Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” - Martin Luther King, Jr.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Closed Doors and Conflicts

Though very little has been discussed publicly about Langtree at the Lake’s request for the Town of Mooresville to issue millions in bonds to pay for the massive mixed-use development’s first phase of infrastructure, much has been said behind closed doors.

E-mail exchanges over the past month between Langtree Attorney David Parker and town administrators provide a more thorough glimpse into the discussions – sometimes quite heated – between the development group and the town.

Langtree: ‘The vultures are circling’

When Langtree asked Iredell County late last year to issue $46 million in bonds, Parker said that Langtree would continue building even if Iredell didn’t approve the deal, but that the developers would likely wait at least a year, until the recession is over. But in a Jan. 29 e-mail from Parker to Mooresville Town Attorney Steve Gambill, Parker said: “We cannot go forward without the infrastructure financing.”

In a Jan. 30 e-mail Parker appears to beseech Town Manager Steve Husemann: “Although I cannot tell you how much time is of the essence in this for us because of the tone that my voice would take, I do understand that our need does not control your requirement of vigilance. That being said, the number of developers that go under daily is astounding and the vultures are continually circling in the sky over all of us.

“We would very much like to survive to build this project,” Parker said.

He went on to state that Langtree “suffered a 120 day delay” trying to negotiate the bond deal with Iredell, only to discover that the county “has no interest in getting into the infrastructure business in any fashion and would have had to take the infrastructure as part of its deal according to their bond counsel.

“Had we known that the County would back off,” Parker continued, “we would have pursued the annexation (with credit against the Utilities payments) months ago and not been in such a state.

“Please help us,” Parker pleaded.

But in previous e-mails – and those written the week leading up to the Feb. 2 town board meeting – Parker’s disposition wasn’t as conciliatory, as exchanges between him and town administrators turned heated.

Biting the hand that could feed you

On Jan. 29 – just days before the February town board meeting, when Langtree was scheduled to request that the Town of Mooresville annex 143 acres of the Mt. Mourne development – Parker e-mailed Gambill and Husemann, discussing the addition of a preliminary-assessment resolution to the Feb. 2 town-board agenda.

The resolution, which was given to commissioners just before they were expected to vote on it, set a public-hearing date for March 2. The resolution passed 5-1 (Commissioner Miles Atkins opposing), but the public hearing was postponed until tomorrow, March 9, because of last week’s inclement weather.

A final-assessment resolution – a document that requests the Local Government Commission to look at the proposed special-assessment financing between Langtree and the town – would be brought up for consideration at a later date, Parker explained in the Jan 29 e-mail. “Bear in mind that the notice only goes out to the Benefitted Property owners and a version is published in the newspaper,” Parker wrote. “NO one other than the Benefitted property owners have legal standing to protest the Notice and we will waive protest if you would like.”

Also, Parker wrote to town administrators, “I do not think that you realize that we cannot keep on having delays and avoid splitting up this property.

“We ask for no special consideration, but after over a year of delays due to slow down by (town) Staff, it would appear that further delays only damage the Town’s reputation for encouraging a higher quality of life.

“We are asking for annexation solely because we have to be annexed in order to ask the Town to ask the LGC (Local Government Commission) to allow the Town to issue the bonds which the Town does not back but are rather secured solely and completely by our property as improved,” Parker said to Gambill, adding, however: “You are now saying that you do not think that we are an ‘Economic Development’ project where a tax check swap will work. Steve Husemann is apparently saying that he cannot think of a way to offset our taxes, hold them in abeyance, or do a swap.

“Being lulled into asking for annexation on a bait-and-switch is not a very appealing situation for us,” Parker said.

Husemann responded on Jan. 30 (the Friday before the Monday, Feb. 2 town board meeting): “Just to be very clear! There is absolutely no agreement at this time that we will defer, waive, credit or in any way credit Langtree for taxes that they will pay after annexation.

“I recall about a 30 second discussion on this topic in which I said that I did not believe that what you were asking for was legal,” Husemann said. “That is certainly not a bait and switch.

“If you were going to pursue this further, you should have done so before the last minute,” Husemann said. “Any discussion on this matter needs to be presented to the entire Board in public session. I have never even suggested to the Board that such a move was pending.

“If you proceed with the annexation with the expectation that some future swap will be approved, you do so at your own risk,” Husemann added. “There is absolutely no commitment or promise from me or any other staff member at this time.”

Parker responded to Husemann that same day, copying Gambill and Mayor Bill Thunberg: “I do not ask for things, considerations, or agreements that cannot stand the twin tests of both public and judicial scrutiny.” Parker said he is “happy to conduct business in the bright light of day, as people that know me will attest.”

It was about four hours later that Parker sent an e-mail to Husemann individually, pleading for help on behalf of the developers.

Closed Doors and Conflicts

After the regular session of the February town board meeting, Mooresville commissioners went into closed session to discuss economic incentives for Langtree.

Though the details of that discussion are unknown, continuing e-mails between Parker and town administrators after the February town-board meeting indicate that things quickly went sour behind closed doors.

The Friday before Monday’s town board meeting, Husemann wrote in an e-mail to Parker: “It is my feeling that our willingness to proceed with this very complicated bonding process is sufficient incentive. I know that you are concerned about additional taxes but we are going to incur costs as well. We need to get a fire station built before that 1st building is occupied. Then we will have to man it.”

Husemann told Parker that if Langtree wanted to negotiate an agreement with commissioners at the Feb. 2 board meeting, then the developers would likely want to contact Russ Rogerson – executive director of the Mooresville-South Iredell Economic Development Corporation (MSIEDC) – “and ask him to present it to the Board.”

Rogerson did in fact approach commissioners in closed session on behalf of the MSIEDC. He apparently asked for economic incentives for Langtree, which is a top financial sponsor of the MSIEDC’s Partners in Progress campaign. Additionally, Rick Howard – Langtree’s CEO – is on the MSIEDC board of directors.

In closed session, Rogerson apparently broached a subject that he wasn’t allowed to discuss in closed session, per the Open Meetings law – and his request for incentives for developers apparently wasn’t well received by all the commissioners.

The day after the Feb. 2 town board meeting, Parker clarified in an e-mail to Gambill: “We are not asking for incentives. It is possible that (John Q.) Hammons will ask for incentives, but Langtree has never asked for any – Russ was not correct.”

In an e-mail to Husemann, Parker said: “I will take the blame for the conversation about incentives not being stopped immediately – I did not foresee that possibility. I fully concur with Steve Gambill that under the Open Meetings law, the SIAD (sic) could not be discussed under the Motion for Closed Session.”

The Open Meetings law allows commissioners to meet behind closed doors to discuss a limited and specific list of confidential matters such as personnel, litigation, economic incentives, etc. The board must provide to the public the subject of what they will be discussing behind closed doors and the accompanying statute that allows them to discuss that particular subject confidentially. Additionally, the law clearly states that the discussion cannot stray from what was advertised as the subject matter. Minutes of closed-session discussions must be released to the public once their release would no longer compromise the matters at hand.

“Russ apparently thought that he was going to talk about the bonds (in closed session) and when he found out that he could only talk about incentives, he did his best,” Parker said in the e-mail to Husemann. “We have not asked for those in the past.

“The tax issue should have never been raised with the Board by Russ the other night,” Parker stated. “I wanted this to go away and merely be looked at later inside the context of the Utilities Agreement. Our understanding was that we would not withdraw the Voluntary Annexation Petition and that we would not be involuntarily annexed until we had a CO (Certificate of Occupancy) – I was simply trying to preserve the original understanding in this new context of having to be annexed now in order to be considered for bond issuance.”

In an e-mail on Feb. 3, Parker wrote to Gambill: “The only thing we wanted on the taxes was to keep our agreement under voluntary annexation that we would not start paying taxes until we had a CO – just trying to keep the same deal that we had before.

Agreement? What agreement? With whom?

The “agreement” to which Parker referred in several e-mails prompted a response from Gambill and Husemann, both of whom said that such an agreement seemed illegal.

“I was not a party to any agreements concerning taxes and annexation,” Gambill wrote in a Feb. 4 e-mail to Parker, “(and, as I have stated before, I do not believe that property taxes can be abated per NC Constitution). I say this to be clear that I have not been involved in any agreements, formallyl (sic) or informally, where I have in any way stated that property taxes would be abated,” Gambill added. “I realize you are not saying that I have been but I have an obligation to be clear on this point.”

A clearly frustrated Husemann jumped into the e-mail discussion, responding to Parker: “I just read your E-mail that you sent to Steve Gambill and once again fear that you are trying to imply that some type of agreement exists or existed that has never existed,” Husemann wrote. “I made it very clear to you last week that we never agreed that you ‘would not start paying taxes until you had a CO.’ I said I thought it was illegal and Steve (Gambill) sent you information to that effect.

“If you ever intend to make such a claim,” Husemann added, “please send me such information immediately. I am uncomfortable with an inference that such an agreement exists when in my opinion there has been no agreement and would like to put this matter to rest before we move forward with discussions about the special assessment bonding process.”

In an e-mailed response on Feb. 4 to Gambill and Husemann, Parker said: “There has been no agreement on tax abeyance, rebates, or anything else – only discussions at a hypothetical level.”

So why, then, the repeated references to an agreement? Who, on behalf of the Town of Mooresville, led Langtree to believe that a potentially illegal agreement regarding taxes could be reached?

The answer to that question was made clear in a Jan. 28 e-mail from Parker to Gambill. The answer? Mayor Bill Thunberg.

“We did not discuss this this AM,” Parker said in the e-mail to Gambill, “but my agreement with the Mayor and others is that we will not pay Town taxes until we get a CO.”

Mayor gives public the finger

It is unclear if Thunberg documented any such agreement with Langtree in e-mails. He has ignored repeated requests over the past few weeks from the Gatton Report to provide any and all e-mail correspondence with any Langtree at the Lake official. Those e-mails, according to the N.C. Public Records Law, are documents that belong to the public. By ignoring the Report’s request for those records, not only is the mayor violating law, he is also giving his constituents the proverbial middle finger.

As soon as he has decided to comply with the law, I will post any relevant e-mails here.



Click on each document below to read the e-mails that were sent to the Report by Husemann; I have placed them in chronological order (except for the first one):



Jan. 28 e-mail exchange:



Jan. 29:





Jan. 30:




Feb. 2:

Feb. 3:


Feb. 4:


Feb. 18:

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

doh!there goes the big bad mayor flipping us off again.who does he think he is??? is this the same group that he signed over some town collateral for?wasn't there a story on that on here?hey mayor hand over the records man.i got news for you, your a public government official.get familiar with the law or find yourself a desk job somewhere outside of town hall.start protecting the people and not the developers that paid for your yard signs.

Anonymous said...

This ridiculous thing will pass..the town helping the rich get richer.
All over the US people are hurting but apparently not in Mooresville. Here the Town Board listens to a rich crazy ass Commissioner and buys a worn out cable vision business.
Lets get some commissioners in office in November that knows what they are doing and will stop trying to help their friends for their on personal thing.
Adkins will vote against (thank God) Carney will vote for it because his office is next to the Howards and he could not face them every day if he voted against it.Rader and Herring will do what Carney says and unemployed Abraham will vote for it hoping that he will finally be able to get a job. Houston you dont know about which way he will go.

Anonymous said...

Jamie, thanks for bringing these matters out from behind the secretive, closed door and maybe illegal negotiations.

It is apparent from the tone of the correspondence there isn’t an arm’s length relationship between the Town and Langtree. This Project was pushed through the Town with little public input and fully supported by the Mayor, even before the details were presented to the Planning and Development Board! He was on TV and in the news media hyping Langtree well before any hearing were held.

The February 18th document even suggests further discussion between the attorneys “for lawyer chat and for me ( the Attorney) to get acquainted”. Apparently, Parker wanted to take Langtree’s petition back behind closed doors. He wanted to get together, off the record, before the March 2nd Town Meeting.

Additionally, the Developer’s Attorney references private citizen Diane DePriest and calls her not a Town Taxpayer, School user or “anything else”! He mentions she is just someone who wants to stop development in her area. This shows Langtree will not stop at anything, even belittling the concerns of a concerned citizen. The arrogance of Langtree is exhibited again.

The Developer’s attorney continually infers Langtree would like to see incentives but, of course, Langtree isn’t asking for them. Heck no, but “John Q” Hammond (Embassy Suites) may be expecting abatements or incentives from the Town. So why wasn’t this aired at the Town Public Meeting two years ago. All that was presented was the Tax benefits of Langtree. Are we no saying the decision process was based on false assumptions?

And was there a deal made by “his Honor” for tax abatement without approval by the Board? We, the citizens, need to know NOW! Not after any Bond deals but NOW. If he is unwilling to release his emails, have the Town Attorney get them. Or ask the State Attorney General to step in.

There are too many questions regarding Langtree. Too many back room dealings, Too close a relationship between Howard and the Town. And few answers.

If we went into a car dealership and priced a fully equipped Mercedes Benz S Class and then went home and figured we couldn’t afford it, we probably would scale back our grandiose plans. It is time for Langtree to “get real” in these rocky economic times and scale back their plans and not come to the Town to ask for financial assistance.

Downtown Mooresville is a blighted area. The store fronts are empty. It is an eye sore. Take a walk through the Town. It is a disgrace that Race City has been so terribly neglected. Let’s fix our problems first before we finance a Billionaire developer’s dream. Build roads, schools, sewer, water pollution control plants, incent Downtown development with Town Bonds not finance a stretch limo for a developer.

Anonymous said...

Why in the world would anyone consider helping a Mega developer build a tract of the magnetude they can't afford?
This irresponsible threat and bribery is the same approach that helped our Economy into its present disaster.
If they can't do the job, let them take the loss.

Anonymous said...

It is time for CFOG to reunite and select candidates for the replacement of the Mayor and the 3 Commissioner candidates. Do not wait until it is too late. Start campaigning now and do not relent. They are the cancers of the Town. Do the surgery quickly. This will also be a warning for any of the miscreants that are left. The citizens speak and if they do not they deserve what they get.

Anonymous said...

Can everybody say "CORRUPT MAYOR" is in the house in Dirty Mo Town?

Anonymous said...

I read in the newspaper last week that Bill Thunberg claims to be unsure as to whether he will run again for mayor.

That is an absolute lie. I know for a fact that he is running again, and that he has already formulated an extensive plan for running.

Of course, articles such as this will put a slight damper on his plans, as they will expose him for the deceitful and conniving impostor that he is.

Anonymous said...

I guess Langtree is "too big to fail"!

Anonymous said...

Jaime,

Thank God we've got you looking out for those of us who live in Mooresville. It shouldn't be a surprise to any one in this town that Bill Thunberg would sell out us taxpayers. Especially since his good friend the editor at the Tribune will no longer truly investigate the Town's business affairs. But that's why we stopped subscribing to the Tribune when Thunberg was elected as we knew the real investigative reporting was over. The Tribune also took full credit for the reporting of John Crone's mismanagement of the Cops for Kids funds knowing full well that Jaime brought them the story. She also did well more than half of the investigative work for the story; yet the Tribune failed to give her credit in the by-line. That was very unprofessial especially since that was the story they won the award for that they so proudly annouced in the paper.

Thanks again Jaime for your hard work on behalf of all the taxpayers.

Love ya!

Anonymous said...

Let’s give this mayor the finger right back. It’s time to impeach the DIShonorable Mayor Thunberg. What a monumental disappointment and embarrassment he’s turned out to be.

Anonymous said...

The Howards lawyer sounds like an idiot but we can’t exactly blame him for threatening and then begging for his clients. They’re paying his hefty bills! And we can’t blame the Howards for trying to get a sweetheart deal for themselves. That’s what developers do!

Who we can blame here is whatever government officials who’ve been winking and nodding and playing hanky panky under the table with these folks. And it looks like in this case its the mayor and it looks like he’s been caught redhanded.

Anonymous said...

I, for one, was impressed by the no-nonsense manner in which Town Attorney Steve Gambill and Town Manager Steve Husemann handled themselves in these correspondences. They clearly were refusing to be party to any misconduct and wrongdoing in this matter. By refusing to be complicit, they have disabled the "muddying of waters" mechanism that someone such as the mayor may have otherwise attempted to employ. That is indeed progress in Mooresville.

Anonymous said...

If Steve Gambill is the TOM attorney, why isn't he looking into the Mayor's corruption schemes???
Sounds to me that Thunberg has the TOM by the "testicles" and no one can or wants to stop him, excluding Miles, who's always standing alone against a bunch of Commissioners that are'nt worth a penny. Only can hope that the three Commissioners, and our Crooked Mayor will not be re-elected. People, haven't you had enough???? March 9th, 11:25am is on mark, so let's all follow his lead and boot them out on their asses.

Anonymous said...

It's about time we have somebody with common sense holding the reigns at Town Hall. Thank you Mr. Huseman for standing up for the little man.

Anonymous said...

I thought Husemann's verbiage was direct and to the point; however, why did it take and FOIA request for this information to become public knowledge. If Mr. Husemann felt so strongly about the tactics of the developers, he should have already made public statements related to the Town's position and the developer's assertion that the Mayor and others had already made promises on behalf of the town. And who, exactly, are those "others" referred to by the attorney for the developer?

As for CFOG, it would be much more advantageous and productive if we, as a group of concerned citizens, didn't organize solely when there's some sort of scandalous activity. Rather, we should be organized and meeting all the time in order to be a consistent and persistent voice calling for reform and for ethical behavior. It's easy to dismiss reactionary groups, but much more difficult to do so with a group which provides a consistent voice throughout the year. Just my thoughts. But I say -- ORGANIZE AND GET THESE FOLKS OUT OF OFFICE.

Anonymous said...

David Parker is not an idiot. He is a very smart attorney. That's why Big Howard and Little Howard are paying him so much. They think he is smarter than the ToM attorney and town manager.

Anonymous said...

http://www.newsfromme.com/images2/pat1.jpg

pic of big howard and little howard.

Anonymous said...

So what happened last night?

Anonymous said...

I must say, excellent reporting. You should keep this for your records for your "next step" as this is Chris Hanson like reporting...

Anonymous said...

Interesting quote from the Langtree at the Lake Press release dated 8/17/2006.

"Unlike other projects that generate jobs and tax base, Langtree at the Lake has not asked for any tax concessions from the town, the county or the state".

This is what as sold to the Town prior to the Town agreeing to let this project go forward. Apparently that is not the case now. Langtree is looking for tax abatements, as well as, asking the Town to float Bonds on Langtree's behalf.

Additionally David Parker alluded in his emails, JQ Hammond (Mega Hotel Developer)may look to the Town to provide incentives, although David Parker did not specifically ask for them in Hammond's name. He just happened to mention it!?

Langtree at the Lake is partially comprised of Land Acquisition and Investment, LLC and per the announcement (same date as above) is comprised of Brad Howard, Wayne Turner and David Parker. David Parker is not merely the attorney for Langtree; he is one of the principals.

Does anyone know what happened at last night's Town meeting? One of the agenda items was the above.

Anonymous said...

Meanwhile, in a public hearing, the town board considered a request from Langtree at the Lake to assess its property for costs associated with building infrastructure.

Last August, the state legislature gave towns the right to create special assessment improvement districts (SAID) where towns could charge fees for improvements in addition to property taxes.

If Mooresville passes its Assessment Resolution, it will be the first North Carolina town to utilize its new authority. Developers and contractors urged commissioners to take advantage of this new tool, saying the development is in a prime location next to a new highway interchange, and promises to bring jobs, tax revenue, along with a hotel and convention center.

Some area residents advised the board to proceed with caution.

First Southwest Company is helping the town explore the economic potential of assessment charges as well as helping to create a policy for future decisions. All administrative fees will be reimbursed to the town by the developer if assessment fees are adopted.

The town called a special meeting for Tuesday, March 24, 6 p.m. at Town Hall to vote on the Final Assessment Resolution. If adopted, the next step will be a review by the Local Government Commission.

Anonymous said...

It now appears that Chris Carney has sold out to the Howard's. They tried to get little Howard elected for an inside voice and failed so now they have bought out Chris. This is a shame because Chris was once a good voice of the people. We must remember this in the coming elections.

Anonymous said...

Little Howard said to stop calling him Little Howard or he's going to show you his big fist.

Anonymous said...

Can any one tell me how much tax revenue Langtree will provide the city and county?

Will it be more than 50% of the total for all of Moorsville? How does the town plan on spending this increase?

How many local vendors are they going to employ?

How many jobs will this project create? Is it more than 100?

If the answers are all favorable than I'm for Langtree. If not than I'm against.

If this project creates jobs and keeps taxes low then I hope all of the commissioners will sell out. !!! Please sell out to the Howards. My FAMILY NEEDS WORK!!!!