November 13 letter to Whatcom County Boundary Review Board:
Dear Whatcom County Boundary Review Board,
Please reject Blaine's city limit reduction for the following reasons.
The Whatcom County Boundary Review Board
submittal report from Blaine Community Development Services is related to
Proposition 2025-07, the so-called "
de-annexation" vote which is invalid due to election fraud by the City of Blaine. Blaine intentionally
deceived voters by altering the title of the ballot measure from the straight forward
"UGA Swap" in the ballot measure resolution to the fraudulent
'Reduction of City Limits' in the voters pamphlet, followed by an independent expenditure campaign.
That campaign included multiple direct mail pieces to voters, a website, and yard signs that
inaccurately claimed the proposition would protect the Critical Aquifer Recharge Area. It removes the CARA from the city, but provides no protection for it. This campaign was paid for by Ocean Farms LLC, the Birch Point developer seeking
West Blaine annexation.
Birch Point annexation has been rejected by Whatcom County Council, and keeping the Grandis Pond CARA in the city will allow Blaine to protect its aquifer that supplies 100% of the drinking water for Blaine and Birch Bay. Transferring jurisdiction to the county does not protect the CARA; the best solution would be for the City of Blaine to purchase the area proposed for deannexation so that septic systems and private wells aren't allowed right over the CARA.
This election fraud should be investigated by the Washington Secretary of State elections division. An excerpt from my SOS letter below, published in Cascadia Daily News:
When Blaine Community Development Services omitted environmental information in order to persuade the planning commission and city council to rezone the Critical Aquifer Recharge Area (CARA) for high-density residential development without doing an Environmental Impact Statement, several developers lined up to profit from this scheme by Community Development Services to violate the State Environmental Policy Act and federal Clean Water Act, thus eliminating best available science and best management practices for stormwater runoff that is now polluting our drinking water source.
When one of the developers pulled out of the deal, Community Development Services came up with the idea of shifting some development to the Semiahmoo headlands and expanding the city limits there. The deceptive “Reduction of City Limits” ballot proposition was in reality the initial step in expanding the city limits — in essence, fraud.
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