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CC 2020-06-09_07 Supplemental No 1_RMEMORANDUM TO: CITY COUNCIL FROM: JESSICA MATSON, DEPUTY CITY CLERK SUBJECT: SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION AGENDA ITEM 7 – JUNE 9, 2020 CITY COUNCIL MEETING COMMUNITY COMMENTS AND SUGGESTIONS DATE: JUNE 8, 20 20 Attached is correspondence received. cc: Acting City Manager Police Chief City Attorney City Clerk City Website (or public review binder) From: To: Subject: Date: Santa Lucia Sierra Club public comment 6/9 meeting: ExxonMobil Interim Trucking for Santa Ynez Unit Phased Restart Project Thursday, June 04, 2020 2:09:41 PM June 4, 2020 Dear Mayor Russom and Councilmembers, At your June 9 meeting, please ask your staff to draft a letter of opposition to Exxon’s Goleta oil trucking project. In the May 19 edition of the Santa Barbara Independent, Katie Davis, chair of Sierra Club’s Los Padres Chapter, described what it was like to live through the Refugio Beach oil spill five years previously. She wrote: “You can’t completely clean up an offshore oil spill. The oil sinks into the marine environment, damaging fragile underwater ecosystems, killing or contaminating fish and smaller organisms that are essential links in the food chain, including the food we eat. The environmental damage can last for decades. More than 300 dolphins, seals, sea lions, pelicans and other birds and animals washed up dead. Many others were found alive and suffering. Oil clogs the blowholes of whales and dolphins, affecting their ability to breathe and communicate. It coats the fur of seals and birds, impairing their ability to float, fly, and regulate temperatures. They die of hypothermia or toxicity or starvation. They go blind or develop birth defects or tumors.” Ms. Davis also described what it was like to live through the 2018 Holiday Fire, turbocharged by global warming, while Exxon pressed for approval of more oil projects that will lead to more oil spills and worsening climate change. (Please read the full text of her article here.) Exxon’s offshore platforms and Goleta processing facilities, major contributors to greenhouse gas emissions on the Central Coast, shut down when the Plains All American Pipeline ruptured onto Refugio State Beach in 2015 and have not reopened. Now, Exxon – in the midst of a pandemic and an oil glut – is seeking a permit to allow up to 70 oil tankers a day to truck oil from its Goleta facility to Santa Maria, and then across the Twitchell Reservoir and the length of the Santa Maria watershed to the San Joaquin Valley on Highway 166, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. In short: From the resumption of offshore drilling to a spike in regional greenhouse gas emissions to impacts on a coastal watershed and the danger to drivers on the 166 (and we saw a small preview of those impacts last March), there is nothing good awaiting the residents of Arroyo Grande and San Luis Obispo County in this dangerous and unnecessary project. For residents of Santa Barbara, a touted $2 million increase in property tax payments to the County General Fund from the restart of offshore drilling is 0.2 percent – one-fifth of one 1 percent – of the county's $950 million annual budget. It cost $257 million to clean up the 2015 Refugio spill. Exxon and other oil companies have made record profits while paying a pittance in local taxes and employing a relatively small number of people. It’s time to end offshore drilling, not bring it back to life. In response to proposals by the Trump administration to dramatically expand drilling off the California coast for the first time in more than 30 years while simultaneously rolling back protections that prevent catastrophic oil spills, more than 80 West Coast communities have formally voiced their opposition to offshore drilling, and more than one million Americans have submitted comments to the administration demanding that we keep offshore oil in the ground and not prioritize the profits of the fossil fuel industry over the interests of our communities and the health of our oceans. The Exxon trucking proposal is an opportunity for your council’s voice to be heard in a significant way on a specific project that would impact the Central Coast. Review of the Environmental Impact Report by Santa Barbara County is scheduled to commence by the end of this month or early July. Now is the time for the county supervisors to hear your voice in opposition. At your June 9 council meeting, please consult with your staff for details on the project and the EIR, and agendize a letter of opposition to the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors as soon as possible. Thank you for your attention to this issue, Andrew Christie, Director Santa Lucia Chapter of the Sierra Club San Luis Obispo, CA 93406 Links contained in this email have been replaced. If you click on a link in the email above, the link will be analyzed for known threats. If a known threat is found, you will not be able to proceed to the destination. If suspicious content is detected, you will see a warning. From: To:public comment Subject:Open Carry in Arroyo Grande Date:Sunday, June 07, 2020 11:25:13 PM This letter of concern is regarding the two occasions in which individuals decided to stand guard over businesses during the protests, holding what looks like assault rifles and a shotgun. According to the article in The Tribune https://link.edgepilot.com/s/801525d0/F9q_UpKVEkyG1_ybbon9RA? u=https://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/local/article243327301.html, it states that police chief Beau Pryor said "it was determined that the business owner/operator was possessing a firearm on the private property of the business, which is allowed under the Second Amendment." Does this also extend to the "volunteers" who were clearly not not the owners/operators of the other businesses that they were sent to defend? Would it apply if they had posted up on the property at the front of the store rather than the roof? I understand the concern for potential looting considering the state of things, however if police were present to check if everything was ok, shouldn't that be enough to deter would be rioters and looters? If open carry is allowed in these situations, it sets a very dangerous precedent. California is obviously not an open carry state and shouldn't become one. When individuals open carry despite the laws in place, it increases the potential of a protest situation escalating unnecessarily to the point of someone getting hurt or killed. In addition, and perhaps most importantly right now, this highlights the very narrative that people are protesting in the first place, that armed white men are ignored at the same time that unarmed black men are killed. It's disheartening to see this surface in our own community. Thank you, Gram Loomis Links contained in this email have been replaced. If you click on a link in the email above, the link will be analyzed for known threats. If a known threat is found, you will not be able to proceed to the destination. If suspicious content is detected, you will see a warning. Thank you, Kathie Walker From: To: Kathie Walker public comment Subject:Re: John Hackleman and The Pit Martial Arts Date:Monday, June 08, 2020 5:05:58 PM Regarding my prior email, please redact the references to Mr. Hackleman's criminal record from my email for the public record to protect him, as I do not have firsthand knowledge of his convictions. My information is based on a message I received from a friend. Thank you. On Mon, Jun 8, 2020 at 4:22 PM Kathie Walker > wrote: Dear Arroyo Grande City Councimembers, I have always known Arroyo Grande to be a quaint, peaceful town. My great-aunt and great- uncle moved here in the 1940s, ran their own local business, Valley Auto Service, and raised their family in their life-long home on Allen Street. Armed men on top of a local business during a peaceful demonstration is not representative of the idyllic town I have known all my life. The actions that were taken by John Hackleman, owner of The Pit Martial Arts and Fitness, are troubling for several reasons including the following: 1. The video message posted by Mr. Hackleman to his thousands of Facebook followers, asking them to show up at his gym at 3:30pm on Friday, was not done in the spirit of supporting the planned demonstration in Arroyo Grande. Instead, he used condescending and inflammatory language, referring to the demonstration as a "kumbaya" moment and directly told demonstrators to "walk fast" and/or "run" past his business, and "don't even look" toward it. 2. The armed men were standing on top of his business as a direct form of intimidation which is not in the spirit of a peaceful demonstration. These actions do not set a good tone for our community and scared a lot of people, including children. 3. I have been informed that Mr. Hackleman has a criminal history which includes violent crimes and, therefore, is not legally allowed to possess a firearm. I question the commonsense (and legality?) of having vigilantes with firearms, on his behalf, within his immediate vicinity. Furthermore, I am appalled at the content of the second Facebook video released by Mr. Hackleman, which intimidates and bullies a female Facebook user, , for using a hashtag to boycott The Pit. He calls upon his followers to "look her up" as he proceeds to intimidate her. I would be absolutely terrified if I was that woman! During the video, Mr. Hackleman also brags that our County Sheriff, Ian Parkinson, was with him that day and mocks in a laughing tone because apparently, law enforcement on HIS side. I am disgusted at the thought of our law enforcement officials taking part in his charade. Although I do not have access to Mr. Hackleman's criminal record, I have been contacted by someone with knowledge that Mr. Hackleman lost his RN license after being found guilty of sexual assault at Atascadero State Hospital. Another woman was a court witness in a separate case involving domestic violence that led to Mr. Hackleman's conviction. If these things are true, any and all forms of threat, bullying, and/or intimidation should be taken extremely seriously. His criminal record also raises concern about his seemingly chummy relationship with local law enforcement in Arroyo Grande and the Sheriff. The optics of the entire situation does not look good at all. I am sickened and embarrassed on behalf of the community right now and urge you to investigate the matter through an independent body that does not involve Mr. Hackleman's "friends" in law enforcement. Thank you, Kathie Walker