Of the six candidates running for the Palm Springs City Council this year, Robert Julian Stone is certainly the most blunt.
The author, film critic and community advocate certainly was not shy about sharing his views during a recent interviewโincluding a conspiracy theory regarding the current City Council and two of his opponents.
But before we get to that โฆ on the subject of homelessness, Stone was rather thoughtful and analytical. He told me the recent film The Florida Project was helpful in exposing the national problem of homelessness.
โThe solution everyone talks about is the โhousing firstโ solution,โ Stone said. โItโs the best solution for a certain number of people who find themselves without homes. Maslowโs hierarchy of needs states that there are three things human beings need to be productive in society: They need food; they need shelter; and they need clothing. If you take any one of those things away from them, they cannot be a productive member of society. Thatโs the challenge that weโre facing: We must provide shelter, but how you go about doing that is a very expensive proposition, because (homelessness) numbers continue to grow. The โhousing firstโ solution works best for people who are living one paycheck to another. When you fall out of your housing, and youโve lost your job, or you have a ruined credit rating because youโve been evicted, or youโre unemployedโwhat it takes to get back in is the first monthโs rent, a security deposit and employment. If thatโs not immediately available to you, youโre out on the streets. The โhousing firstโ model works really well. because (these people) arenโt used to living on the streets, donโt want to live on the streets, and want to get back into a stable situation.
โIf youโre talking about the people who donโt want four walls and a roof over their heads, or have addiction and mental health issuesโthose people are more difficult to handle.โ
Stone said the vacation-rental situation in Palm Springs has been poorly handled.
โAirbnb is not going to go away, and itโs here to stay. The thing that we need to do is figure out the best way to manage it,โ he said. โI donโt think creating a $1.7 million-a-year bureaucracy to handle the problem was necessarily the right way to go. When Palm Springs did their big vacation rental ordinance, they did not run it through the Planning Commission; they didnโt hold public hearings over a period of time. It was mostly Geoff Kors and J.R. Roberts in a back room coming up with this proposal, which went through a tumultuous unfolding when they got slapped with petitions to recall them and recall this ordinance if they didnโt change it. It was badly handled, and the biggest thing they missed was they didnโt do any density controls, and thereโs nothing that prevents 98 percent of the homes next to your home from becoming short-term vacation rentalsโand thatโs a problem.โ
Stone didnโt mince words on transparencyโespecially involving the funding for Measure J, a 1 percent sales and use tax approved by voters in 2011 that was slated to go toward city services, maintenance and redevelopment.
โTheyโre certainly transparent on the general-fund portion, but there are dozens of other side funds that donโt appear anywhere in the public forum for the cityโs residents to understand or (figure out) exactly whatโs going on with that money,โ he said. โThe city budget is $110 million; the other dozens of other funds make up an aggregate of another $110 to $120 millionโthings like the airport fund, the Measure J fund, the utility tax fund, the gas tax fundโand theyโre run like a sideshow. Theyโre controlled by the city manager, who dips into those funds to transfer into the general fund as he sees fit, or to transfer from the general fund into those funds when they have shortfalls. Some have income; some of them, like the golf course fund, have income and expenses. We never really get a true picture of what our budget is, because half of it is run behind a curtain, and thatโs a problem.โ
Regarding the cityโs relationship with the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians, Stone said the city needs to work with the tribe in a more cooperative fashion.
โThatโs a very difficult question, because the city has taken a position that changes from day to day depending on the subject on the table,โ Stone said. โSometimes, they say, โTheyโre a sovereign nation; we have nothing to do with them.โ Iโve heard Ginny Foat articulate that many times, saying they donโt get involved in their business. At the same time, we have a master plan โฆ a bilateral agreement that both sides signed and should be adhering to. But when it comes down to enforcing it, the city never tries to. We need to invite them to the table. โฆ If you look at the history of Palm Springs and the tribe, itโs very checkered. We need to have a better agreement with the tribe; we need to have one that is neutrally supportive. With the way the downtown (redevelopment) project was handled, and the 31 counts of corruption which relate directly to the downtown plan, we canโt really take the moral high ground when it comes to the tribeโs property, given the way the city handled their own downtown development.โ
Stone is not happy with the downtown redevelopment project.
โI think the hotel is a scar on the landscape. It will always be that,โ he said. โIf you look at the very first building near Tahquitz (Canyon Way) and Palm Canyon (Drive), that building which will house the Starbucks, thatโs exactly the scale we were promised: Itโs single story; itโs a tall building, and itโs a nice addition to the neighborhood. Then you look at these other buildings, and theyโre horrible. Itโs better than what we had, because what we had was terrible, but itโs so much less than what we deserved.โ
What does the city need to do to be more transparent? Well, hereโs where that conspiracy theory part comes in.
โThe first thing that we can do is elect me,โ Stone said with a laugh. โI also want to talk about where weโre headed if the Lisa (Middleton) and Christy (Holstege) train pulls into the station: We are going to be doing old-school Chicago politics with Councilmember Geoff Kors in the role of Mayor Richard Daley. Weโre going have two people seated solely because of the support and the campaign management and campaign contributions that came from a sitting councilmember. Lisaโs campaign is being run by Geoff Korsโ husband. โฆ They are the chosen twoโso Geoff Kors will have the two votes he needs if they are seated, and then all bets are off, because itโll be government by Geoff Kors, for Geoff Kors and about Geoff Kors. If you think that those two women are going to do anything to oppose what he wants, youโre too naive to be talking toโbecause thatโs what weโre going to get, and thatโs very troubling, because thatโs not good for democracy.โ
When I asked Stone whether he thinks the city is opposed to funโa criticism some have made against the current City Councilโhis answer, much to my surprise, involved the ethnic makeup of the city.
โThey are so not fun,โ Stone said with a laugh. โHell to the no on that! Iโm sorry, but we have too many white people living in this town. I lived in San Francisco, and Iโm used to living in a very diverse city where Caucasians were the minority. I was born and raised in Detroit, which was largely an African-American city. Thatโs the kind of demographic Iโm used to. Iโve lived here full time for the past 12 years, so if you donโt mind me mixing metaphors: I know where the bodies are buried, and I can hit the decks running when I sit in that chair. I understand the demographic that lives here, because Iโm a part of it, but I always wish there was more diversity in the community and diversity on our City Council. Iโm sorryโIโm a white male, and I canโt help it.โ
After our interview, he emailed me additional thoughts that were a bit more measured.
โLas Vegas has glitz, but Palm Springs has chill,โ Stone said. โAnd chill is cool, sophisticated, and somewhat fragile. We canโt let (the city) be dragged into the vortex of beer bongs and guzzler helmets. So if the City Council may seem a bit stodgy on some points, I think itโs because they have an intuitive understanding of what makes our city special, and a commitment to maintaining it.โ
