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Montebello Postpones Trash Decision

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  • Montebello Postpones Trash Decision

    MONTEBELLO POSTPONES TRASH DECISION
    By Amanda Baumfeld, [email protected]

    San Gabriel Valley Tribune
    10/09/2008 11:30:47 PM PDT
    CA

    Residents hold up signs of protest on Wednesday at the Montebello City
    Council meeting. (Watchara Phomicinda / Staff Photographer)MONTEBELLO
    - In front of hundreds of protesting residents, the City Council on
    Wednesday postponed a decision to let voters decide who takes out
    the trash in Montebello's commercial areas.

    With some members saying they were afraid of pending litigation, the
    City Council voted 3-2 to put off a decision to place a referendum on a
    March ballot. The referendum would allow a popular vote to determine
    if Athens Services should have the sole right to haul trash from
    commercial areas.

    Mayor Bill Molinari and Councilwoman Mary Anne Saucedo-Rodriguez
    opposed, while council members Robert Urteaga, Rosemarie Vasquez and
    Kathy Salazar voted to postpone the decision.

    Despite the council's decision, Molinari and Saucedo-Rodriguez said
    they supported the will of the petitioners.

    "My opinion is that we should ... allow this to go to a vote of the
    people," Molinari said.

    The vote came after Athens Services in July was awarded a contract
    to haul all trash in the city. Previously, much of the commercial
    trash service was carried out by 13 independent haulers.

    "I think the council made the proper decision," said Dennis Chiappetta,
    executive vice president of Athens. "The residents were lied to
    dramatically."

    Tuesday's decision upset many residents, who packed the council
    chambers and spilled out into the hallway to hear the verdict.

    "The bottom line is they are not listening to the people that got
    them elected," said resident

    Chris Robles.

    He and several others said the council should have decided to put
    the vote up to the people, despite the pending legal issue.

    Hundreds of Montebello's residents, especially members of
    Armenian-American families, have a long history in the garbage
    business. A large part of the city's economy is associated with
    refuse hauling. Independent haulers want the chance to bid on any
    city contract.

    The independent haulers circulated a petition calling for a referendum
    to be placed on the ballot that would revoke Athens' contract and
    allow other haulers to work in the city.

    They gathered 6,286 signatures. Of those, 4,578 were deemed valid by
    the Los Angeles County Registrar/Recorder's Office. State law requires
    2,550 signatures or 10 percent of the city's 25,496 registered voters
    to qualify for the ballot.

    Then on Monday, Irene Villapania of Montebello, with the support of
    Athens, filed a lawsuit against the city. The suit challenges the
    validity of the referendum and questions how signatures were collected.

    Villapania, a director at Azusa Chamber of Commerce, is being
    represented by several attorneys who also represent Athens.

    Many Athens employees also came to the meeting, some speaking on the
    benefits the exclusive contract could bring to the city, such as less
    truck traffic and money for infrastructure.

    The 15-year contract, worth about $7.8 million annually, provides
    Montebello with $500,000 and 7.5 percent of gross receipts from
    commercial accounts. Approved by Urteaga, Salazar and Vasquez, it
    also phases out the 13 independent haulers who currently collect trash.

    The same council majority is now asking the residents to wait for
    the outcome of the lawsuit building frustration among independent
    trash haulers.

    "There is no victory for (Urteaga, Salazar and Vasquez), no matter
    which way the issue falls," said Ron Saldana, who represented many
    of the independent haulers and is the executive director of the Los
    Angeles County Disposal Association.

    "It is only a failure of leadership of the majority who have forced
    these actions," he said.

    When it came time to vote on the issue, Saucedo-Rodriguez made a motion
    to allow the referendum, which was quickly followed by a substitute
    motion from Salazar to wait until after the lawsuit.

    Vasquez seconded the substitute motion before hearing what it was,
    causing some residents to cry conspiracy.

    "That tells you right there that there's a deal in place with these
    council people," said Jack Topalian of Montebello.
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