- Elizabeth Larson
- Posted On
Lakeport City Council appoints temporary member, continues residential development hearing
Following brief interviews with two former council members, Bob Rumfelt and George Spurr, the council appointed Spurr to fill the seat formerly held by Mireya Turner, who resigned in August to take the Lake County Community Development Department director job on a permanent basis.
At its Sept. 6 meeting, the council had directed staff to reach out to former council members to find out if any of them would be interested in filling the remainder of Turner’s term, which expires at year’s end.
Rumfelt served for 16 years on the council, ending in 2010. Spurr left the council at the end of 2020 after serving one term.
After both Rumfelt and Spurr had spoken briefly to the council, the council began to discuss the temporary appointment. Then Rumfelt returned to the microphone and said he was pulling his hat out of the ring in favor of Spurr.
The council then voted unanimously to approve Spurr’s three-month appointment, with Administrative Services Director/City Clerk Kelly Buendia administering the oath of office to Spurr, who was immediately seated on the dais with the other four council members.
There may still be more need for additional council appointments before the year is over, however.
By the time of her resignation, Turner had already signed up to run for a third term and her name will be on the ballot in November.
If she is elected, she will need to resign her post and the council will have to make another temporary appointment, this one for two years, until the next municipal election.
Write-in candidates have until Oct. 25 to sign up to run for Turner’s seat.
In addition, Councilman Michael Green has made it broadly known that he has applied for the District 4 supervisorial seat vacated by Tina Scott. That position will be appointed by the governor.
As a result, the city has begun to seek additional applicants should it need to fill those seats.
In other business, at the request of developer Peter Schellinger, owner of Waterstone Residential, the council voted to continue a public hearing for general plan and zoning changes for his Parkside Residential Project at 1310 Craig Ave.
Schellinger is seeking approvals to build 128 new apartment units and 48 cluster homes on the 15-acre site, next to the original Parkside subdivision near Westside Community Park.
Neighbors at the Parkside subdivision have pushed back on the plan, citing issues such as traffic, wildfire risk and water use.
Schellinger said he had participated in a Zoom meeting initiated by the neighbors, who have expressed their concerns to him directly.
“We are pushing forward to try to get the financing in place,” he said, noting that there is a very unique opportunity now to take advantage of state financing.
He said he would go back and reconvene with the neighbors and would work with city staff on how he would like to proceed.
The council also set special meetings on Dec. 12 and 13 to make appointments to city commissions and committees with terms expiring this year and received an update on the city’s GIS and asset management program.
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