Dunes officials allege activist meddled with mail
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Andrew Glazer
NEWPORT BEACH -- Dunes officials have asked the postal inspector to
investigate charges that a local environmentalist tricked postal workers
into holding City Hall-bound letters sent in support of the proposed
resort.
They say a supervisor from the U.S. Post Office on Camelback Street, who
was not identified, sent a letter on June 19 to Dunes officials claiming
Newport Beach-based activist Susan Caustin -- misrepresenting herself as
a Dunes employee -- asked postal workers to hold the mailings.
Dunes officials had distributed hundreds of fliers -- with pre-stamped
postcards addressed to Mayor John Noyes affixed to them -- to Newport
Beach homes two weeks ago. The fliers instructed project supporters to
mail the postcards.
Caustin said she wouldn’t be so foolish to use her own name if she was
misrepresenting herself.
“That’s really absurd,” said Caustin, who has spoken out against
developers’ plans to build the massive Dunes waterfront resort on the
undeveloped southeastern portion of the Back Bay. “I’m still fighting the
project, but it’s not worth me going to the U.S. Postmaster’s jail for
it.”
Dunes officials want to build a 470-room, four-story hotel with a
31,000-square-foot conference center, swimming pools, health spa and
restaurants.
Opponents say the project is too large for the environmentally sensitive
Back Bay.
Dunes officials said they expected the city to receive the letters in
time for a City Council hearing June 13.
But Dunes officials said they were surprised when residents who mailed
the postcards said their correspondence had not been included in a
package being prepared for the hearing. The postcards did not arrive
until roughly a week after the scheduled hearing, which was postponed --
for other reasons -- until tonight.
Caustin said she asked a postal worker to verify Dunes officials had used
proper postage.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. Postal Service said the employee normally
handling business reply postage was on vacation. His replacement chose to
err on the conservative side by holding the mail, she said.
“He probably got flustered,” said spokeswoman Terri Bouffiou. “He
probably said ‘Oh my goodness, they’re doing something wrong here --
maybe I should wait until tomorrow to get this straightened out.’ ”
Robert Gleason, Dunes’ chief financial officer, said the mailings had
been arranged with postal employees in advance.
“We did everything the post office told us to,” he said. “We wanted to
make sure it would go through.”
Gleason said he will wait to hear from the Postal Inspection Service
before guessing whether the letters were held because of a
misunderstanding, or foul play.
But Caustin said she wished Dunes officials would drop the matter.
“This is a form of intimidation,” she said. “Clearly, there was a
misunderstanding here.”
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