Wal-Mart gives backers $111,000
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- If money talks, then Wal-Mart will be heard loud and
clear in the campaign leading to a vote on a ballot initiative that may
scuttle the retailer’s plans to open a store.
A local campaign committee friendly to Wal-Mart has collected about
$112,000 so far, with the retailer contributing about $111,000, according to public financial statements filed Jan. 11.
“It’s an outrageous sum of money,” said Connie Boardman, a member of Save
Crest View, an opposing committee whose members helped sponsor the
initiative.
Known as Measure I, the initiative will ask residents in the March
election to rezone the site on Talbert Avenue by Beach Boulevard, where
Wal-Mart proposes to build a 150,000-square-foot retail complex. Changing
the zoning from commercial to residential may prevent the project from
moving forward.
The total amount of money Wal-Mart opponents have managed to collect --
about $13,000 -- pales in comparison to the retailer’s largess, public
financial statements dated Jan. 4 show. Boardman said Wal-Mart is giving
the other side an unfair advantage.
“I think it’s unfair when a giant corporation is trying to influence a
local election,” she said.
But Wal-Mart spokeswoman Cynthia Lin said the company is simply
supporting a grass-roots campaign driven by parents, teachers, school
officials and local businesses. The project site is a closed school
campus owned by the Ocean View School District, which plans to use the
money gained from the development to renovate other district facilities.
“This is their campaign,” Lin said. “We’ll do what we can to help.”
The money pays not only for mass mailers and campaign signs, but for the
services of firms that specialize in public relations and surveys, the
financial statements reveal.
The Arkansas-based retailer isn’t the only outsider involved in the
campaign, Lin points out. Wal-Mart’s opponents received $10,000 from a
retail clerks union headquartered in Washington D.C., financial
statements show. The United Food and Commercial Workers, with a local
chapter in Buena Park, is critical of Wal-Mart’s practice of hiring
nonunion employees, Boardman said.
Ultimately, campaign contributions will not decide the election, said
Tracy Pellman, co-chair of Save Our Schools, the committee fighting the
initiative.
“Having the community understand what’s going on is going to be the
advantage,” she said. “I don’t think money is going to do it.”
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