cornell Road--as the project would; most of the Medea Valley neighborhood uses Kanan Road to the west.
“Heller worked that one very skillfully,” said David Brown, a project opponent and vice president of the Las Virgenes Homeowners Federation.
Yet officials, who must make the final decisions, are not always impressed by the campaigns.
“Usually what a developer wants when utilizing organizers and public relations firms is to get something he’s not entitled to,” said Los Angeles City Councilman Zev Yaroslavsky. “If that something doesn’t make sense, all the consultants in the world aren’t going to make a difference.”
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