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County moves to terminate doughnut deal

by Matt Baldwin / Whitefish Pilot
| June 29, 2011 10:05 AM

Flathead County Commissioners on June

22 took a major step toward scrapping the 2010 revised interlocal

agreement concerning the two-mile planning “doughnut” around

Whitefish when the board unanimously adopted a resolution giving a

one-year termination notice to the city of Whitefish.

The action from the county comes as a

preemptive move in anticipation of a Whitefish ballot referendum

that seeks to end the revised agreement. The board fears that if

voters choose to end the agreement, it will lead to more litigation

and hurt doughnut property owners.

“If things don’t go right in November,”

Commissioner Jim Dupont said at the meeting, “at least we are six

months into termination.”

Dupont was a key player in helping

craft the 2010 agreement, which is considered a compromise between

the city and county. Commissioners Dupont and Dale Lauman, and past

commissioner Joe Brenneman unanimously approved the restated

interlocal agreement on Nov. 30, 2010.

The Whitefish City Council narrowly

approved the agreement on Nov. 15, 2010 by a 3-2 vote with

councilors Ryan Friel and John Muhlfeld in opposition, and mayor

Mike Jenson and councilor Bill Kahle absent.

The agreement included a five-year

duration and provided a way for the county or city to unilaterally

withdraw with a one-year notice.

 

Doughnut resident Lyle Phillips spoke

to the board June 22 and requested the termination. He said he

supported the 2010 agreement.

“I agreed with the [revised]

settlement, not because it gave the doughnut residents everything

they thought should be in it, but I understood it was a compromise

and ended the current litigation,” Phillips said. “It brought the

county and city together. It promised certainty and stability for

the doughnut, which we desperately need in this current real estate

market.”

He’s requested termination because of

the referendum, which he says “guarantees” more litigation.

“We in the doughnut are tired of

litigation,” he told the board.

He named referendum supporter Richard

Hildner, of Whitefish, and accused sponsors of the referendum of

pushing for even more litigation. Phillips said referendum

supporters are working so that “we in the doughnut have no

say.”

Hildner told the Pilot that referendum

sponsors have “no desire for more litigation.”

“We have a desire to allow Whitefish

residents to vote on the decision made by City Council whether or

not to accept the restated interlocal agreement,” he said.

Hildner cited that no city residents

spoke in favor of the agreement at past council meetings, and that

more than 1,000 signatures were collected in favor of putting a

referendum on city ballots. Hildner, a city council candidate,

helped collect the signatures.

“The referendum has nothing to do with

the agreement,” Hildner said. “It only calls into question the

decision of the Whitefish City Council.”

Supporters of the referendum believe

there is “overwhelming public opposition” to the revised doughnut

agreement, and fear the new agreement “has crippled the city’s

ability to govern itself effectively.”

 

In the June 22 termination notice from

the Board of Commissioners to the Whitefish City Council,

commissioners said that if Whitefish voters approve the referendum,

“it will create more litigation that could potentially continue for

years.”

“While we at the County had hoped that

the 2010 Agreement would allow us to begin a new cooperative

relationship with the City of Whitefish, we cannot postpone

governance of the doughnut indefinitely while the referendum and

its inevitable litigation plays out.”

Commissioners stated their reasoning in

the letter. They said that uncertainty in the doughnut “undermines

economic development” and that doughnut residents remain in legal

limbo without representation.

“Doughnut residents deserve the same

level of self-determination that the City of Whitefish referendum

seekers have so robustly exploited for themselves.”

Finally, commissioners again cited

potential litigation and its affect on real estate.

“When the many legal questions about

the referendum are litigated in district court and then appealed to

the Montana Supreme Court, we can expect at least three to five

more years of uncertainty and attorney’s fees.

“Our doughnut constituents don’t need

more litigation and the uncertainty it brings to their property.

They are having troubles selling their home. They are reluctant to

improve their property, and hire more electricians or plumbers,

because they don’t know the rules.”

Hildner questioned whether the board

had any facts to support their claims about property values and

jobs lost.

The city has 90 days to propose a

resolution and both the city and county are required to engage in

mediation.