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Home
Depot sparks feud in the Chamber of
Commerce
Publication
Date: Friday, February 08, 2002
Home
Depot sparks feud in the Chamber of
Commerce
Chamber
to poll members about Measure N support
By Bill D'Agostino
In a move sparked by a dispute among
Chamber of Commerce Mountain View
members, the organization announced this
week that it will poll all its entire
membership to find out what they think
about Home Depot.
The move is a direct response to a
few members' concerns about the
organization's recent endorsement of the
retail giant's March ballot measure.
Some members, however, feel that both
this impending vote of chamber members
and the chamber's endorsement of the
ballot measure has been compromised by a
potential conflict of interest within
the chamber.
If measure N passes, it will allow
Home Depot - which holds a long-term
lease on the old Emporium site on El
Camino Real and Highway 85- to build a
large retail store at that location.
The home improvement chain claims the
store will bring in as much as $500,000
in annual sales tax for the city, but
opponents worry that the traffic -
especially large truck traffic - will
have strong negative impacts on the
local community.
The announcement of the chamber's
surprise endorsement of Home Depot
angered members - including Bruce Bauer
Lumber and Supply and Minton's Lumber
and Supply - who oppose the retail
giant, especially in light of the fact
that the chamber suddenly and
unexpectedly reversed its three year
neutral stance on the issue without
polling member businesses.
Members were also alienated by the
fact that Astrid Thompson, the chamber's
membership development director, is
serving as community co-chair of the
campaign to get Home Depot approved by
the voters.
"That lit the fire under a
number of people," said to Kay
Mascoli, campaign organizer for Citizens
Voting No on N, a group opposing Home
Depot.
At the time the endorsement was made,
Thompson said that her work with Home
Depot - for which she is not paid - and
her job with the chamber are separate
and unrelated.
Julie Lovins, a chamber member who
works as a language doctor, and the
other concerned chamber members decided
to take action against the endorsement
by trying to use a chamber bylaw to get
members to vote on the Home Depot issue
and hopefully reverse the board's
endorsement.
According to the bylaw, if 5 percent
of members sign a petition to question a
board decision, the chamber will poll
all members to determine its position on
the issue.
Although the group believed they had
collected more than the amount of
signatures needed to get the vote, the
chamber told them that they did not
actually have enough members sign on.
The chamber nullified six signatures
because the signers were not members in
proper standing. Two other signers had
decided to rescind their signatures
after supposedly talking with the other
co-chair of the Yes on N committee, Art
Takahara.
Members were suspicious that Takahara
spoke to the the petition signers
because the identity of the signer was
supposed to be confidential.
Carol Olson, the chamber's CEO and
president, said that Home Depot did not
know who signed the petition but had
merely been polling chamber members and
found out the information on their own.
But Lovins said that she believes
it's too big of a coincidence that Home
Depot happened to talk to the petition
signers the weekend before the chamber's
board was going to meet.
Despite the shortfall in signatures,
the chamber's board decided to go ahead
with the vote during an emergency board
meeting held on Monday, Feb. 4.
The chamber also estranged those
members who oppose Home Depot by
deciding that more than half of chamber
members - not simply a majority of those
who vote on the issue - will have to
vote against Home Depot in order to
reverse the chamber's endorsement.
"They set it up in a way which
is totally unlike any other
election," according to Julie
Lovins, a chamber member who works as a
language doctor.
Mailings for the vote were expected
to go out this week and the businesses
will have ten days to respond.
The chamber's board, Olson noted,
knew they were making a controversial
decision when they decided to endorse
Home Depot. "They felt pretty
strongly that it was the right thing for
us to do," Olson said.
Copyright © 2002 Embarcadero Publishing Company.
(Mountain View Voice, Mountain
View, California.)
http://www.mv-voice.com/morgue/2002/2002_02_08.homedepot020802.html
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