It looks like the San Diego Union-Tribune is shining the light on the crooked Gliderport Lease deal. Here's the article from today's paper:
http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2015/jun/08/gliderport-lease/San Diego Union-Tribune, Monday June 8th, 2015 wrote:
Gliderport lease hangs in the balance
Breathtaking Torrey Pines lot has had month-to-month deal since 2008
By Greg Moran 5:55 a.m.June 8, 2015
It’s San Diego City Historical Site #315, listed on both the state and national Registry of Historic Places, a small patch of land on an ocean bluff known as “The Kitty Hawk of the West.”
With multicolored paragliders and hangliders swooping off a cliff face nearly every day of the year, the Torrey Pines Gliderport is one of the most recognizable spots in the San Diego. Gliding enthusiasts and tourists flock there year-round.
For the past two decades the city has leased the property to a private company founded by a former city police officer, which runs flight operations, sells flying lessons and equipment.
And it’s all rent free.
The city collects no money under the terms of the lease — known as a “flat-rate lease” — which was first negotiated in an exclusive, no-bid arrangement in 1998. That agreement expired in 2008.
Since then, for nearly the past seven years, the lease has been on “holdover” status — a month-to-month deal that keeps the same terms and conditions in place.
The original owners of Air California Adventures, David Jebb and his wife, sold the business to a new owner and current flight director Robin Marien in early 2009.
That sale may violate some provisions of the lease. One section requires that any “assignment” of the lease be approved by the city in advance, which did not happen. Another section specifically says that Jebb has to own 51 percent of the company while the lease is in effect.
A letter from a Real Estate Assets Department official in February 2009 to Jebb questioned whether the assignment of the lease could even be done.
“As the city has made you aware, it is somewhat uncommon to assign a lease on holdover status,” the letter said. It went on to note the lease had “existing legal entanglements and a number of outstanding violations.”
Last week, in response to questions from The San Diego Union-Tribune, the city real estate department said it never approved the sale because of the settlement of a lawsuit that had been filed by an environmental group in 2008, and called for the development of a general plan for the park. It said the non-approval would “rectified” when the lease is put out for bid.
That plan was adopted by the city in June 2012. There’s been no move to put the lease up for bid since. Last month, the real estate department said that a request for bids would be issued in 45 days. Then last week, officials changed that timeline. The city now says a “Request for Interest” will be sent out in late summer, then based on that response bid requests would be sent out later.
Asked why it has taken three years to move to redo the lease, a department spokesman said all such proposals are “prioritized based upon staff workload and scheduling.”
Whenever bids are sought there will be one change: the new lessee will pay rent. The city said it plans to charge $3,412.50 annually to operate the glider port, which sits on a two-acre lot amid 57 acres of parkland.
Marien did not want to be interviewed and instead referred questions about the lease to his lawyer, Christopher Saldana. The no-rent lease is an advantage to San Diego, Saldana said, because under state law cities that allow hazardous activities to take place on land can’t be sued for injuries — as long as the agency doesn’t charge a fee to use it.
“My belief is the city made a decision in the past not to charge rent so they wouldn’t change their liability,” he said.
There have been some lawsuits filed over accidents there over the years, including one in 2013 over a mid-air paraglider collision that injured a woman. The lawsuit eventually settled for a confidential amount, and the city was not named as a defendant.
The collision was captured on a video being made by another instructor who was in the air, according to the court file. That video shows two paragliders operated by instructors purposely colliding into each other, among other risky acts.
The suit argued such conduct is not unusual, said Brett Schreiber, the lawyer for the woman, who said the city needs to take a harder look at the leaseholder, Air California Adventures.
“They’ve given the keys to the land to ACA, and washed their hands of it,” Schreiber said.
Saldana argued the facility has a strong safety record that is among the top five for all gliding sites in the world. There have been only a handful of collisions at the site, which has about 300 days of flying per year and about 100 flights a day, or an estimated 30,000 landings each year.
The suit also contained a lengthy declaration from Robert Kuczewski, a longtime pilot of hang gliders and paragliders who has been a persistent critic of ACA. He said he has observed numerous safety violations over the years, and those who object are ostracized by the leaseholder.
Kuczewski said the city has to take a more active role.
“You can’t have someone operate outside the bounds of fairness and safety,” he said.
Saldana said such critiques are wrong. In May, ACA and Marien sued Kuczewski for defamation in a case that is still pending in San Diego Superior Court.
Saldana said that ACA doesn’t make much profit with the lease, though he declined to say exactly how much. Most users are members of clubs who can pay a yearly fee of $200. Flying with instructors on a paraglider costs $175 and hang gliding $225. Lessons to become a certified pilot begin at $895.
“It simply isn’t an unsafe place,” Saldana said.
Whenever the city puts the lease out, he said, his clients plan to bid on it.
The no-rent lease is one of a handful that the city has. In 2008 the then-head of the real estate department questioned the wisdom of a rent-free deal to a for-profit business on public land.
“I don’t want to give away anything to anybody for any reason,” the official, Jim Waring, told The San Diego Union-Tribune.
That was months before the lease expired, and before the city began extending it on holdover status.