Valley Voice Issue 125 (20 September, 2018)

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Valley Voice

Volume XXXVIII No. 18 20 September, 2018 ourvalleyvoice.com

Former partners say ARCO stalls, Valley Children’s moves onMaster Caldwell Sequoia Gateway ahead Developmental Plan Nunley defrauded City of Tulare

DAVE ADALIAN

dave@ourvalleyvoice.com

At one end of Caldwell Avenue in Visalia, a major development project appears to have stalled, while down at the other end another project years in the making may finally be coming to fruition. According to officials at City Hall, six months after winning an appeal to construct a downsized version of its project--a 24-hour fueling station, car wash, convenience store and restaurant at West Street and Caldwell--the developers have yet to submit an updated plan. Meanwhile, the environmental impact report for an 82-plusacre commercial park that will house the Valley Children’s Medical Group’s Specialty Care Center has been approved, with construction beginning as soon as early 2019.

DAVE ADALIAN

dave@ourvalleyvoice.com

Tulare City Councilman Greg Nunley committed repeated, systematic fraud in land development deals with the city he serves, according to sworn statements of several of Nunley’s former business associates.

‘Landscape of Political Corruption’

ARCO a No-Go?

Residents of south Visalia who fought to keep what would have been the city’s largest gas station out of their neighborhood and lost may end up winning by default. Chandi Group

Documents for the “Sequoia Gateway” development show the scale of the proposed area.

USA, which planned to build an ARCO AM/PM in an area surrounded by homes on three sides, has not com-

municated with city planners since it won the right to build a scaled-down

CALDWELL continued on 11 »

Janz pulling even with Nunes, polling suggests DAVE ADALIAN

dave@ourvalleyvoice.com

With less than two months until the midterm congressional elections on November 6, Democratic challenger Andrew Janz is running a dead heat with incumbent Devin Nunes in the 22nd District race.

Survey Says...

The latest poll provided by the Janz campaign shows the challenger trailing by just 6 points. These most recent numbers mean Janz has cut Nunes’ lead by half in two months. A July poll showed a 12-point margin in favor of Nunes. The two surveys used to conduct

the polling each have a margin of error of around 4.5%, meaning Janz could be nearly even with his opponent, or trailing significantly. Regardless, the polling reflects markedly increased support for the Democratic candidate among all possible voters. The survey sample selected by Strategies 360, the company hired by the Janz campaign, was weighted with additional Republican voters to reflect demographics in the 22nd District. While the two polls paid for by the Janz campaign still show Nunes with a slight lead, a third independently-conducted poll showed the two tied at 47% of the vote each. That poll reflected sentiment at

the end of July.

Jumping Ship

The numbers against Nunes are unprecedented. Never before has the perennial candidate seen a true challenge to his tenure, and for nearly a generation there’s been very little change in the 22nd Congressional District. Now, Republican support seems to be shifting away from Nunes. The most recent poll shows the same voters who are almost equally divided between the two candidates stick to their party affiliations when Nunes is out of the picture. Nunes, the poll shows, is costing the GOP votes. Norma Burns of Tulare, a longtime supporter of Nunes and person-

The five statements--each given under penalty of perjury--were gathered by Visalia attorney Michael Lampe and presented to Tulare City Attorney Mario Zamora. Greg Nunley The testimonies, according to Lampe, “reveal a pattern of deception that crosses well into the

NUNLEY continued on 15 »

al friend, is one such voter who won’t support the Republican again. “I won’t vote for him anymore,” she said. “I know know him pretty well.” Members of Nunes own family have also contributed to his opponent’s campaign.

Bringing the Race Home

Recently, Janz took his campaign into the heart of Nunes’ home town, holding a political rally at Tulare Union High School, Nunes’ alma mater. The rally was the fourth in a series of what the Janz campaign are calling “town hall” meetings, a reference to the lack of such face-to-face meetings with Nunes. Nunes has not held a

POLLING continued on 12 »

Tulare City Council candidate accused of assault CATHERINE DOE

catherine@ourvalleyvoice.com

Alex Gutierrez, candidate for Tulare City Council District 2, has been accused of assault by Democratic Central Committee (TCDCC) Vice Chair, Kathleen Dowling. Dowling is also known locally as the “stocking lady” for her donations to the Rescue Mission at Christmas. After a TCDCC meeting at Tulare’s Apple Annie’s May 25, 2017, Dowling said that Gutierrez picked up a chair as she was trying to leave and pinned her to the wall. She said that the legs of the chair were on either side of her so she could not move. “He kept yelling at me ‘we need to talk, we need to talk,’ and I said, ‘no you need to let me go.’” Starting to fear what he would do next and trying to de-escalate the situation, she said she kept her voice down and continued to encourage him to let her go because he was visibly agitated.

Gutierrez was upset about something Dowling said earlier in the evening and he wanted to talk it out before she left. Dowling said the standoff lasted about a minute as she kept pushing against the chair telling Gutierrez, “You need to stop. I am not going to talk with you right now.” She continued, “I finally had enough adrenaline going that I pushed the chair away and started to leave. I then felt his foot push against my ankles and I hit the floor so hard that the room of 25 to 30 people became dead silent.” TCDCC member Alberto Aguilar was standing behind her and helped her up. Another member went to get her ice for her knees. Dowling said she fell flat on her face and sustained several injuries, including bruises up and down her body and a torn rotator cuff. Dowling assumed after the incident that the TCDCC was going to file a police report. When, after three weeks

they did not, she filed a police report and notified the state Democratic Party. Dowling and Aguilar expected TCDCC Chair Ruth McKee to call a special executive board meeting and remove Gutierrez as treasurer as per the TCDCC bylaws. Instead, Dowling was relieved of her duty as cosigner of committee checks “in an effort to lighten her load and keep her safe.” The Tulare Police Department (TPD) conducted an investigation that came back inconclusive. Though the report was not available at press time, both Dowling and Gutierrez agreed that the TPD report revealed that as many witnesses said that an assault took place as said did not. Dowling has until May of 2019 to formally press charges. Gutierrez does not deny there was an incident but denies he tripped her. He said that Dowling had been rude to him before the meeting and he wanted to tell her he didn’t appreciate what

she said. He acknowledged that Dowling did not want to talk so he slid one of the restaurant’s overstuffed chairs in front of her. “But it wasn’t touching her,” he said. Gutierrez said, “She moved the chair away and pushed herself through me and then she tripped because she walks with a wobble.” Gutierrez said that she stepped on his foot and that is why she fell down. He also said that it was not Aguilar that helped her up but that it was him. Because it was after the meeting many of the members were still mingling in and outside the conference room and did not witness the incident. Aguilar was a witness and sent his testimony to McKee in an email the next day. “I witnessed an incident involving Alex Gutierrez and Kathleen Dowling that resulted in Kathleen falling to the floor due to the actions taken by Alex when he tried to block her from leaving

CANDIDATE ACCUSED continued on 13 »


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Valley Voice Issue 125 (20 September, 2018) by Valley Voice - Issuu