What is known about Project Elevate developer CenterCal Acquisitions? What ChatGPT found about Elk Grove's newest partner

In preparing our story on Wednesday night's Elk Grove City Council meeting approving the sale of 20 acres of taxpayer-owned property, we decided to look at the city's chosen developer of Project Elevate, El Segundo, Calif.-based CenterCal Acquisitions. 

Given that the city will speak glowingly of its new partner, we asked ChatGPT if there was controversial information on the developer. Our plan was to summarize this information for a story.

ChatGPT generated an extensive report that cannot be easily summarized. Below is the information generated about Elk Grove's new development partner. 

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Controversies on CenterCal Acquisitions (El Segundo, CA)

CenterCal Acquisitions (also known as CenterCal Properties) is a retail and mixed-use real estate developer based in El Segundo, California therealdeal.com. While it has developed successful shopping centers across the Western U.S., it has also been involved in several controversies, legal disputes, and community backlashes. Below is a summary of key unfavorable information, organized by category, with dates, locations, and sources.

Redondo Beach Waterfront Redevelopment Dispute (2015–2023)

One of CenterCal’s most high-profile controversies unfolded in Redondo Beach, CA. In 2015 the company proposed a 35-acre, $400 million project to overhaul Redondo Beach’s aging harbor waterfront with 520,000 sq. ft. of new shops, a market hall, a cinema, a hotel and more therealdeal.com. The plan initially received City Council approval, but it quickly became a lightning rod for community opposition. Critics derided it as a “mall by the sea,” voicing concerns that it would worsen traffic congestion and alter the character of the seaside community therealdeal.com. The development battle grew unusually intense: opponents fiercely mobilized, and Mayor Bill Brand rose to office in 2016 on a slow-growth platform centered on stopping CenterCal’s project therealdeal.com. In March 2017, Redondo Beach voters passed Measure C, a ballot initiative to block large waterfront development, effectively torpedoing CenterCal’s plan therealdeal.com. Fred Bruning, CenterCal’s CEO, later recounted that the backlash was so vicious that his car tires were slashed and drones hovered over his home during the conflict therealdeal.com. (Some opposition rhetoric even took on a racist tone, with fears the project would bring in “those people” from outside communities therealdeal.com.) Bruning called it “the saddest moment of my career” therealdeal.com.

 After the project was blocked, CenterCal sued the City of Redondo Beach, alleging breach of contract. The developer argued the city had initially agreed to the public-private partnership and then unlawfully derailed it. Between 2017 and 2019, CenterCal’s affiliate (Redondo Beach Waterfront, LLC) filed multiple lawsuits (reportedly five in total) seeking roughly $15–20 million in damages easyreadernews.com easyreadernews.com. This led to protracted litigation. Redondo Beach officials maintained that halting the oversized development was in the public interest, while CenterCal sought compensation for its sunk costs. Finally, in March 2023, the saga concluded with a settlement: the Redondo Beach City Council voted to pay $2 million to CenterCal to resolve all outstanding lawsuits easyreadernews.com. This was just a fraction of what the developer had demanded, and city leaders characterized the outcome as a win for the community’s vision. “The settlement is a big deal,” Mayor Brand said, expressing relief that the city could move forward “free of the cloud of uncertainty” from the litigation therealdeal.comtherealdeal.com. The settlement also required CenterCal to formally relinquish any development rights on the waterfront, clearing the path for Redondo Beach to pursue a different, scaled-down revitalization plan therealdeal.com.

Environmental and Regulatory Challenges

During the Redondo Beach dispute, CenterCal’s project ran into regulatory roadblocks as well. In May 2018, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge James Chalfant ruled that the project’s Environmental Impact Report (EIR) violated the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) on several grounds pvsbsierraclub.org. The court found the EIR “failed to address” critical issues, including potential water-quality and public health impacts from CenterCal’s plan to replace a protected saltwater lagoon with an open beach in polluted harbor waters, as well as the project’s interference with coastal views and the unsafe relocation of a boat launch ramp pvsbsierraclub.org. Judge Chalfant ordered the City to decertify the EIR, rescind all project approvals, and cease any further action on the development until the environmental deficiencies were remedied pvsbsierraclub.org. The California Coastal Commission likewise put the brakes on the proposal – in 2018 it notified the City it would not even consider permitting the project until the CEQA issues were resolved pvsbsierraclub.org. In effect, the courts and Coastal Commission concurred with community groups (like Building a Better Redondo and the local Sierra Club) that the waterfront mall plan was incompatible with environmental and coastal protection laws pvsbsierraclub.org pvsbsierraclub.org. This legal victory for project opponents, combined with the Measure C voter mandate, meant CenterCal’s Redondo development was dead in the water well before the 2023 settlement formalized its end.

SLAPP Lawsuit Against Local Activists (2017–2021)

Another unfavorable episode for CenterCal was its role in a controversial lawsuit against Redondo Beach slow-growth advocates – a case widely viewed as a retaliatory SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation). In June 2017, shortly after Measure C halted the waterfront project, two Redondo residents, Arnette Travis and Chris Voisey, filed a lawsuit accusing Mayor Bill Brand, Councilmember Nils Nehrenheim, and the Rescue Our Waterfront (ROW) citizens’ group of violating campaign finance laws easyreadernews.com easyreadernews.com. The suit claimed Brand and Nehrenheim had “controlled” the ROW political action committee during the Measure C referendum, allegedly an improper coordination of a candidate with a ballot committee easyreadernews.com. Notably, Travis and Voisey were outspoken supporters of CenterCal’s projecteasyreadernews.com, and their attorney had previously been paid by CenterCal’s campaign to fight Measure Ceasyreadernews.com. ROW leaders immediately denounced the case as “yet another CenterCal attempt to intimidate residents and ram through their plan,” pointing out that the developer appeared to be using surrogates to harass its opponents in court easyreadernews.com. Councilman Nehrenheim bluntly called it “a personal lawsuit, meant to be personal harm as retribution by CenterCal”easyreadernews.com.

 

The courts ultimately sided with the activists. In 2018, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Malcolm Mackey dismissed the Travis/Voisey suit and blasted it as frivolous. He found the claims meritless and the tactics abusive, reportedly labeling the lawsuit a “sham” orchestrated by CenterCal using the two residents as “shills.”thelog.com thelog.com Evidence had revealed that despite Travis and Voisey’s initial denials, CenterCal’s development entity was secretly funding their lawsuit – their lawyer was forced to admit in court that CenterCal’s Redondo Beach Waterfront LLC was paying his feesthelog.com thelog.com. Judge Mackey deemed this an egregious attempt to punish community members for political activity. In a scathing ruling, he ordered the plaintiffs (and by extension CenterCal) to pay approximately $900,000 in attorneys’ fees to cover the defendants’ legal coststhelog.com thelog.com. This fee award was intended to sanction the misuse of the courts to suppress public participation. The developer’s allies appealed the decision, but the California Court of Appeal in 2021 upheld the attorney-fee judgment, confirming that Brand, Nehrenheim, and the ROW activists were “unquestionably the prevailing party.”law.justia.com CenterCal’s legal team continued to contest payments for years – as of 2024, the company’s principals were still fighting in court to avoid reimbursing the activists’ full legal expenses rescueourwaterfront.org. Nonetheless, the anti-SLAPP victory stands as a major legal defeat for CenterCal, casting the company in a highly negative light for its attempt to stifle local opposition through litigation.

“Litigious and Combative” Reputation

CenterCal’s aggressive actions in Redondo Beach – suing the city, suing citizens, and even threatening ancillary events – have contributed to a reputation for combative tactics. The hostility between CenterCal and Redondo Beach became so extreme that it spilled into public view in unusual ways. For instance, in 2018 during a California Coastal Commission hearing, CenterCal representatives served legal papers on residents in the audience who had appealed the project’s permits thelog.com. In 2019, the developer even threatened to sue over the “BeachLife” music festival, a popular three-day event on the same waterfront it once sought to control thelog.com. (CenterCal’s claim was presumably that the festival’s use of the harbor area or parking interfered with its lease rights, an issue it raised after its project was stalled.) These maneuvers were seen locally as spiteful and obstructive. As Redondo Harbor Commissioner Jim Light – a leader of the opposition – commented, “CenterCal is famous for ignoring the community… In the end, despite thousands of comments from the public, CenterCal pressed ahead with its plan… All this shows that CenterCal is willing to violate the law with its projects and when it does not get its way they are willing to sue the bejesus out of their opponents. CenterCal is bad news for any community.”thelog.com thelog.com Such sentiments, published in the local press, illustrate how the company’s hardball approach engendered significant community backlash in the South Bay.

 

CenterCal also drew negative media coverage during these disputes. A notable example was a Los Angeles Times investigation in November 2022 that exposed offensive private emails by Mayor Brand and his allies – emails which CenterCal obtained through litigation discovery and then publicized to discredit the slow-growth camp latimes.comlatimes.com. The emails (in which Brand made crude remarks and jokes in poor taste) bolstered CenterCal’s narrative that the anti-development movement was tainted by nastiness or bias latimes.com. Brand accused CenterCal of “cherry picking” and leaking his emails “to vilify him.”latimes.comlatimes.com While the LA Times piece cast the city’s leadership in a harsh light, it also underscored the bitter feud between CenterCal and Redondo Beach’s officials, revealing the lengths to which the developer would go in a public relations battle. This kind of adversarial relationship with local government is certainly an unfavorable mark on CenterCal’s record.

Other Community Controversies

Outside of Redondo Beach, CenterCal’s projects have occasionally met resistance or troubles, though none as explosive. In Meridian, Idaho, for example, CenterCal partnered on a large 200-acre mixed-use development (near Ten Mile Road) that was approved in 2024 amid some community concerns. Local residents and even planning commissioners raised worries about traffic congestion and school crowding, noting the project had been advanced without a new traffic study idahostatesman.com. Despite these objections, the Meridian City Council greenlit the development, reflecting a recurring theme: CenterCal’s ambitious retail/residential centers often spark questions about infrastructure and growth impacts. Similarly, in other cities (e.g. in California’s Central Valley or the Pacific Northwest), big retail projects have at times drawn critique for their scale or potential to disrupt local environments – though such cases have not garnered major media coverage like Redondo Beach did.

 

CenterCal’s tenant relations have also seen tension during challenging times. For instance, during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, CenterCal had to issue a default notice and pursue eviction against Regal Cinemas at Bridgeport Village (Tigard, OR) when the theater chain failed to pay rent during shutdowns tualatinlife.com. CenterCal’s CEO noted they tried to negotiate with Regal but ultimately had to take legal steps tualatinlife.com. While this reflects the difficult retail climate rather than misconduct, it did generate some negative press in the Portland area. Overall, however, no major financial scandals or insolvency issues have been reported regarding CenterCal itself. As of 2024, the company was still expanding – for example, it was selected to develop a new downtown project in Rohnert Park, CA (a $400 million project approved in August 2024) pressdemocrat.com – and it has touted high occupancy rates at its properties prnewswire.com. This suggests CenterCal remains financially stable. Labor practices at CenterCal have also not been the subject of any publicized disputes; our research turned up no known lawsuits or official complaints by employees regarding labor or workplace issues. In contrast to its high-profile battles with cities and community groups, the company appears to avoid controversy in its internal operations.

Summary of Key Incidents

  • Redondo Waterfront Lawsuits (2017–2023): CenterCal’s planned redevelopment in Redondo Beach was halted by a voter initiative and found to violate environmental laws. The company sued the city for breach of contract, seeking up to $20 million. The dispute settled in 2023 with the city paying $2 million easyreadernews.com therealdeal.com.
  • Community Backlash: The Redondo project drew fierce opposition (“a mall by the sea”), over concerns of traffic and overdevelopment therealdeal.com. Opponents passed Measure C (2017) to block it, and activists faced off against CenterCal in public hearings and the press.
  • Anti-SLAPP Ruling (2018): A lawsuit funded by CenterCal against project opponents was dismissed as a sham. A judge called the case frivolous and ordered CenterCal’s side to pay ~$900,000 in attorneys’ fees to the defendants thelog.comthelog.com. An appellate court upheld this outcome in 2021 law.justia.com.
  • Aggressive Legal Tactics: CenterCal gained a reputation for litigiousness – from filing five lawsuits against Redondo Beach easyreadernews.com to threatening new suits (even against events like a local beach festival) when it didn’t get its way thelog.com. Redondo’s harbor commissioner accused CenterCal of “willing to violate the law… and sue the bejesus” out of opponents thelog.com.
  • Negative Media Coverage: The feud with Redondo Beach led to unfavorable press for CenterCal. In 2022, the L.A. Times reported that CenterCal leaked private emails to smear the slow-growth mayor, highlighting the nasty tactics in this development fight latimes.comlatimes.com.
  • Other Projects: In other communities, CenterCal projects have prompted some concern (e.g. traffic impacts in Meridian, ID) idahostatesman.com, but there have been no comparably prominent lawsuits or scandals reported outside California.
  • Financial/Labor Issues: No significant financial instability of the company has been reported in credible sources, and no known labor or employee misconduct issues have surfaced publicly.

Sources: Official court records, news outlets, and watchdog groups were used to compile the above information. Key references include local newspapers (Easy Reader News easyreadernews.com easyreadernews.com), regional real estate press therealdeal.com, The Los Angeles Timeslatimes.comlatimes.comThe Log boating news thelog.com, Sierra Club reports pvsbsierraclub.org, and California appellate court decisions law.justia.com. These sources document the legal disputes, community opposition, and outcomes in detail, underscoring the unfavorable aspects of CenterCal’s track record in certain developments. All evidence of lawsuits, settlements, and controversies has been drawn from reputable publications or official records, as cited above.


Citations

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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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City closes book with $2 million CenterCal settlement - Easy Reader & Peninsula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/city-closes-book-with-2-million-centercal-settlement/
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City closes book with $2 million CenterCal settlement - Easy Reader & Peninsula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/city-closes-book-with-2-million-centercal-settlement/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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CenterCal ‘Shopping Mall by the Sea’ Stymied in Court | Palos Verdes-South Bay Sierra Club

https://pvsbsierraclub.org/2018/06/21/centercal-shopping-mall-by-the-sea-stymied-in-court/
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CenterCal ‘Shopping Mall by the Sea’ Stymied in Court | Palos Verdes-South Bay Sierra Club

https://pvsbsierraclub.org/2018/06/21/centercal-shopping-mall-by-the-sea-stymied-in-court/
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Lawsuit accuses Brand and Nehrenheim of coordinating with PAC - Easy Reader & Peninula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/brand-nehrenheim-rescue-our-waterfront-coordinating-lawsuit/
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Lawsuit accuses Brand and Nehrenheim of coordinating with PAC - Easy Reader & Peninula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/brand-nehrenheim-rescue-our-waterfront-coordinating-lawsuit/
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Lawsuit accuses Brand and Nehrenheim of coordinating with PAC - Easy Reader & Peninula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/brand-nehrenheim-rescue-our-waterfront-coordinating-lawsuit/
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Lawsuit accuses Brand and Nehrenheim of coordinating with PAC - Easy Reader & Peninula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/brand-nehrenheim-rescue-our-waterfront-coordinating-lawsuit/
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Lawsuit accuses Brand and Nehrenheim of coordinating with PAC - Easy Reader & Peninula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/brand-nehrenheim-rescue-our-waterfront-coordinating-lawsuit/
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Waterfront developer court-ordered to pay $900,000 in legal fees to Redondo Beach | The Log

https://thelog.com/waterfront-developer-court-ordered-to-pay-900000-in-legal-fees-to-redondo-beach/
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Waterfront developer court-ordered to pay $900,000 in legal fees to Redondo Beach | The Log

https://thelog.com/waterfront-developer-court-ordered-to-pay-900000-in-legal-fees-to-redondo-beach/
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Waterfront developer court-ordered to pay $900,000 in legal fees to Redondo Beach | The Log

https://thelog.com/waterfront-developer-court-ordered-to-pay-900000-in-legal-fees-to-redondo-beach/
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Travis v. Brand :: 2021 :: California Courts of Appeal Decisions :: California Case Law :: California Law :: U.S. Law :: Justia

https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/2021/b298104.html
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Judge Rules Against CenterCal’s Fred Bruning and Jean Paul Wardy! - Rescue Our Waterfront

https://www.rescueourwaterfront.org/2024/01/23/judge-rules-against-centercals-fred-bruning-and-jean-paul-wardy/
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Waterfront developer court-ordered to pay $900,000 in legal fees to Redondo Beach | The Log

https://thelog.com/waterfront-developer-court-ordered-to-pay-900000-in-legal-fees-to-redondo-beach/
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Waterfront developer court-ordered to pay $900,000 in legal fees to Redondo Beach | The Log

https://thelog.com/waterfront-developer-court-ordered-to-pay-900000-in-legal-fees-to-redondo-beach/
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Waterfront developer court-ordered to pay $900,000 in legal fees to Redondo Beach | The Log

https://thelog.com/waterfront-developer-court-ordered-to-pay-900000-in-legal-fees-to-redondo-beach/
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Waterfront developer court-ordered to pay $900,000 in legal fees to Redondo Beach | The Log

https://thelog.com/waterfront-developer-court-ordered-to-pay-900000-in-legal-fees-to-redondo-beach/
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Crude emails reveal nasty side of a California beach city’s crusade to halt growth - Los Angeles Times

https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2022-11-14/crude-emails-reveal-nasty-side-of-a-california-beach-city-crusade-to-halt-growth
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Crude emails reveal nasty side of a California beach city’s crusade to halt growth - Los Angeles Times

https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2022-11-14/crude-emails-reveal-nasty-side-of-a-california-beach-city-crusade-to-halt-growth
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Crude emails reveal nasty side of a California beach city’s crusade to halt growth - Los Angeles Times

https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2022-11-14/crude-emails-reveal-nasty-side-of-a-california-beach-city-crusade-to-halt-growth
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Crude emails reveal nasty side of a California beach city’s crusade to halt growth - Los Angeles Times

https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2022-11-14/crude-emails-reveal-nasty-side-of-a-california-beach-city-crusade-to-halt-growth
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Another big commercial center coming to Meridian, Idaho

https://www.idahostatesman.com/news/local/community/west-ada/article293082059.html

Bridgeport Regal Cinemas Faces Eviction After Failing to Pay Rent ...

https://tualatinlife.com/featured/bridgeport-regal-cinemas-faces-eviction-after-failing-to-pay-rent-for-nine-months/
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Rohnert Park chooses Southern California developer CenterCal as ...

https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/rohnert-park-centercal-downtown/
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CenterCal Properties outperforms, achieves 94% occupancy across ...

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/centercal-properties-outperforms-achieves-94-occupancy-across-mixed-use-retail-portfolio-in-q1-2024-302132318.html
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Redondo Beach to Settle CenterCal Lawsuits

https://therealdeal.com/la/2023/03/28/redondo-beach-to-settle-lawsuits-with-centercal-over-waterfront/
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City closes book with $2 million CenterCal settlement - Easy Reader & Peninsula Magazine

https://easyreadernews.com/city-closes-book-with-2-million-centercal-settlement/
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Crude emails reveal nasty side of a California beach city’s crusade to halt growth - Los Angeles Times

https://www.latimes.com/homeless-housing/story/2022-11-14/crude-emails-reveal-nasty-side-of-a-california-beach-city-crusade-to-halt-growth


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