MM has received some corrections to its piece on the Film Festival: instead of 60-70 people attending, 180-190 people attended. Woo-hoo! Instead of Diamond Jim’s Saloon it should have been reported as Diamond Jim’s Opera House (they have been using this title for concerts/special events). Instead of the short film being title “Zanja” it should have been short film “Zanja Creek,” which is also available on Vimeo (high resolution version). Instead of November 6 being Thursday, it is November 5th. For future locations being a tent on vacant land, with Mill Creek Saturday night red carpet, locations/venues have not been confirmed, (Ed.’s note: Mill Creek was confirmed at the lat C.O.M.E.T./Chamber meeting). Definite locations will be announced soon! Thanks for the updated info, Jeff Bryant. MM
UPDATE ON MENTONE VS. REDLANDS:
Counsel for C.O.M.E.T. (Community of Mentone Empowered Together) filed a Motion for six injunctions against future conduct before Superior Court Judge, the Honorable Donald Alvarez, in July; Redlands’ and LAFCO’s counsel opposed the Motion, on the basis that C.O.M.E.T. should have filed a “reverse validation” action challenging completed projects. Several weeks after the hearing on the Motion, Judge Alvarez, who ruled in Greenspot’s favor on the “Harmony” Project, denied it. C.O.M.E.T.’s counsel then filed a Petition for Writ of Mandate with the Fourth District, seeking an order of that Court that Judge Alvarez change his decision to comply with the law C.O.M.E.T. had provided.
The Injunctions sought Court orders that “1) Redlands cease demanding annexation of a new development to Redlands City Limits in exchange for water or sewer service, so as to take Mentone territory to itself, whether via its annexation “Agreements” or any other methods; 2) Redlands cease enforcement of all provisions of executed said annexation or “pre-annexation” “Agreements”; 3) Redlands cease requiring payment of “Development Impact Fees” (“DIFs”) for services it does not provide, such as fire, police, library, parks and others; 4) Redlands cease requiring payment of “Development Impact Fees” that exceed the reasonable cost of providing the services it does provide, which violates its own adopted professional development fee impact studies, in order to receive water and sewer service; 5) LAFCO cease its violation of Government Code §56133(e)(4); and 6) prohibited any lobbying or other interference by Redlands, LAFCO or any other party against passage of proposed legislation that would prohibit Redlands from demanding said forced annexation from Mentone.” Early in 2019, Senator Mike Morrell had introduced a bill prohibiting governmental entities from demand No. 1 above, but it “died in committee.” LAFCO is alleged wrongfully to have approved Redlands’ alleged extortionate annexations.
Meanwhile, C.O.M.E.T.’s counsel had also filed a Motion for Relief from Government Code section 945.6. The Motion for Relief requested that the Court allow late claims against Redlands for its annexations of Mentone territory, of which Mentone did not know until much later, and alleged compliance with a three-year statute of limitations, imposed for fraudulent transactions. Redlands’ and LAFCO’s counsel opposed, and C.O.M.E.T.’s counsel filed a reply. Several weeks after the hearing Judge Alvarez denied that, as well.
C.O.M.E.T.’s counsel then filed a Petition for Writ of Mandate to the Fourth District Court of Appeal on Monday, January 27. The Writ Petition alleges that LAFCO’s rules, set down by the Legislature, prohibit a City from voting on annexation because the rules only provide for voting by the “affected territory,” i.e., an unincorporated area such as Mentone. This was held in the Supreme Court’s case of “Citizens Against Forced Annexation v. LOCAL AG. FORM., 32 Cal. 3d 816, 187 Cal. Rptr, 654 P. 2d 193 (Cal Supreme Court, 1982),” in which the situation was the reverse of Mentone’s: Eastview wanted to be annexed to Rancho Palos Verdes, which didn’t want the annexed territory but the Court held that it had no vote against annexation. Thus, the Petition states, Measure U, under which Redlands has demanded annexation for more than 19 years, was void from the beginning.
Moreover, the Petition states, the Supreme Court case of “Hansen v. City of San Buenaventura (1986) 42 Cal.3d 1172, 1188-1189, 233 Cal. Rptr. 22, 729 P.2d 186 [held] that a city acquiring the water system of another community was under the same obligation as the grantor to continue the service and supply water to all who may become entitled to it in the future.” Redlands’ and LAFCO’s Opposition argued that a First District case gave Redlands the right to demand annexation in exchange for water [Ed.’s note: Supreme Court law “trumps” a State’s District Court so it can’t be overturned, as Redlands seemed to be arguing and Judge Alvarez’s decision adopted].
The Fourth District’s reputation is that Writ Petitions are often denied summarily (without explanation); if they are not, the other parties have an opportunity to respond and then the Petitioner has another opportunity to argue their case. The decision may or may not be published, depending on the effect on established case law on the subject. If the Petitioner or Respondent is unsatisfied with the decision, they may appeal to the Supreme Court, which doesn’t take every case referred to it for review but often does if it involves conflicts in law between two or more District Court decisions. In the C.O.M.E.T. vs. Redlands case, there may be a conflict between the Supreme Court cases that C.O.M.E.T. relied on and the case Redlands’ and LAFCO’s counsel argued.
A Motion is a written document, filed and scheduled for hearing; oral argument is made at the hearing by the attorneys involved. A Petition for Writ of Mandate can be made to the Superior Court or the Fourth District Court of Appeals, who receives the case after it has been heard in the Superior Court, or it can be made to the Superior Court in the first place. There are strict deadlines for filing lawsuits, motions and writ petitions but the only deadline for the Superior Court Judges is 90 days for a motion. MM
Come Join M.A.C.A., C.O.M.E.T. and the Chamber!
The schedule for the year is just below. M.A.C.A. (“Mentone Area Community Association”) meets in Diamond Jim’s Saloon, behind Mill Creek Cattle Company on the second Tuesday of each month; C.O.M.E.T. (“Community of Mentone Empowered Together”) meets about 7:00 p.m. on the last Tuesday of the month, followed by the Chamber meeting at about 7:30 p.m., in the Rocky Point Church’s fellowship hall. The Chamber is not limited to businesses and costs only $25 per year to join. M.A.C.A. and C.O.M.E.T. are free. MM
2020-MACA-Chamber-meetings-1WHAT DOES THE SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT DO?
According to Richard Corneille, retired from the SBCWCD and president of the Water Board, at the Chamber of Commerce meeting on Tuesday, January 28, the District does not provide water; it comes from Northern California. The District’s job is to capture as much of the River and other sources such as the mountains, as possible and replenishes our water supplies underground. Its main intake is in the Wash just east of Garnet Street and also east of the aggregate mining by CEMEX, etc., which pay the District for doing so The District is comprised of 50,000 acres, 70,000 acre feet of water, only 1,000 acre feet of which would supply one or two homes for a year. (Also, see brochure below)
The SBCWCD purchased 25 acres of the former Lockheed property (now Seven W Enterprises) and its basins; in response to audience members’ questions he said the water quality is constantly monitored for toxins. Lockheed paid for cleanup for years, he stated. The District plans to keep the area in its present habitat and as a buffer, protecting several native animal and floral species (but not Mentone residents, he admitted in response to an audience member’s joke). The San Bernardino Municipal Water District is much larger, he explained. The District also owns and rents a four-bedroom house to Steps4Life, which provides transitional housing for persons, from homeless to their own home, said Corneille. MM
Water-Conservation-Brochure Water-Conservation-Brochure-IIUpcoming Events
Adopt a Highway: February 1 (this Saturday): meet at 7:30 at the Chamber of Commerce office/Noteworthy Realty, 1911 Mentone Boulevard. Everyone is welcome to clean up the Boulevard for a couple of hours. If you haven’t volunteered to do so before, CalTrans requires you to watch a short video, then head out to clean up.
On February 6 at the Redlands Senior Center, 111 W. Lugonia at 9 a.m., the County Aging and Adult Services will hold their once-every-four-years event for years 2020-2024. Everyone is invited to attend and give input as to ideas of what Aging and Adult Services can do for seniors in Mentone. The County department will implement new programs or modify existing programs based on community input.
The Senior Center at the Library will hold its Valentine’s Day pizza party on February 12 from 12-2.
The Chili Cookoff will be on June 13 this year, Mentone’s 123rd anniversary. Volunteers are invited to submit chili crockpots, as well as to coordinate the cookers, the parking or the vendors. To volunteer, call the Chamber office at 909-362-7860.
More on the successful First Annual Film Festival: 60-70 people attended most of the day at the Mill Creek Cattle Company, in the Diamond Jim’s Saloon. Mill Creek provided a popcorn machine, there were 20 entries and a red carpet with the Mill Creek insignia were features. One feature was a short film on the Zanja, which is accessible on Gazebo Gazette’s Facebook page. Awards were trophies and pictures. The 2020 Second Annual Film Festival will be around November 6 for three days, starting with Thursday’s “Meet and Greet,” Friday night and all day Saturday, in a tent on the vacant land next to Hovey Tile (by the Chamber of Commerce sign). Mill Creek Cattle Company will host the Saturday Night red carpet event. More details will come later.
OP-ED
Thanks to Godfreyd, our Crafton Hills intern, you can now click on the links above to go to your chosen page. Way to go, Godfreyd!
Mentone Film Festival 2020
Mentone held its First Annual Film Festival in November 2019. The Second Annual Film Festival will take place later this year. Here are some of the attendees. Click on the link/logo below to see information from the 2019 Festival.
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Welcome to our new Intern, Godfreyd Tuazon, an honors student at Crafton Hills College. He works three days a week as well as attending classes in the IT field and we are delighted that he is helping us get the website working even better in his “spare time.” We have had four college interns thus far, and they have helped us a lot. MM is sorry we haven’t been able to post anything for months after starting the website because of a lack of help and feels very bad that we couldn’t upload the posters advertising the wonderful events we have in Mentone in the summer and fall. Hopefully, it won’t take long to be able to do so. We are also going to be able to notify everyone whose e-mail addresses we have of news so they can check out the site. We also need to put up permanent signs around town, advertising MentoneMatters.org., so everyone will know what’s going on in town. Without a local newspaper since 1943, and some of us not wanting to read about Redlands, it is hard to “get the word out” as to what is going on. The Reynolds’ (see “Interested in Mentone History?” elsewhere) have copies of Grandfather Reynolds’ newspapers and share tidbits with MM, which hopes to have more of them on the site in the future, once this editor/publisher learns how to upload photo-type items. MM is also wondering: If State Senators can term out why can’t we have U.S. Senators and Representatives time out, too? One feels that sometimes they do not have their constituents’ best interests at heart, but just politics.
Have a comment to make? Send it and if it’s decent, we’ll publish it.
MACA news
Rachel Chilly, Sheriff’s Department spokesperson: In December there were 12 arrests: 3 good felonies. On December 30, there was a incident on the Boulevard at Chrysolite; a “man with a gun” = high priority for the Sheriff’s Department. There were several different versions, however. someone shot into the air but no one was hit, apparently [Ed.’s note: what goes up can come down and people have been shot a long ways away by gunshots up in the air]. Someone reported a suspicious person sitting in a car near a school, however, it turned out they were there legitimately. Audience members asked about mail theft: the Department says the problem is more prevalent during the holidays and tax season. By 9 p.m., it is suggested, make sure your mailbox is emptied, lock gates, lock your cars, turn on lights, put everything away. The U.S.P.S. has a program, called Informed Delivery, where they will e-mail you what they get for you. If you see someone stealing mail, take down the license number, get the make and model, a description of the vehicle they are driving and call the Sheriff. The Feds will prosecute large, documented cases, she said. Early in the month people are stealing money to buy drugs; at the end of the month they are seeking to replace their benefits, which have run out. Audience members also talked about people driving while on their phones; the Sheriff will ask for more CHP enforcement. MACA will apply to have the Second Annual Film Festival like the one last Fall. Adopt a highway is the First Saturday of February, meeting 7:00-7:30 at the Chamber office/Noteworthy Realty, on the Boulevard. Lloyd White, a Beaumont City Council member and Republican, is running for Senator Morrell’s seat, which he is losing because of term limits. As for the “pot shop” on the Boulevard, it alleges a religious base so the Department is still working on it. Counsel for COMET (Community of Mentone Empowered Together”) spoke for a few minutes, bringing everyone up to speed as to the progress of the case against Redlands for forcing annexation in exchange for water and – where available – sewer services to new developments. Counsel had filed a Motion for Injunction, which she explained is a document that is filed, opposed in writing and then a reply brief, then a hearing by Judge Donald Alvarez, the same judge who decided on the “Harmony Project” across the River. The Motion sought several injunctions – orders prohibiting Redlands from demanding the annexations, enforcing the annexation agreements already signed, and several others. The judge issued his decision later, denying the requested injunctions, which COMET’s counsel briefed to the Court of Appeal. The Court denied COMET’s request to waive fees. COMET’s counsel had also filed a Motion for Relief from the late filing of claims for damages to Redlands. Defendants Redlands and LAFCO (Local Area Formation Commission) opposed and COMET replied. The Judge also denied that Motion.
DRAIN THE SWAMP!
At the M.A.C.A. (Mentone Area Community Association) meeting last Tuesday, a representative of the County Public Health Department introduced the Aedes mosquito (see brochure below). It is very small, she said, and can breed in very little water. It lays its eggs on the sides of containers and the eggs can lie dormant for up to a year. Very hot and cold weather affect it but it does well in temperate weather. It has a 7-day life stage. Only the females bite and they are attracted to heat, light and body odor – even if we can’t detect it! She continued that it bites mostly between the knee and ankles and itches really bad; it feeds in stages, rather than all at once. It also feeds in the daytime and can even come down the fireplace. The Zika virus it carries can be transmitted to unborn babies, through transfusions and when people go out of the U.S. Symptoms are flu-like: fever, rash, pain; tests to detect it include blood and urine. There is no vaccine or medication; victims have to ride it out. It can also carry yellow fever and West Nile fever.
To avoid having them breed in your yard, she said, get rid of all standing water: tires and saucers are their favorite, she said. Changes pets’ water every three days. For some vessels, you can get granules to put in water; for ponds you can get free mosquito fish from the Department’s headquarters. Bracelets made with DEET to repel the mosquitoes are also available.
INTERESTED IN MENTONE HISTORY? On January 27, 2020, at 7 p.m. at the Contemporary Clubhouse, 173 S. Eureka, Redlands, Marie Reynolds, whose grandfather-in-law published the Mentone newspaper from the 1930s to 1943, will give a talk on Mentone history.
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