City tries to save part two of sports complex
Dave Brooks
Surf City officials are doing their best to salvage the second
construction phase of the Huntington Beach Sports Complex, after it
was abandoned by contractor Joe O’Connor, who has a history of failed
sports projects.
The attorney and soccer enthusiast is tied to at least seven
defunct corporations involving sports construction and a handful of
lawsuits connected to similar failed projects in Oregon and
Washington, according to public records obtained by the Independent.
Community Services Director Jim Engle said the city will continue
to pressure O’Connor to finish, or return the nearly $950,000 he was
paid to build batting cages, a soccer pavilion, and skating
facilities at the Goldenwest Street facility. But if O’Connor
abandons the project, as he did on projects in 1998 in two Pacific
Northwestern cities, Engle said he will bring a new contractor on
board and continue to put legal pressure on O’Connor.
“We’re going to go after him hard,” Engle said.
On July 14, the city filed a lawsuit against O’Connor after he
missed a March 20 completion deadline. O’Connor blamed the delays on
bad working conditions and increased costs, arguing that he would
need an additional $300,000 to finish.
O’Connor and his company, Community Parks Foundation, were brought
on the project in June 2003 to meet financing requirements that
mandate a nonprofit entity be hired to complete a portion of the
sprawling $19-million Sports Complex.
O’Connor never registered Community Parks Foundation for nonprofit
status as required by law, Internal Revenue Service records indicate.
Two other companies run by O’Connor that are doing business with the
city of Huntington Beach, National Community Sports Foundation and
Intersport Systems Group, are also not properly registered. All three
companies have been dissolved for failing to renew their articles of
incorporation, according to Oregon Business Registry records.
Four more defunct corporations where O’Connor served as either
president or a board member have surfaced, including one called
Oregon Community Sports Assn., which was responsible for two domed
soccer pavilion projects in Salem and Yakima, Wash.
Oregon resident Nancy Ornee was hired as the project manager for
the Salem Sundome Soccer Pavilion, an indoor soccer arena marketed by
O’Connor as a prototype for rain-soaked cities.
The project was a disaster from its inception, plagued with debt
and red-tagged by Marion County building inspectors, before
eventually falling over in a windstorm, Ornee said.
Ornee described O’Connor as a charismatic businessman constantly
in denial about his failure to meet the most basic permitting and
regulatory requirements. Even in the worst of times, when O’Connor’s
paychecks to his employees began to bounce and building inspectors
ordered a work stoppage, O’Connor refused to acknowledge that
anything had gone wrong and continued to actively pursue new
investors.
“The whole thing was doomed to failure from the beginning,” she
said.
O’Connor was finally forced to leave when a major investor,
Birdair Inc. of Amerhest, N.Y., wrested the project away. In a
February 1998 letter to O’Connor, Birdair Vice President Garry Becker
said his company wanted O’Connor off the project because of his
“growing tendency to intermingle the truth with what [O’Connor] would
like to believe,” classifying the project as a “physical as well as
financial mess” that is “going to cost someone a small fortune to
have any chance at rectifying [O’Connor’s] mistakes.”
O’Connor threatened to sue Birdair for kicking him off the
project, but never filed. Instead, a company called Pacific Mobile
Structures filed a civil complaint against O’Connor shortly before a
windstorm knocked the pavilion over, Marion County court records
show.
Court records also show that three other collection agencies have
filed suit against O’Connor in the past eight years, as well as a
2001 eviction of a rental O’Connor was listed as sharing with his
father-in-law Harvey Miller. When reached for comment Friday, Miller
said he was unaware of the eviction.
It remains unclear what soccer pavilions, if any, O’Connor has
successfully built, although in a July interview he claimed to have
constructed pavilions in Ireland and Mexico.
The Independent has requested copies of public
employment-references O’Connor submitted when he put in his bid for
the job, but to date, the Huntington Beach Community Services
Department has not turned that over.
Although no clear timeline is available, Engle said that former
department director Ron Hagan was responsible for choosing O’Connor.
Hagan did not return phone calls for comment.
The idea of the Sports Complex was rejected twice by voters, once
as the advisory Measure GG in March 1996 and again as Measures J, K
and L in November of that year. Both gauged whether residents were
willing to levy themselves with property assessments to pay for the
center and both were defeated with a seven-percentage point margin.
The Sports Complex was revived a year later by the City Council
and marketed as a $1.5 million project. The price tag eventually shot
up to $19 million.
There is still about $240,000 in public funs left for the project
-- mostly from a contingency fund -- an amount Engle said should have
been much higher.
“There was a payment made to O’Connor that shouldn’t have been
made,” Engle said. “Based on the schedule, we didn’t have enough
product. Somewhere this slipped through the cracks.”
Engle said he will now focus on finishing the batting cages and
soccer pavilion, most likely with the help of an outside contractor.
“We’re looking at our contingency plans,” he said. “We’re
currently in the process of finding a contractor that can complete
and operate” the sports complex.
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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