I wasn’t going to write about this matter here today, but now it appears that I should. First, for context, read this from Bloomberg News; I’ll print only the first four paragraphs, but there much to note beyond that at the link:
Citigroup Inc. terminated a deal to purchase $265 million of revenue bonds from Anaheim, California, after opponents sued over plans to expand the city’s convention center, a city spokeswoman said.
Citigroup was the lead underwriter on the bonds offered March 24, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The bonds were rated AA- by Standard & Poor’s, according to a disclosure document. The deal was set to close May 14.
A local group that calls itself the Coalition of Anaheim Taxpayers for Economic Responsibility filed the suit May 12, alleging that the public financing authority wasn’t allowed to offer the debt because California lawmakers dissolved redevelopment agencies, one of which was a member of the financing authority.
“Unfortunately, the originally targeted investors were not willing to accept the litigation risk and chose not to proceed even though the city, the city attorney and bond counsel were of the opinion that such litigation would not likely succeed,” Anaheim spokeswoman Ruth Ruiz said by e-mail.
Scott Helfman, a spokesman for Citigroup, decined to comment on the termination.
In other words: CATER filed suit on Monday to invalidate the illegal Convention Center Expansion bonds, a deal that was to close on Wednesday. Citigroup learned of this, presumably took a look at the lawsuit, and decided not to buy the bonds after all. The City is apparently looking for other possible buyers.
We’ve just sent a letter to Anaheim City Attorney Michael Houston. Because it is a public record, there’s no reason not to publish it here as well — and in fact the interest of transparency suggests that we do so. The image of it is just above; the text is below the graphic

When we first published this image two months ago today, the polar coordinate view was meant to signify only the concept of “expansion.” Now we know that it also signifies something else: “balloon payments.”
May 16, 2014Michael Houston
City Attorney, City of Anaheim
200 S. Anaheim Blvd., Anaheim 92805[BY E-MAIL TO <mhouston@anaheim.net> AND CITY CLERK LINDA ANDAL <landal@anaheim.net>]
Mr. Houston,
As you are no doubt already aware, on Monday, May 12, CATER filed suit against the City in the case of Coalition of Anaheim Taxpayers for Economic Responsibility v. City of Anaheim (Superior Court of the County of Orange Case No: 30-2014-00722291-CU-MC-CJC.) We have not yet had the opportunity to effect service of process, but I attach a conformed copy of the complaint as a courtesy. You will note that the complaint largely follows the reasoning sent to the City Council prior to its vote by Cory Briggs, Counsel for our Co-Plaintiff – a communication that the City Council chose to ignore in approving the bonds without a legally mandated vote of the electorate.
We now understand from a story in Bloomberg News, “Anaheim Says $265 Million Bond Deal Terminated by Citigroup,” that Citigroup has decided not to purchase the bonds due to “litigation risk.”
Our purpose in filing this suit has never been to block expansion for the Anaheim Convention Center, but to ensure that, if it is done, it is done lawfully, responsibly, and with the required public debate. We therefore extend to you the following offer of settlement, which may facilitate that process.
- The City will place onto the Nov. 5 general election ballot all matters legally necessary for the bond financing proposed for the Convention Center. Plaintiffs and the City will agree to abide by the outcome of a fair and certified public vote.
- The City will publish prominently and in plain English a certified and sworn accounting showing:
- All bonded indebtedness of all agencies and authorities of the City of Anaheim, including Principal Amount at Issuance and the final repayment amounts and pace of projective revenues;
- A calendar showing individual and total payment amounts due for existing and proposed bonds;
- An accounting of exactly what expenditures were funded by each existing bond, what public properties are obligated under existing Lease Revenue Bonds, and estimate life spans;
- A description of the steps the City has taken to ensure that the City will not face default, either to the bonds or to the Lease Revenue Payments, and of the present and anticipatable prospects and consequences of default on one or more of these bonds, so as to assess risk to the General Fund.
- The City will agree not to use the Anaheim Public Financing Authority for future financing requiring a positive public vote under the CA Constitution or Anaheim City Charter without first obtaining that vote.
- The City will reimburse Plaintiffs’ attorney fees and costs, the specifics of which we can discuss if your client is interesting in pursuing settlement.
I have consulted with Mr. Briggs, who informs me that IOC joins in this settlement offer. He and I will be happy to discuss this matter with you by phone, should you wish, at your earliest convenience.
Sincerely,
Greg Diamond
Gregory A. Diamond
On behalf of CATER
If Citigroup was not willing to accept the litigation risk, it means that the lawsuit has merits.
The remarks by the Anaheim spokesperson, is a typical PR twist: “It is unfortunate that a few local activists, in contradiction to the overwhelming community support shown at the council meeting where the bonds were authorized, have taken legal action against this project,”
I don’t think that’s typical. From a city employee?
I’m not used to seeing that kind of blatant political speech while on the clock.
Perhaps ‘spokeswoman Ruth Ruiz’ should read her own City’s background info before propagating disinformation? Let’s see what the Minutes of the March 11 Public Hearing reveal, composed the “overwhelming Public Support”—-
From the Minutes of the March 11th Public Hearing, there were 28 speakers,
(from a City of approx. 345,000 residents!)
– Anthony Barron – GES GlobalExperience employee + Local 831 Union
– Rhonda Atterberry – Local 831 trade Show and styler
– Jessica Lopez – ‘trade show industry member’
– Kevin Kennedy- Genrl Mgr Hyatt Regency OC Garden Grove)
(from LinkedIn)
– Douglas Robbins- Painters and Allied Trades union
– Richard Samanigo – IBEW Local 441 rep >2000 locql wkrs
– RossMcCune – Anaheim Chamber of Commerce
– Owner of Castle Building /costr (commercial) Anaheim
– Carl Ritola – Plumbers/ Steamfitters Local 582
– Pete Mitchell – Anaheim Police Association union
– Steve Arnold -Anaheim / OC Hotel Lodging Association
– Kevin Curtis – Rain Forest Cafe
– Anaheim Restaurant Council
– Robert Kaczmarczyk – Ralph Brennen’s Jazz Kitchen
– Jim Adams – LA/OC Building/Construction Trade Council
– Jill Kanzler – S.O.A.R.
– Phillip Salerno – Local 500 Masons union
– Robert Donahue – Disneyland Resort
-Anaheim/ OC VistrsConvBur
– Julia Smith – Global Experience Specialists (exhibits co)
– William Fitzgerald – Anaheim H.O.M.E.
– Shaun Robinson – Anaheim Hilton
– Darlene Cochran – Pacific Sightseeing
– Kevin Dow – Turner Construction- Project Construction Co
– Todd Voth – Populous -Project Architect
– John McKinney resident- supported expansion
‘Sell stadium to support CC expansion CC income exceeds Stadium Income’
– Todd Ament – Anaheim Chamber of Commerce
– Chris Snyder – Catch restaurant
-Tapp’s Fish House & Brewery
– Ed Fuller- OC Visitors Association
– Mariott
– Larry Slagle -(from Google- Anaheim Yellow Cab, S.O.A.R.)
– CynthiaWard – (CATER) -SUPPORTED project, contingent on-
-Guarantee of local / Union labor
-No GenFund risk or requires popular vote
-Define unspecified use of $20 Million Bond Funds
-Confirm/define 2nd parking Structure
-Define solution to parking loss during construction
-Any project Financing Impact on TOT loss to Garden Walk rebates?
-financing Impact of LPMR for Disney Rooms defined
-Public accounting of LPMR and any GenFund impact
-(no) Earthquake impact of ‘Interstitial Parking’ (between floors)
-Homeland SecuRity approval of unchecked Unattended vehicles
So, of 28 speakers, 9 were Members/Officials of Construction /Trade Unions
benefitting through project employment
7 were owners of Convention / tourism Businesses to
gain financial benefit from expansion
7 were Officials/ Members of Resort Area Tourism Trade Groups
whose members would directly benefit from ConvCtr based business
2 were principals of the project – Contractor and Architect
and just 3 were otherwise unaffilliated Residents, — of which
1 was Vehemently Opposed to the Project
1 Was Supportive of the project
1 was Supportive of the project, contingent on Public concerns
about financing, jobs, technical aspects of the project, and
jobs being satisifed.
AND THAT LAST ONE PERSON WAS CYNTHIA WARD OF CATER, THE INITIATOR OF THE LAWSUIT!!!!
So if assuming “The Community” boundaries are Harbor, Katella, Ball, and West, perhaps Diaz is fortunate to suffer only optical myopia, instead of the legal and ethical myopia apparent elsewhere in the building!
Hahahaha! What do we owe you for that research? Oh, forget it — just send the bill to the City!
And thanks. That was worth whatever time you put into it.
I hope this is the draft copy.
Shaddap. It was a rush job.
But … I challenge you to rewrite it over the weekend and whip it into shape, nipper!
A bit of proofreading is all.
“…if your client is interesting in pursuing settlement.”
Well, being interested in pursuing settlement would make Mr. Houston’s client more interesting to me. But I take your point.
Color me wrong. BUT,
Isn’t CATER’S well meaning, righteous fight the very thing Greg Diamond rallies against here and any place else someone practicing “net neutrality” AKA “anonymity” posts an opinion.
I understand the law and the disclosure requirements, and my intention is not to empower the Matt “JUBAL” Cunningham players of the world, but it occurs to me isn’t this much the same as CATER, whose membership is anonymous?
I would accept a half dozen made up names like: Skallywag, Kenlaysnotdead, bigboxofredwhine, fatgayunionboss or whatever. But with this latest development, isn’t it time for the citizens of Anahiem learn WHO is doing their bidding?
As one anonymous guy here liked to say: “Just Sayin’ “.
When does Anaheim get to learn WHO IS CATER?
Not that I’m going to step in the middle of this, but let’s keep in mind that CATER is attempting to force both an ethical decision and a legal decision to allow the people of Anaheim to have their say in a $300,000,000 bond purchase.
You know, just a little perspective vs. anonymous comments on blogs.
Nameless, there is no mystery to CATER, the officers of record are publicly disclosed. Cynthia Ward (moi) serves as President and our Treasurer/Secretary is Brian Chuchua. Sadly Brian was attending a meeting of the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce Legislative Committee yesterday when news broke…seriously….we will have him put back together again in no time.
I gotta give that man the respect and admiration he is due because I avoid that crowd like the plague, and he bravely marches right into the lion’s den on a regular basis, God bless him.
Nameless, we don’t publish our supporters or members because it’s not something you do in the days of identity theft etc. Show me a group, even one as non-controversial as Rotary, that publishes their members. Heck, you can’t see a list of members of the Chamber of Commerce, and one would think they WANT to advertise themselves and get their names out there! No mystery, just the way things are today.
Speaking for myself and not for CATER, the reason many posters here (and possibly CATER members) prefer to speak with their evidence, ideas and actions, rather than from their identities, positions, and affilliations, is lack of confidence in, and /or familiarity / experience with, that the City and its Minions, associated blogs, etc. have ABSOLUTELY NO reservations about attacking, (usually ALSO anonymously) the MESSENGER when left WITHOUT grounds to attack the message.
If you think that doesn’t extend to the groups themselves, (recent APD publicity? DPOC vs DIamond?) check out the old clippings about the City and the late Gus Bode. Clear that up for you ? Fling all the snarky aspersions you want.
Who cares who CATER members are? I don’t even know if there are any beyond the officers, and I could not care less. At least someone is sticking up for truth, justice and the American Way.
Given that our actions are transparent — filing lawsuits using people’s real names and all — it’s weird that people think that our membership matters. No one on our side is profiting off any of this business — unlike those in BigBox’s list below.
I’ve publicly ruled out one hypothesis simply because it bears on the lawsuit itself: neither Mayor Tait nor his wife are involved on our side of the “v.” in the case caption. (That is: they are not members of nor donors to CATER.) I understand that people would care about that, for ethical reasons, so I’m happy to confirm the above. He’s not talking to us about it, period — as is entirely appropriate.
And yet the Cunningham drones and Mr. Business of Baseball want to know who the members are, because they are so addicted to transparency.
Why not make an offer: you reveal your members when Curt Pringle reveals his clients, especially his relationship with a certain Arizona billboard billionaire who wants public subsidy from Anaheim taxpayers.
“Brian Chuchua. Sadly Brian was attending a meeting of the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce Legislative Committee yesterday when news broke…”
I couldn’t find an antonym for “serendipitous” – so I’ll settle for hilarious karma.
Incomprehensible. But glad you amuse yourself.
Up yours Skally. When are you going to get off your butt and do something to make your community a better place to live? Anonymous snarking on the blogs accomplishes little beyond sucking up your time, or that of your employer. Chuchua is a braver man in his sleep than you will ever be.
Yeah, but he DID teach his granddaughter to shoot a gun.
Who cares Anaheim Convention Center has just about every employee part-time no benefits,and a bunch of monkeys running facility services Mike Dziurgot making $100,000 a year doing nothin…