The Y-Gate Scandal, “Kill Bill,” the Battle for Ninigret
Park – is this how Gentz kept his 2010 campaign promises?
By Will Collette
Tom Gentz took the position of Town Council President in
2010 by virtue of being the top vote-getter. In a bitter, ugly campaign that
pitted Gentz’s “new” CCA faction against the four formerly-CCA-endorsed Council
members who were seeking re-election plus Jim Mageau and his running mate David
Mars, Gentz made a popular choice.
An outwardly jocular, glad-handing former health insurance
executive, Gentz made a wonderful first impression, kidding around and slapping
people on the back. He came off like your favorite Uncle Fluffy, who would show
up at Christmas to hand out ten-dollar bills to the kids, but not before giving
each a painful pinch of the cheeks.
In his first few months, he seemed to
relish the ceremonial aspects of being Council President, leading the Pledge of
Allegiance, handing out proclamations to Boy Scouts and generally yukking it
up. He left the real dirty work to his henchman and CCA slate-mate, Council
Vice-President Dan Slattery.
But that changed. Before our eyes, Gentz changed from the
bumbling Uncle Fluffy who blundered his way through Council agendas and
prepared statements into a thoroughly unpleasant Boss Gentz. We should have
seen it coming, but it was nonetheless shocking when Gentz dropped the Uncle
Fluffy act.
Click to enlarge - Read what Gentz promised when he ran for office in 2010. Compare it to his actual record. |
He showed early signs of it. Early in his term, the Town
Council considered a ceremonial resolution
of support for a piece of environmental legislation Rep. Donna Walsh was
pushing. Several other towns had already passed resolutions.
The legislation
called for the manufacturers and sellers of products that were either dangerous
or difficult to dispose of to be held responsible for those products. Gentz
adamantly refused to support the resolution of support, calling
the whole idea “onerous.” Lisa DiBello voted with him, but Dan Slattery didn't. The resolution passed 3-2.
Beating up local business
What ever happened to Uncle Fluffy? |
There was the surprise evening when all hell broke loose
during what is usually the most boring part of any Town Council meeting –
review and approval of liquor licenses. The Breachway Grill, fresh
off its hot start-up, wanted to expand the scope of its license, which
nearly all of the neighbors thought was just fine, since owner Craig Marr ran a
nice establishment.
But Gentz was incensed. He had heard that Marr had held a
function on the outside deck of the restaurant even though he was not licensed
to do so. He dressed Marr down in terms that, coming from anyone never mind ole
Uncle Fluffy, were shocking. Click
here to see for yourself.
It turns out that Marr was hosting a birthday party for his
grandmother and since the restaurant was crowded, he took this private family
function out onto the deck. He apologized if this was a violation, but said he
thought it was ok because it was a family affair.
Nah-uh, said Gentz as he continued to berate Marr and then
was the only “no” on the motion to approve the Breachway’s request.
No Democrats Allowed!
Then there was another surprise, again in the most unlikely
of settings, the Town Council’s agenda planning meeting which is normally even
more boring than the liquor license reviews. It seemed that there was a request
from Tim Quillen to speak under “Persons wishing to be heard” as a representative
of the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee.
No way, said Gentz and his henchman Dan Slattery. No
political party spokespeople can speak before the Council. Not acceptable, even
though both Gentz and Slattery frequently spoke before the old Town Council as
CCA representatives. Gentz was later told
by Town Solicitor Peter Ruggiero the Council could not censor the CDTC. At
the meeting, Gentz and Slattery both had the nerve to deny they ever tried to
censor Quillen, but after shouts of “Liar!” from the audience, Gentz backed
down and apologized.
Nobody really needs affordable housing
Gentz receiving instructions from Planning Commissar Ruth Platner |
Which is a nice position for him to take as the owner of two Charlestown homes
worth more than one million dollars.
Gentz also violated the often-repeated CCA pledge to respect and involve town commissions on all matters within their jurisdiction. On affordable housing, Gentz ignored the Affordable Housing Commission (and was repeatedly disrepectful to its chair). He ignored the Economic Improvement Commission on the lighting ordinance. He ignored the Conservation Commission on Y-Gate. He and Dan Slattery tried to strip the Parks and Recreation Commission of their jurisdiction over Ninigret Park and give it instead to a hand-picked committee of CCA allies.
Waging class war against the middle class, dividing the community
Gentz’s final meeting of 2011 saw the famous “Riot
of the Rich” where wealthy non-residents organized by the CCA and the RI
Statewide Coalition stormed the Council meeting, incensed at the idea proposed
by town Democrats to give each homeowner who makes Charlestown their permanent
home a $1000
Homestead Tax Credit. Gentz joined with Slattery to denounce the very idea
of giving middle-class permanent residents a break at the expense of our rich
vacationers and killed the Democrats’ proposal.
As we got into 2012, we saw a lot less of Uncle Fluffy and a
lot more of Boss Gentz. This past year has been a terribly divisive one for
Charlestown as we saw the CCA through Gentz and Slattery, with support from
Councilor DiBello, crank up the Battle for Ninigret Park and then the “Kill
Bill Campaign” that led to the ouster of Town Administrator William DiLibero.
In 2011, Gentz couldn’t praise DiLibero enough, lauding him
at almost every Council meeting, bragging about DiLibero’s acceptance into an
elite town official training program at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government,
commending DiLibero for gallant service in the aftermath of Hurricane Irene and
giving him a glowing annual review and big raise. Click
here for an example.
But in 2012, DiLibero had to go. Gentz now hated DiLibero so
much that, when DiLibero finally handed in his resignation but offered to stay
on long enough to smooth the transition, Gentz wanted DiLibero out of the
building immediately.
Early in 2012, Gentz
went along with Deputy Dan Slattery’s campaign to strip the Parks and
Recreation Commission of the powers it has under the Town Charter to
oversee Ninigret Park. They proposed transfering those powers to a hand-picked
ad hoc committee of CCA allies and US Fish and Wildlife exec Charlie Vandemoer.
Gentz bought the completely fictitious idea that the town
had offended the federal government through a proposal to install dark-sky
friendly sports lights in Ninigret Park and that the federal government might
retaliate by taking back Ninigret Park.
NO LIGHTS. No discussion, no debate, no vote. |
The Chariho boys Pop Warner football team were all in
attendance to speak in favor of having a lighted field so they could get in a
couple extra hours of practice. After Gentz made his decree (which, by the way,
he had no power – or right – to do under the Town Charter), the kids dejectedly
left the room.
Beating up local business, Part 2...also, poking your nose where it doesn't belong
The mean Boss Gentz also poked out of the bunny suit when Gentz used his public office to intervene in a neighborhood feud against the Ocean House Marina, owned by Rob Lyons, for some unspecified slight.
In Charlestown, especially in the last few years, neighbor
versus neighbor fights often end up drawing in town government. One common way
neighbors fight against each other is by filing complaints and trying to get
the town to take sides. Responsible town officials are careful not to get
sucked in.
But not Tom Gentz. In one really ugly episode, Gentz sided
against the Ocean House Marina and actually introduced a new
ordinance designed to hurt its business by banning parking on Town Dock
Road. Even though Gentz promised to give the two warring sides a chance to
negotiate a resolution to their grievances, he introduced the ordinance over
Marina owner Rob Lyons’ objections.
Lyons argued that Gentz didn’t even give them a chance to
work it out, and instead gave his neighbors exactly what they wanted – and made
any negotiations pretty pointless.
To drive it home, Gentz permitted the neighbors to engage in
almost an hour-long rampage of character assassination against Lyons and his
business before pushing his colleagues to vote to enact the ordinance.
By the way, there was collateral damage. Shellfishermen who
were building a growing aquaculture business in the pond begged Gentz and the
Council to not kill their new business by banning parking. But it didn’t
matter. Gentz had his mind made up that his ordinance needed to be enacted.
I can’t begin to comprehend Gentz’s rationale for his
unhealthy intervention.But you can listen to the discussion here
and here
and read Gentz’s ordinance for yourself by clicking
here.
And then there's the Y-Gate Scandal
As if all of these issues weren’t enough to convince you that Tom Gentz should not be re-elected, there’s his central role in the Y-Gate Scandal. Click here for all the coverage of Y-Gate.
The plan Gentz killed |
He then switched his support to a Ruth Platner scheme to use
public money to pay for the camp purchase, but not its ownership – the
taxpayers would pay for the camp, but the Charlestown Land Trust would actually
own it. Under the “conservation easement” that Gentz wanted Charlestown to pay
$475,000 to purchase, residents could go on the land “by appointment only[2].”
This is what the conservation easement actually says, as opposed to what Gentz, Ricci and the CCA claims |
What’s significant about Y-Gate and Tom Gentz is that this
is exactly the kind of rip-off Tom Gentz promised to fight against. In his 2010
campaign bio, and again this year, Gentz bragged about his business academic
degrees and extensive experience in the insurance industry. He talked about his
skills and abilities to make sound financial decisions for Charlestown.
Click to enlarge - does this description match the record? |
Gentz
sanctioned a secret, illegal process that allowed parties who stood to gain
from Y-Gate to be the committee that crafted the plan that Gentz convinced his
colleagues to accept. Then in a letter to the Westerly Sun, Gentz denied there
were any secret meetings, despite sworn depositions by two participants –
Councilor Gregg
Avedisian and Charlestown Land Trust Treasurer Russ
Ricci – attesting that there were.
At last February’s monthly Town Council meeting, Gentz
pushed the vote to authorize the $475,000 vote, in violation of the Open
Meetings Act, according
to Judge Stern who had halted the sale and gave community opposition time to gel.
But before that February vote, there was the embarrassing spectacle
of Boss Gentz browbeating Chariho Schools Superintendent Barry Ricci, demanding
that Ricci reduce Charlestown’s share of the Chariho budget[4]
by just about the same amount of money Gentz later in the same meeting gladly
voted to spend on Y-Gate.
The person in the bunny is former Town Administrator Bill DiLibero's daughter who was forced out of office by Porsche driver Tom Gentz |
That juxtaposition of priorities – the demand that Chariho cut programs
to the bone, but while pushing to spend roughly the same amount of money on a
taxpayer rip-off like Y-Gate – provides the most compelling case why voters
should send Tom Gentz back into full retirement so he can pursue his hobby of restoring classic Porsche
sports cars.
FOOTNOTES
[1]
Even though Gentz and Slattery recently voted to approve two non-profit developments,
contingent on receipt of state funding. Here’s the “having your cake and eating
it, too” part: on the CCA’s official website, Gentz’s CCA running mate George
Tremblay has written to urge defeat of State Question 7, which is where that
state funding would come from. So while the CCA claims they supposed these two
projects, they also want to choke off the state funding that would make them
possible. I predict that if the CCA retains control of Charlestown government
in the upcoming election, they will kill the Shannock Village and Churchwoods
projects dead.
[2] Ricci
and the Land Trust’s lawyer kept saying the dawn to dusk access was written in
the “management plan.” Except that management plan was never introduced into
the public record. What IS in the public record is the easement itself that
specifies access by appointment only.
[3]
The RI Department of Environmental Management was to hold the first easement.
[4]
Gentz was repeatedly challenged by Superintendent Ricci and by Charlestown’s
two representatives on the Chariho School Committee to at least give some
examples of specific cuts he would make to the Chariho budget. Gentz would not,
and just kept repeating his demand that Charlestown’s share of the Chariho
budget be cut.