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When City Hall Stops Listening, Residents Get Loud - Matthew Malady

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Manage episode 521822179 series 3704010
Content provided by Scott. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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A neighbor learns a truck yard is slated for the other side of his fence and decides to do something about it. That’s the spark for a candid, on-the-ground look at how land use decisions get made in Apple Valley—and what everyday residents can do when the process feels tilted.
We sit down with Matthew, a seventh grade teacher whose backyard sits about 30 feet from the proposed 14.8-acre truck and trailer facility at Navajo and Waalu. He walks us through the moment he found out from a neighbor rather than the town, the scramble to decode a mitigated negative declaration, and the immediate worries any family would have: 3 a.m. engine starts, floodlights, traffic at a strained intersection, and the loss of quiet nights. From there, we map the mechanics of civic action—flyers, group chats, yard signs, and a steady drumbeat of three-minute public comments—to show how a small cluster of homes became a connected front.
We also unpack why residents are pushing for a full Environmental Impact Report instead of an MND, and how consistent policy matters when a town that restricted truck parking at homes now considers concentrating hundreds of rigs beside a neighborhood. Along the way, we raise transparency questions around selective notices, late agenda postings, and Measure P’s general fund routing and oversight. This isn’t about outrage for outrage’s sake; it’s a practical guide to reading agendas, understanding the planning commission’s role, spotting red flags, and building momentum without burning out.
If you care about Apple Valley’s future—traffic, air quality, public safety, and honest process—this conversation gives you the playbook to get informed and get involved. Listen, share a timestamp with a neighbor, then join us at the next meeting. Subscribe, leave a review to boost local voices, and tell us: should a project this size move forward without a full EIR?

Support the show

Apple Valley Agenda’s: https://applevalley.org/government/meetings-and-agendas/

Apple Valley TV: https://applevalley.tv/internetchannel/

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Show Mission And Local Focus (00:00:00)

2. Meet Matthew And His Background (00:01:16)

3. The Truck Yard Plan Hits Home (00:02:09)

4. Missing Notices And Selective Outreach (00:04:03)

5. What An MND Really Means (00:07:58)

6. Organizing Neighbors Into Action (00:12:05)

7. Public Comment Limits And Pushback (00:14:06)

8. Conflicts, Connections, And Transparency (00:18:09)

9. Health, Sleep, And Property Impacts (00:22:19)

10. Why An EIR Is Non‑Negotiable (00:25:35)

11. Staying Engaged Beyond One Fight (00:28:04)

12. Measure P And Oversight Concerns (00:30:05)

13. Council Culture And Need For Change (00:33:17)

3 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 521822179 series 3704010
Content provided by Scott. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Scott or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

A neighbor learns a truck yard is slated for the other side of his fence and decides to do something about it. That’s the spark for a candid, on-the-ground look at how land use decisions get made in Apple Valley—and what everyday residents can do when the process feels tilted.
We sit down with Matthew, a seventh grade teacher whose backyard sits about 30 feet from the proposed 14.8-acre truck and trailer facility at Navajo and Waalu. He walks us through the moment he found out from a neighbor rather than the town, the scramble to decode a mitigated negative declaration, and the immediate worries any family would have: 3 a.m. engine starts, floodlights, traffic at a strained intersection, and the loss of quiet nights. From there, we map the mechanics of civic action—flyers, group chats, yard signs, and a steady drumbeat of three-minute public comments—to show how a small cluster of homes became a connected front.
We also unpack why residents are pushing for a full Environmental Impact Report instead of an MND, and how consistent policy matters when a town that restricted truck parking at homes now considers concentrating hundreds of rigs beside a neighborhood. Along the way, we raise transparency questions around selective notices, late agenda postings, and Measure P’s general fund routing and oversight. This isn’t about outrage for outrage’s sake; it’s a practical guide to reading agendas, understanding the planning commission’s role, spotting red flags, and building momentum without burning out.
If you care about Apple Valley’s future—traffic, air quality, public safety, and honest process—this conversation gives you the playbook to get informed and get involved. Listen, share a timestamp with a neighbor, then join us at the next meeting. Subscribe, leave a review to boost local voices, and tell us: should a project this size move forward without a full EIR?

Support the show

Apple Valley Agenda’s: https://applevalley.org/government/meetings-and-agendas/

Apple Valley TV: https://applevalley.tv/internetchannel/

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Show Mission And Local Focus (00:00:00)

2. Meet Matthew And His Background (00:01:16)

3. The Truck Yard Plan Hits Home (00:02:09)

4. Missing Notices And Selective Outreach (00:04:03)

5. What An MND Really Means (00:07:58)

6. Organizing Neighbors Into Action (00:12:05)

7. Public Comment Limits And Pushback (00:14:06)

8. Conflicts, Connections, And Transparency (00:18:09)

9. Health, Sleep, And Property Impacts (00:22:19)

10. Why An EIR Is Non‑Negotiable (00:25:35)

11. Staying Engaged Beyond One Fight (00:28:04)

12. Measure P And Oversight Concerns (00:30:05)

13. Council Culture And Need For Change (00:33:17)

3 episodes

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