Council to review election code and spending
Barbara Diamond
Frank Ricchiazzi questions the honesty of Village Laguna and plans to
demand answers at the May 6 City Council meeting.
“All I am doing, and what other people will be doing Tuesday, is
asking questions pertaining to the agenda item, which is on the
filing of the three PACs [political action committees] in ’01 and
‘02,” Taxpayers Assn. member Ricchiazzi said. “I am not saying
Village Laguna did anything illegal. I am saying its dishonest for a
group to send out campaign literature or newsletters and raise funds
without identifying itself as a PAC, including its ID number.
“There are a significant number of questions raised when a person
reads Village Laguna’s [campaign statement],” he said. “I will
continue to ask the questions until I get answers.”
Ricchiazzi has filed no complaint with the Fair Political
Practices Commission, which polices violations of the state Political
Reform Act, which the council does not.
“I don’t think it’s appropriate to raise this at the council level
and I am not a member of Village Laguna,” said Anne Johnson, who
worked closely with Ricchiazzi to successfully re-elect Paul Freeman
and Steven Dicterow in the 1998 council election. “I am a political
person, I love the political game, but once the election is over, we
have a town to run. I think this is counterproductive and
mean-spirited. You don’t kick somebody when they are down.”
In recent years, Village Laguna has endorsed only one successful
council candidate: Mayor Toni Iseman.
The May 6 council agenda is expected to include a review of the
city’s election code and a definition of PACs and their role in the
last election. The item is sponsored by Councilwoman Elizabeth
Pearson and Councilman Wayne Baglin and will also include a report
prepared by them on spending in the last election as reported by
Village Laguna, the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Assn. and the Laguna Beach
Firefighters Assn.
Mayor Iseman has sponsored a bill for the May 6 agenda that lists
every contribution to the five council members and to Melissa O’Neal,
a council candidate in the 2002 election.
Some Village Laguna members see Ricchiazzi’s questions as a
vendetta.
“Frank is out to get us,” Arnold Hano said.
At a previous meeting, Ricchiazzi contended that Village Laguna
raised money to defeat Pearson, Baglin, Cheryl Kinsman and Dicterow,
who was warmly received as the guest speaker Monday at the monthly
Village Laguna meeting.
In recent years, only two committees have been formed to defeat
specific council candidates: Norm Grossman and Ann Christoph, members
of Village Laguna at the time of the elections.
Village Laguna and the taxpayers association designate themselves
as general purpose committees on their campaign statements. Village
Laguna, involved only in local elections, files the statements with
the city clerk. The taxpayers association files with the county
because it also supports county supervisorial and judicial
candidates, Ricchiazzi said.
Ricchiazzi also has raised questions at council meetings about
Village Laguna’s practice of co-mingling funds spent on political
activities and charitable ones. He showed a pie chart at one meeting
that purported that Village Laguna spent $67,002 of the $70,252
raised during the 2001-02 City Council election cycle on political
contributions, polls, fund-raisers, newsletters and parties and only
$3,250 on charitable contributions.
“His figures are so far out as to be ludicrous,” Hano said. “He
sees everything as a political expense.”
Village Laguna does not claim to be a charitable organization.
“If you ask the average person in town, they will say that Village
Laguna gives thousands of dollars to charity,” Ricchiazzi said. “The
taxpayers not only keep their education fund and their political fund
separate, they keep them in different banks.”
Ricchiazzi’s remarks have had a chilling effect.
The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce and the Laguna Beach
Visitor’s Bureau stopped selling tickets to the Village Laguna Charm
House Tour, a fund-raiser for Village Laguna.
However, the visitor’s bureau has a sign on its door directing
ticket seekers to the nearby Golden Spoon, which is owned by chamber
President Ken Delino. The chamber has a tour poster in its window.
The posters do not identify Village Laguna as a nonprofit or as a
political organization. Brochures are available wherever tickets are
sold that include information that the group spends money to support
local candidates.
“I would say that local organizations took a look at their
association with Village Laguna and decided it is a political
organization and felt it necessary, as nonprofits, to sever their
connection,” Ricchiazzi said. “If my tax dollars [through city
grants] go to the chamber, and I know the chamber is helping a
political organization to defeat my candidates, are we on the same
level?”
No one has publicly used the word, but privately, “conspiracy” is
being whispered.
The whisperers don’t think it is a coincidence that the Festival
of Arts, on whose board are political supporters of Councilwoman
Pearson, denied Village Laguna the use of its frontage for staging
the buses for the Charm House, as has been custom for more than 30
years.
“The first I heard that we would be prevented from using it was in
a letter dated April 10 and received April 15, saying the board had
decided we couldn’t use the premises for a staging area,” Village
Laguna President Ginger Osborne said. “The letter said there was a
previous application for the same date.”
Music in the Park Inc., which is partially funded by the city
through the Arts Commission, applied for the date, although Village
Laguna has held the Charm House tour on same weekend for 31 years and
rents buses from the city.
Village Laguna had never before been asked to submit an
application, nor was it notified that it was now required, Osborne
said.
“I talked to [city Arts Coordinator] Sian Poeschl, who thought
there would be no problem because the tour ends before the concert
starts,” Osborne said. “So we asked that the festival board decision
be revised and we were told to apply next year.”
Ricchiazzi said he won’t stop asking his questions, even if the
council takes no action.
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