Tag: Pete Kremen

Misappropriation in a teapot


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | January 29, 2013

By Ralph Schwartz

I like graft and corruption as much as the next guy, but I’m having difficulty getting excited about the latest controversy in the Whatcom County Council.

Council member Barbara Brenner accused the former executive (Not to name names, but wouldn’t that be Pete Kremen?) of misappropriating a $1.5 million state grant that was supposed to go to the county conservation futures fund by putting it in the parks improvement fund.

The grant covered the cost of the county’s purchase in 2010 of land that became Lily Point Marine Park in Point Roberts. The county paid for the land up front with money from the conservation futures fund — a fund dedicated to the purchase of land in the county for conservation. The futures fund is built up with property tax revenues.

So taxpayers’ money wasn’t returned to the futures fund after the state grant came in. It went instead to the parks improvement fund, which has fewer strings attached.

County Executive Jack Louws said today that the state Attorney General’s Office gave an opinion on this little switcheroo. It was legitimate; however, the county hadn’t formally approved the fund switch.

The council will vote tonight on a resolution to confirm a move that’s already been made. If it decides not to approve the resolution, the executive said he would make sure the money was returned to the futures fund.

No money was misspent, Louws said. And it’s no skin off his nose, whichever way the council votes. “It’s just a political decision at this point,” he said this morning.

Even so, fireworks are expected tonight. Council members Ken Mann and Sam Crawford, on the finance committee, agreed at this morning’s committee meeting to put off debate on the issue until tonight. They expected robust discussion among council members and said the public is likely to speak out on the matter tonight as well.

Will Kremen be blasted for socking money away for his “pet project?” What was this “pet project,” anyway? Will Brenner and Kremen stop exchanging barbs and finally engage in a duel, to resolve their rivalry once and for all?

Stay tuned. All will be revealed tonight. Whatever happens will likely make Page 2 of Thursday’s Bellingham Herald.

4 Comments

Whatcom County fines SSA Marine for Cherry Point road work


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | August 3, 2011

From Stark

Whatcom County Planning and Development Services has announced fines aagainst SSA Marine totalling $2,000 in connection with unauthorized road-grading work at the Gateway Pacific Terminal site at Cherry Point.

The company will also be required to pay an additional $2,400 to cover county staff costs in dealing with the issue.

Beyond that, the company is also being ordered to repair the damaged areas.

Here are the documents issued Wednesday, Aug. 3 by Tyler Schroeder, planning supervisor.

Notice of penalty, clearing regulations violation

Notice of penalty, critical areas ordinance violation

Memo from Tyler Schroeder to Pete Kremen, County Executive.

19 Comments

SSA road-grading work in Carl Weimer’s crosshairs


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | August 1, 2011

From Stark

Whatcom County Council member Carl Weimer has asked the county’s Planning and Development Services director, Sam Ryan, to clarify what’s going on at SSA’ Marine’s Gateway Pacific Terminal property at Cherry Point.

Weimer sent Ryan a letter full of pointed questions, which he has shared on his blog.

SSA Marine is in the early stages of a lengthy public process involved in getting a fistful of local, state and federal permits for construction of a massive new shipping facility to handle trainloads of coal and other bulk cargoes.

Late last week, Weimer called attention to what he estimates to be about 2.5 miles of roads graded through forested areas that he says are at least partly on wetlands. Weimer discovered the work while walking his dog in the area. Now he wants to know if this work was fully compliant with county development regulations, Department of Natural Resources forest-clearing regulations, and federal wetlands rules.

If it wasn’t, what happens next?

I have a call in to Planning this morning — Monday, Aug. 1. Ryan apparently is out of the office until Wednesday, but I’m hoping to hear from someone else in that office today. I have also emailed Whatcom County Executive Pete Kremen, and I also hope to hear from SSA Marine spokespersons. Stay tuned.

32 Comments

UPDATE: County’s attorney says ferry deal won’t change county’s disclosure philosophy


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | July 8, 2011

From Stark

Update: County Executive Pete Kremen and County Council President Sam Crawford have responded to my request for clarification on language in a county ferry deal with Lummi Nation that appears to put some level of restriction on what county officials can tell the public

Kremen replied by sharing an email he sent to Dan Gibson, assistant chief civil deputy prosecuting attorney, who is handling the legal end of the ferry negotiations for the county.

“I also would like an explanation of what it means and why it was inserted,” Kremen wrote Gibson. ” Please contact Mr. Stark tomorrow as early as possible.  Thank you.”

Here is Crawford’s email in response to my inquiry yesterday:

“I just saw this, and don’t know yet how to interpret it.  As you know, the majority of the county council appears to have agreed to the fundamentals of a lease (cost, agreed-upon improvements, length of term, etc), and in the time since has been waiting for the attorneys to present some specific language.

“Now that we have it in front of us, we’ll need to parse the language in the upcoming weeks.  I’ll reserve judgment on any aspect until after we’ve had a chance to read all of this, ask questions, hold a hearing and give the language in its entirety an appropriate amount of careful review and consideration.

“I’m anxious to hear public comment on the lease terms, as it took a long time of negotiations to get where we are today, and now the details can be reviewed and discussed with public input,” Crawford concluded.

As Kremen requested, Gibson did call me, and he downplayed the impact of the language in the “intergovernmental framework agreement. ” He says that language will not change the way that county officials disclose information.

“I don’t see that that language makes any significant shifts in the way that we’ve conducted ourselves,” Gibson said today in a telephone interview.

The framework agreement is part of a draft lease that will be submitted to the County Council on Tuesday, July 12.

Here’s the part that raised my eyebrows yesterday:

“Any potential media announcements or discussions regarding this agreement and the implementation of this agreement will be jointly discussed with the goal of agreement by the parties in advance to ensure that the sentiments expressed represent an accurate and balanced description of the subject matter involved. The parties will discuss foreseeable public events or open meeting where media may be present and/or where communications on the parties’ discussions may occur with other parties — with the intent to avoid surprises if at all possible. Neither party will make a statement characterizinig the position of the other party to any media relating to the substantive issues under discussion. Statements to the media by the individual parties apart from those referenced above should be limited to acknowledgement that discussions are ongoing between the parties with a view towards reaching agreement on issues concerning the project area, or other matters as may be appropriate.”

Gibson noted that in the negotiation of any legal agreement, there is some degree of confidentiality until the process is complete. But he said county officials also recognize that they have an obligation to be accountable to the public.

“We don’t want our statements to the press to undermine the progress we are making,” Gibson said. “Within negotiations, there is a certain tension … We recognize that the public has a right to know … the general process and also, at appropriate times as progress is made, we can say ‘this is what’s happening’ … Our goal is that we will treat each other respectfully in terms of our communications.”

It seems to me that over many months of negotiations, full of stops and starts and seeming impasses and looming deadlines that were extended at the last minute, the system ultimately worked. You and I would both have preferred to have more and better information about what was going on every time three County Council members met in private negotations with Lummi leaders, with millions of dollars and the fate of Lummi Island residents hanging in the balance.

But county leaders never left us completely in the dark. Gibson, County Executive Pete Kremen and County Council President Sam Crawford gave me timely progress reports after each session.

Lummi leaders weighed in as well,  including an extensive briefing for The Bellingham Herald’s editorial board.

County officials were irritated by tribal statements, and vice-versa. Perhaps that irritation prolonged the negotiating process. Too bad. But it didn’t stop the two sides from reaching a deal–proving that you don’t need to negotiate the disposition of millions of dollars in public funds under a total news blackout, convenient as that might be for the parties involved.

Gibson said nothing in the framework agreement would stop county officials from providing the same level of public accountability that they have provided up to now. Let’s hold them to that.

In any event, both the framework agreement and the draft leases themselves will be on the docket for a public hearing on July 27.

Read the fine print by clicking here.

7 Comments

County ferry deal with Lummi Nation includes curbs on public statements


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | July 7, 2011

From Stark

On Tuesday, July 12, The Whatcom County Council takes its first public look at a new lease with Lummi Nation that should keep the Lummi Island Ferry operating for another 35 years. The lease agreement itself contains no surprises at this point, but county officials are also being asked to agree to curb public statements about the deal.

An “intergovernmental framework agreement” that is being brought to the council alongside the lease deal contains this language:

“Any potential media announcements or discussions regarding this agreement and the implementation of this agreement will be jointly discussed with the goal of agreement by the parties in advance to ensure that the sentiments expressed represent an accurate and balanced description of the subject matter involved. The parties will discuss foreseeable public events or open meeting where media may be present and/or where communications on the parties’ discussions may occur with other parties — with the intent to avoid surprises if at all possible. Neither party will make a statement characterizinig the position of the other party to any media relating to the substantive issues under discussion. Statements to the media by the individual parties apart from those referenced above should be limited to acknowledgement that discussions are ongoing between the parties with a view towards reaching agreement on issues concerning the project area, or other matters as may be appropriate.”

I’m not even sure what this means. Does it mean an unhealthy restriction on Whatcom County officials’ freedom to discuss a costly public contract with their constituents via “the media?”

Or is it a reasonable limit on public airing of sensitive talks between the county and a sovereign government?

I have emailed County Executive Pete Kremen and Council President Sam Crawford seeking their understanding of this paragraph. I have also left voicemail for Dan Gibson, assistant chief civil deputy prosecuting attorney. Stay tuned.

5 Comments

Here are the rest of Whatcom Dem endorsements for 2011


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | June 17, 2011

From Stark

Lest we forget, Whatcom Democrats did endorse a number of other candidates at their Thursday, 17 meeting: candidates who were unopposed on the county ballot.

That  list includes two who are running unopposed: Bellingham City Council members Terry Bornemann and Jack Weiss.

They also endorsed candidates who were unopposed for the Dem endorsement, because their opponents did not seek the party’s seal of approval:

  • Steve Oliver, incumbent County Treasurer
  • Pete Kremen, departing County Executive, seeking the District 1  seat on the County Council
  • Christina Maginnis, County Council District 2
  • Alan Black, County Council District 3
  • Incumbent City Council member Seth Fleetwood
3 Comments

David Stalheim files for Whatcom County Executive–UPDATE


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | June 10, 2011

From Stark

David Stalheim, former Whatcom County Planning Director and sometime Politics Blog commenter, has filed his candidacy for Whatcom County Executive, setting up a four-way scramble that also includes State Sen. Doug Ericksen, former Lynden mayor Jack Louws, and Tom Anderson, former general manager of Whatcom PUD.

Incumbent County Executive Pete Kremen is stepping down and seeking a seat on the County Council.

Stalheim left the county job about a year ago to accept a job as block grant program manager for the City of Bellingham.

UPDATE: Stalheim, 52, told me he won’t be taking leave from his city job, and will have to confine his campaigning to evenings, weekends and lunch hours.

He also says he thinks he has a good shot at being elected, based on his experience running the planning department here and elsewhere.

“I’m not doing this to be a politician,” Stalheim said. “I’m doing this to run the government efficiently and effectively.”

He said he has been considering entering this race for some time. It was not a last-minute decision.

55 Comments

Pete Kremen challenges Tony Larson for Whatcom County Council seat


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | June 9, 2011

From Stark

If you read the comments on this blog, you have “known” since this morning that County Executive Pete Kremen would challenge Whatcom County Council member Tony Larson for re-election.

Kremen earlier announced he is stepping down as Executive at the end of the year, mostly because he needed to reduce his stress levels because of hypertension.

When some of our beloved commenters informed us that Pete was already coming out of political retirement, Jared and I had a good laugh and forgot about it, until I made a late check of candidate filings. We will never doubt any of you again.

Pete says he doesn’t see a contradiction, since being a council member will be a lot less stressful and time-consuming than being County Executive.

He said he has no particular beef with Tony Larson. He just happens to live in the same district. I have a call in to Tony.

Details to follow.

32 Comments

Sen. Ericksen confirms interest in Whatcom County Exec’s job


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | May 26, 2011

From Stark

Just got off the phone with State Sen. Doug Ericksen, R-Ferndale. Speaking via hands-free mobile phone on his drive home from the grueling budget session in Olympia. Ericksen said he expects to decide by next week if he’ll be a candidate for Whatcom County Executive.

“I think there’s a pretty good chance,” Ericksen said.

He plans to spend the weekend relaxing with his family before making his decision.

He added that he was surprised when the incumbent, Pete Kremen, bowed out of the race.

57 Comments

Pete Kremen says Pike’s lake move is political…


Written by | The Bellingham Herald | January 10, 2011

From John Stark

…What’s more, the Whatcom County Executive contends that Mayor Dan Pike is worried about the potential mayoral candidacy of former State Rep. Kelli Linville, the longterm Democratic incumbent who lost a close reelection battle with
Republican Vincent Buys last November.

Kremen was reacting to this.

“This seems very contrived,” Kremen said of Pike’s petition to the Washington Department of Ecology.

Kremen contended that Pike’s move may be an attempt to score political points with city residents in an election year at City Hall.

“There is a groundswell of support and indications that Kelli Linville may be challenging Pike for the mayor’s position this year,” Kremen said.

We haven’t had a chance to check this with Linville yet. Remember, this is blogging.

This is the first time we’d heard that Linville might have an eye on City Hall. Up to this point, the big rumor was that she would run for County Executive.

In a recent interview with Sam Taylor, Linville was noncommittal about her political future but didn’t rule anything out either.

62 Comments
Top