Huge C-Tran Meeting Tomorrow - Tuesday at 5:30PM - Support Belkot & Stop Light Rail - Is Wil Fuentes Paying Mayor Anne Back?
Apr 15, 2025 1:13 am
Mayor Anne Contributed $1,000 To Wil Fuentes Last Year, Now She Wants Him To Vote To Save Her Light Rail Project
Why was Wil Fuentes chosen and how can Mayor Anne brag about Wil Fuentes backing her up to save Light Rail? Maybe because Mayor Anne paid Wil... $1,000, to be exact. Last year, Mayor Anne contributed $1,000 to Wil Fuentes.
I wonder what Wil had to promise to gain her support? Hmmmm
Also, don't you think Wil Fuentes should recuse himself from a vote that supports one of his biggest individual contributors of his campaign?
In a recent public records request, it was found that Chair Sue Marshall was in direct communications with Mayor Anne... and texted her that Wil Fuentes was installed in the C-Tran Board to replace Belkot. Wonder if Mayor Anne requested Wil Fuentes?
Inquiring minds want to know...
Show Up & Speak Up Tomorrow At C-Tran Meeting
READ CLARKCOUNTYTODAY.COM ARTICLE HERE
Tomorrow — Tuesday, April 15 at 5:30 PM — is the next C-Tran Board meeting, and it’s shaping up to be a doozy.
As you may recall, last month, Councilor Sue Marshall conspired with Vancouver Mayor Anne to block a vote that would have changed C-Tran’s by-laws and prevented Clark County taxpayers from footing the bill for TriMet’s light rail operations — a cost that could reach $20 million per year. With Councilor Michelle Belkot poised to cast the deciding vote to end light rail funding, Sue Marshall made a motion to table the vote. The very next day, she improperly and without legal authority removed Belkot from the C-Tran Board and replaced her with Wil Fuentes — a new political ally of Mayor Anne, installed to do her bidding.
This upcoming meeting matters because:
- They will attempt to officially seat Wil Fuentes and have him cast the deciding vote to keep light rail funding alive.
- Two lawsuits (Anderson v Clark et el & Belkot v Clark/Fuentes) are now challenging both the legality of Belkot’s removal and Fuentes’ appointment.
- Last month’s “motion to table” was out of order. According to Robert’s Rules of Order (12th ed., §17): “A motion to table is not valid if made solely to avoid or suppress a vote due to anticipated outcome. It must be linked to urgent, temporary business or a need to shift priorities.”
- Clark County residents don’t want light rail — and certainly don’t want to subsidize Portland’s TriMet. Once those tracks are laid, the taxpayer-funded grift never ends.
- Mayor Anne wants a train for her city, but expects Clark County’s “smaller cities” to pay for it.
- The C-Tran Board should instead make a motion to table this vote and allow the legal process to proceed — the first hearing is scheduled just two days later, on April 17.
Show up early - Pack the house - Always be respectful, thoughtful, and civil — let your arguments be what people remember.
April 15 - 5:30PM (show up early if you want to plan to give comment)
C-TRAN Administration Building
10600 NE 51st Circle
Vancouver, WA 98662
Other info for Tuesday's C-TRAN Meeting
Participating At C-TRAN Board Meetings
C-TRAN Board Meetings are broadcast live on CVTV (Comcast channel 21 or 23 and HD321 or HD323). You can also livestream the meeting at www.cvtv.org.
All meeting agendas for the Board meetings are posted on the C-TRAN Website, usually by the Thursday preceding the meeting. Each agenda will include a phone number and access code unique to that meeting to listen to audio only of the meeting.
Meeting agendas can be found here. The C-TRAN Board of Directors typically meets the second Tuesday of each month at C-TRAN’s administrative offices, 10600 NE 51st Circle, Vancouver, WA 98682. Meetings begin at 5:30 p.m. and are open to the public. Meeting times and locations are subject to change.
Comments For Agenda And Non-Agenda Items
Citizens may address the Board on any agenda or non-agenda item during “Public Comment”. Those wishing to do so must complete a Public Comment form available at the meeting. When the Chair calls your name, come forward to the table and state your name and address for the record.
If you wish to attend virtually and address the Board during the live meeting, or if you wish to submit written comments to the Board to be entered into the meeting record, please contact C-TRAN Clerk of the Board Sindy Quitugua by NOON of the meeting date; sindy.quitugua@c-tran.org or by fax at 360-696-1602. If you wish to submit written comments at the meeting, please provide a minimum of 15 copies.
Length of Comments Or Testimony
Please observe the time limit of three minutes.
Written Comments
If you would prefer to submit written comments for any agenda or non-agenda item, you may do so. Please provide the Clerk of the Board the written comments no later than noon the day of the meeting by e-mail to sindy.quitugua@c-tran.org or by fax at 360-696-1602. If you wish to submit written comments at the meeting, please provide a minimum of 15 copies.
Questions Regarding C-TRAN Board Meetings
Questions regarding C-TRAN Board of Directors meetings and agendas can be directed to the Clerk of the Board Sindy Quitugua; 360-906-7447, sindy.quitugua@c-tran.org, or Deputy Clerk of the Board Morgan Stubbe at 360-906-7304, morgan.stubbe@c-tran.org.
ICYMI:OUTRAGEOUS: Mayor Anne Blames Vancouver's Homelessness On Camas, Battle Ground & Other Cities 
CLICK HERE TO LISTEN
In this clip from a March 14 Union Roundtable event, Mayor Anne discusses a meeting with Fred Meyer managers and blames Vancouver’s homelessness crisis on “other cities.” She claims that the homeless population in Vancouver is the result of resolutions passed by Camas, Battle Ground, and others — suggesting that these neighboring cities are pushing the issue onto Vancouver.
Injunction Hearing Set For April 17th To Temporarily Reverse Decisions To Remove Belkot
Stay tuned...
Support Reform Clark County Efforts Here
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Please consider donating to https://www.givesendgo.com/GF5UC to support Councilor Michelle Belkot's efforts.
"Keep your life free from love of money, and be content with what you have, for he has said, "I will never leave you nor forsake you." So we can confidently say, "The LORD is my helper; I will not fear; what can man do to me?" - Heb 13:5-6
Charter Review Commission - Do You Want To Help Shape Clark County For The Next 10 Years? Time IS RUNNING OUT... Filing Week Is Coming Up Fast
The Home Rule Charter: Our "County Constitution"
The Home Rule Charter is often referred to as our "County Constitution." While there are some advantages to having a Charter—Clark County being one of only seven counties in Washington State with one—there are also significant downsides, and ours has many.
Earlier this year, Greg Kimsey boasted about writing much of the Charter, which explains why it empowers many executive branch positions while stripping power from the people (the legislative branch). Unfortunately, the first Charter Review Commission served as a puppet for administrative elites and proposed several terrible amendments, including:
- A "woke" preamble (failed)
- Creating a DEI office (tried twice, failed twice)
- Allowing elected executive branch officials to appoint their successors, even if they committed a felony or were being removed from office (passed)
- Restricting initiative and referendum rights (one passed, two failed)
- Ranked Choice Voting (failed)
- Eliminating the Chair position (held by Eileen Quiring-O’Brien), which conveniently redistricted three Republican Councilors into the same district (passed)
- Adding phony non-partisan titles for County officials (passed) - Newsflash: This doesn’t magically remove politics from political positions. Instead, it gives voters less information and allows candidates to deceive voters.
What is the Charter Review Commission?
The Home Rule Charter requires review by a 15-member elected Charter Review Commission. Three members are elected from each of the five County Councilor districts. Under the Charter, the next election for commission members will take place in November 2025.
Here’s the relevant section from the Charter regarding the Commission:
Section 9.1: Charter Review Commission
- Election and Period of Office
- Five years after the adoption of this Charter and at least every five years thereafter, the council shall facilitate the election of a Charter Review Commission. The commission will consist of fifteen members, elected on a nonpartisan basis, with three representatives from each council district.
- Candidates shall file during the regular candidate filing period and pay a $25 filing fee.
- No primary will be held for this election. The election shall occur during the November general election.
- The member receiving the most votes shall convene the commission.
- The term of office for commission members shall be two years or until the commission concludes its work, whichever occurs sooner.
- Meetings may take place at appropriate times and locations within Clark County. Public notice of each meeting must be provided in a countywide newspaper and posted on the county’s website at least 14 days in advance.
- Vacancies
- Vacancies on the commission must be filled by the remaining members within 30 calendar days after the chair declares a vacancy. Notice must be provided to residents of the affected district within 10 days of the declaration. The selected replacement must reside in the district where the vacancy occurs and be approved by a simple majority vote of the commission.
- Financial Support
- Commission members shall serve without salary but will be reimbursed for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses. The County Council must provide the commission with necessary resources, facilities, and funding to fulfill its purpose effectively.
Interested in Becoming a Charter Commissioner?
If you’re interested in serving as a Charter Commissioner, please click the button below to send me an email with your name, address, and district. I’ll send you more information!
Since there are no primaries for Charter Commissioners, it’s crucial to identify and support the three best candidates from each district. Coordination is essential to avoid splitting votes, as happened last time.
Quick Facts About the Charter Review Commission:
- Serious Responsibility: This is an opportunity to bring much-needed reforms to Clark County.
- Term of Office: Two years or until the commission’s work concludes, whichever comes first.
- Representation: Only three commissioners will be elected from each of the five County Council districts. [Click HERE to find your district.]
- Commitment: Be prepared for at least two meetings per month, with the potential for more during busy periods.
- Election Timing: Commissioners will be elected in the November 2025 general election (no primary election).
Support Reform Clark County Efforts Here
Your support helps with legal and other expenses needed to reform Clark County
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Reform Clark County only encourages lawful and respectful action that leads to meaningful constitutional reforms in Clark County