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DESCRIPTION:Supervisors to vote again on Ross Valley flood fee\nStaff Report from 
 http://www.marinij.com/marin\nArticle Launched: 08/25/2007 12:18:53 AM 
 PDT\n\nA new vote on the Ross Valley flood fee is on the Marin Board of 
 Supervisors' agenda Tuesday morning. A public hearing will be held.\n\nThe 
 supervisors voted 3-0 to impose the fee at their July 17 meeting, but 
 County Counsel Patrick Faulkner said there are legal questions about 
 whether the board needed four affirmative votes to meet a two-thirds 
 majority required to approve the fee.\n\nVoting again should answer any 
 potential legal challenges to the board's vote, Faulkner said.\n\nThe flood 
 fee, narrowly endorsed by voters in a June mail-in election of more than 
 15,000 Ross Valley property owners, is designed to raise $40 million to 
 help reduce damage from flooding. The average annual tax will be 
 $125.\n\nThe supervisors' meeting will begin at 9 a.m. in Room 330 of the 
 county Civic Center\n\nCounty Of Marin: Board of Supervisors\nCounty of 
 Marin: Board of Supervisors Board of Supervisors ... BOARD OF SUPERVISORS. 
 CONTACTS. DEPARTMENTS. JOB POSTINGS. MY MARIN. SERVICES & INFORMATION 
 ...\nwww.co.marin.ca.us/bos - 27k - Cached \n\nTown of Ross " Welcome to 
 the Town of Ross\nhome. contact. sitemap. What's New. Town Council. Current 
 Meeting ... The second edition of The Morning After, the Town of Ross' new 
 monthly newsletter, ...\nwww.townofross.org - 9k - Cached \n\nSan Rafael 
 News http://www.marinscope.com/newspointer/index.php\n\nNews on Ross 
 http://www.marinscope.com/rossvalleyreporter/index.php\n\nPro Editorial 
 http://www.marinij.com/circare/html/sca_template.jsp?sortBy=mngi&similarTo=&similarType=find&runSearch=true&type=any&aff=3&query=supervisors+to+vote+again+on+ross&searchbutton.x=36&searchbutton.y=3&searchbutton=Search\n\n#\nMarin 
 Independent Journal - Taxpayer group opposes Ross Valley flood 
 fee\nSausalito-Marin City. West Marin. Other News. Obituaries. Business & 
 Stocks. Weather. Traffic ... Taxpayer group opposes Ross Valley flood fee. 
 Richard Halstead ...\nwww.marinij.com/ci_5657398?source=rss - 54k - Cached 
 \n\nRevolt grows over Ross Valley flood vote\nRichard Halstead from 
 http://www.marinij.com/marin\nArticle Launched: 07/28/2007 10:19:09 PM 
 PDT\n\nA revolt sparked by last month's mail-in ballot to levy a flood fee 
 on Ross Valley property owners is gaining momentum - with one lawyer saying 
 he will file suit and two other veteran government attorneys saying a judge 
 could toss out the election.\n\nSan Anselmo lawyer Ford Greene says he has 
 decided to file suit to challenge the legitimacy of the election. Greene 
 said his suit will assert that the design of the ballot was 
 flawed.\n\nOfficials said the election passed by 65 votes after they 
 disqualified 21 percent of the 8,059 votes cast because the ballots were 
 not signed. By paying for a recount, Greene discovered the measure would 
 have failed by 147 votes if the unsigned ballots were counted.\n\nOf the 
 1,678 disqualified ballots, 730 were marked in favor of the flood measure, 
 while 942 were opposed.\n\nGreen says voters may have failed to sign their 
 ballots because the directions to sign it appeared on the back of the 
 document in small print. No signature on the ballot is required in a 
 typical election.\n\n"It's in the smallest print on the other side, buried 
 among other small print, down at the very bottom," Greene said.\n\nAt the 
 same time Greene is gearing up to sue, the Marin United Taxpayers 
 Association is soliciting\nAdvertisement\ndonations with an eye toward 
 filing its own lawsuit.\n\nAssociation member Basia Crane said the suit 
 would likely contend it was improper to exempt government-owned parcels 
 from paying the fee. Timothy Bittle, director of legal affairs for the 
 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, warned the county before the election 
 that this might constitute a fatal flaw. If the Marin taxpayers association 
 doesn't file its own suit, it might give the money to Greene, Crane 
 said.\n\n"This can use more than one lawsuit," Crane said.\n\nTwo veteran 
 Marin government lawyers - Hadden Roth, a former Marin County Municipal 
 Court judge who now serves as town attorney for Ross, and Douglas Maloney, 
 who served as Marin County's top lawyer at the Civic Center for 30 years 
 before retiring in 1993 - both said the election stands a good chance of 
 being invalidated by a judge.\n\n"If in fact the judge feels the intention 
 of the voters was not to pass this, it's going to be a difficult situation 
 for him or her not to go that way," Roth said.\n\nMaloney, the former Marin 
 county counsel, said, "If I were (the) judge - unless there was something 
 to prevent me from ruling otherwise - I would be inclined to say it isn't 
 fair to do this without giving the people another shot at it."\n\nBoth 
 lawyers cautioned they are unfamiliar with the applicable government 
 statutes involved in the case.\n\n"It's just an intuitive reaction," Roth 
 said.\n\nBut Patrick Faulkner, Marin county's current county counsel who 
 serves in Maloney's old job, said he is familiar with the law on the 
 matter, and said the Ross Valley Flood Control District followed it to the 
 letter.\n\n"Ford can have his opinion on that but I think it's a valid 
 ballot," said Faulkner, the lawyer who would defend the election in court. 
 "He's an opponent of the tax so he's going to look for a reason to attack 
 it."\n\nThe controversial ballot has drawn attention from the Marin 
 Election Advisory Committee, which wants to take a closer look at the 
 voting procedures used. But the committee, which advises the registrar of 
 voters on voter participation and election integrity issues, stopped short 
 of commenting on the results of the election itself.\n\nMarin County 
 Supervisor Hal Brown, who spearheaded the effort to raise funds for flood 
 control, said he fears that nothing will be done to avert future flooding 
 in the Ross Valley if the election results are thrown out and the fee can't 
 be collected.\n\n"If it goes to the courts, then the courts will decide 
 whether we have flood protection or not," Brown said. "It could mean no 
 flood protection."\n\nAbout 1,200 homes and 200 businesses were damaged by 
 the flooding that occurred across much of Marin in the early morning of 
 Dec. 31, 2005, with downtown San Anselmo especially hard hit.\n\n"We were 
 fortunate no one was killed," Brown said.\n\nThe Corte Madera Creek Basin 
 has flooded 14 times over the past 50 years. The flood fee would raise 
 about $40 million for flood control projects in Fairfax, Greenbrae, 
 Kentfield, Larkspur, Ross and San Anselmo, and make the district eligible 
 for millions more in state grants.\n\nBrown said he wasn't sure if the 
 county, which provides the bulk of the flood control district's budget, 
 would be willing to finance another costly election effort.\n\nIt paid MIG 
 Inc., a Berkeley-based consulting firm, $300,000 to oversee the flood 
 election campaign. The county also paid $185,000 to hire engineer Jack 
 Curley to work on the project. The California Coastal Conservancy 
 contributed $100,000 to help cover the costs of a computerized hydraulic 
 model of Corte Madera Creek that identified key bottlenecks that cause 
 flooding.\n\nBecause county officials called it a fee, and not a tax, the 
 flood measure required a simple majority vote for passage, and not a 
 two-thirds majority, as is required under Proposition 13. The vote was held 
 under Proposition 218, which requires local governments to hold "protest" 
 elections before imposing user fees on property owners. Items on a 
 Proposition 218 ballot require only a majority to pass.\n\n"This election 
 was conducted by the Department of Public Works, not our office," Elaine 
 Ginnold, Marin registrar of voters, has noted. "These ballots went out to 
 property owners. They didn't have to be registered voters or even 
 citizens."\n\nState law does not require voters in a Proposition 218 
 election to sign ballots but the law does allow counties to impose 
 conditions such as signatures, which the Marin Board of Supervisors 
 did.\n\nThe controversial ballot was designed by the MIG consultants with 
 help from attorney Samuel Sperry, a Proposition 218 expert with the 
 international firm of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. Curley, the 
 engineering consultant, said Sperry's pay was contingent on voters 
 approving the fee - and he will get paid regardless of any suit.\n\nSperry 
 declined to comment on any possible legal challenges to the 
 election.\n\n"MIG has done many elections like this," Faulkner said. "The 
 ballots have been similar."\n\nThe controversial election has unleashed a 
 tidal wave of furious critics, with many writing letters or e-mailing the 
 Independent Journal.\n\nOne letter writer, Gordy Hall of Fairfax, on 
 Saturday said county supervisors, and particularly Brown, should be held 
 accountable, "including the possibility of recall."\n\nThe only elected 
 official so far to call for a review of the vote, Fairfax Mayor Larry 
 Bragman, said he thinks "there is sufficient cause for the court to look at 
 it because of the rate of disqualifications."\n\nLinda Remy, a health 
 policy analyst for the University of California at San Francisco and a 
 former Marin Healthcare District board member, said the high rate of 
 unsigned ballots motivated her to offer Greene the aid of the Marin Health 
 Fund in raising money for his suit. Since the fund is a nonprofit, 
 donations made to it are tax deductible. Remy is the fund's 
 president.\n\n"When you have a situation where 21 percent of the ballots 
 are invalidated, you've got problem with the way the election was 
 conducted, because that has never happened before," Remy said.\n\nSpeak out 
 on flood fee\n\nControversy is raging in the Ross Valley about an unusual 
 mail-in election for a flood control fee, which the county declared was 
 approved by 65 votes. Officials tossed out 21 percent of the ballots 
 because voters failed to sign them - as instructed in small print on the 
 reverse side of the ballot.\n\nA count of the unsigned ballots indicates 
 the measure would have failed by 147 votes if they were counted.\n\nThe 
 measure required a simple majority vote for passage because county 
 officials said it was a fee and did not require a two-thirds majority vote 
 for passage as required for taxes by Proposition 13. Only property owners 
 were allowed to vote in the flood election, but some property owners, like 
 local government agencies, were exempted.\n\nSupervisor Hal Brown has 
 dismissed ballot critics, saying that unless a judge steps in to invalidate 
 the election, "that means going forward, collecting the property tax" and 
 making flood improvements.\n\nWhat do you think? It's your turn to speak 
 out.\n\nWhat should county officials do? Should the unsigned ballots be 
 counted? Should the election be held again this November? Is it time for a 
 judge to look at the situation?\n\nWrite to: Independent Journal, P.O. Box 
 6150, Novato, CA 94948-6150. Fax 883-5458. Or e-mail to 
 opinion@marinij.com\n\nIn all communications, including e-mail, be sure to 
 include your name, address and telephone number.\n\n#\nMarin says suit over 
 flood fee has no legal basis - Topix\n... a new Ross Valley flood fee 
 followed the letter ... Search within Ross, CA. Find A Topic. Change City. 
 City,ST or ZIP. Search All Topics. Keyword(s) 
 ...\ntopix.net/city/.../marin-says-suit-over-flood-fee-has-no-legal-basis - 
 37k - Cached \n\n#\nRoss Valley Watershed\n... (49.49%) against, property 
 owners in Ross Valley approved the storm drainage fee. ... Event", making 
 it equally as disastrous as the 1982 Ross Valley flood. 
 ...\nwww.rossvalleywatershed.org - 16k - Cached\n#\nMarin Independent 
 Journal - Unsigned ballots rejected Ross Valley flood fee\nSausalito-Marin 
 City. West Marin. Other News. Obituaries. Business & Stocks ... property 
 owners agreed to annual fees for flood control by just 65 votes in 
 ...\nwww.marinij.com/ci_6448544?source=rss_viewed - 57k - 
 Cached\n#\nEngineers and Communities Identify Priority Flood Protection 
 Solutions (PDF)\n... property owners showed strong support for a storm 
 drainage fee to ... City of Larkspur. Town of Ross. Town of San Anselmo. 
 San Anselmo Flood Protection 
 ...\nwww.rossvalleywatershed.org/docManager/1000000187/FactSheet_3.pdf - 
 581k - View as html\n#\nPacific Sun : Deluge protection for Ross 
 Valley\n... City Councilwoman and the town's representative on the Ross 
 Valley flood protection district. ... includes a proposal to charge a 
 drainage fee, assessed to 
 ...\nwww.pacificsun.com/news/show_story.php?id=115 - 43k - Cached\n#\nFord 
 Greene -- Marin IJ 30 July 2007\n... that authorized a new Ross Valley 
 flood mitigation fee may be thrown out and ... in similar elections 
 conducted by the city of Roseville and the Jurupa Area 
 ...\nwww.fordgreene.com/news/marin-ij-2007-07-30.html - 9k - Cached 
 \n\n#\nElection Administration Research Center\nJuly 11, 2007 - Supervisors 
 declare flood fee election official ... Ross Valley property owners voted 
 whether to accept 20 years of user fees to 
 ...\nearc.berkeley.edu/news/2007/July/SupervisorsDeclareFlood.php - 8k - 
 Cached \n\nOther papers that cover Marin\n\nhttp://www.pacificsun.com/ - 
 Independent paper\n\nhttp://sfgate.com/\n\nhttp://www.bohemian.com/ - 
 Independent paper \n\nadd put up by\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/08/27/18443858.php
SUMMARY:Marin Supervisors to vote again on Ross Valley flood fee{Civic Center}
LOCATION:there will be lunch break \n\nend of meeting a guess
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/08/27/18443858.php
DTSTART:20070828T160000Z
DTEND:20070828T230000Z
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