‘Green light’ turns red at Dover Shores
Susan McCormack
DOVER SHORES -- A mysterious letter endorsing the controversial “green
light” initiative was circulated within a recent Dover Shores Community
Association newsletter, but no one will own up to who wrote it or how it
was allowed to be distributed.
The board is sending a retraction to all residents, saying “a gross
error” has been committed because the letter was to be supplied as
“information only.”
“We’re not a political animal,” said Byron Romig, board president. “We
did not [vote to] endorse the ‘green light’ initiative. ... All we’re
trying to do is inform the community.”
Romig, who said he did not write the letter, added, “We’re not on either
side [of the issue].”
Homeowner associations are not allowed to endorse political campaigns or
issues.
And supporters of the initiative know this, said Phil Arst, one of the
most vocal leaders of the initiative.
Since he is president of the Community Association Alliance, which
represents about 5,000 families, Arst said he knows that such a group can
not take a political stand.
“In a community association, you can’t speak for everyone,” Arst said.
“While the mass might support the initiative, you just need a few against
it so that you can’t take a position.”
Arst added that he, too, has no idea who wrote the information and the
letter. The letter was signed by “The Dover Shores Board of
Directors.”Romig said the letter was brought to his attention last Friday
when a resident complained to him. The complaint was valid, Romig said,
because individual members of a community board may make endorsements,
but a board as a governing body may not.
The letter stated that the board “feels that we will heavily be impacted
by traffic on Pacific Coast Highway, Dover Drive and Irvine Avenue.”
“Your help is needed,” it continued and encouraged residents to circulate
the petition among their friends and send money to the initiative
proponents in an enclosed envelope.
Proponents are working to get the initiative on the March ballot. If
passed, it would require a majority of voters to approve major general
plan amendments, such as building more than 40,000 square feet of floor
area.
The board’s retraction states that this “incitive form with a cover
letter” is “not endorsed” by the board.
Romig said he doesn’t know how the cover letter got written. He said he
drafted a different cover letter, which was sent to someone in charge of
writing a newsletter for the association and then to the management
offices of the community.
“I don’t know how this thing got turned around,” he wrote to the
management office in asking it to distribute an immediate retraction.
Romig said his only suspect would be a proponent of the initiative who
could have requested that new information be added to his own letter.
But Arst defended his group, saying that he dropped off the petition and
return envelopes to Dover Shores’ management offices and had nothing to
do with the cover letter that was sent out with his materials.
The management offices had no comment.
Romig said the board will definitely discuss the mystery at an upcoming
meeting, but he does not expect the association to take any legal action.
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