A STOCKTONIA INVESTIGATION

2015

“I remember first coming here and just kind of being wowed by the building, and then walking into this office space and being like … where’d the ‘wow’ go?”

Katherine Roland, STOCKTON CITY CLERK

2017

A decade into the expensive work to complete the city’s move to 400 E. Main St., a path toward a permanent City Hall was still unclear.

Then, in September 2017, then-City Manager Kurt Wilson and city staff presented a new option: The city could buy another property for $13.6 million — and be done with the Main Street building and its ongoing rent payments once the lease ended.

That property was the Waterfront Towers complex: two five-story, 1980s-era office towers overlooking the Stockton Marina.

Buying the towers was the cheapest and most financially responsible option, Wilson said before the purchase vote at the Sept. 19 meeting. The proposal would cost an estimated $25.5 million total: $13.6 million for the buildings and $11.9 million for “everything else it would take to get it ready to go,” Wilson said.

In contrast, renovating historic City Hall and rebuilding the dated Permit Center annex would cost an estimated $60 million, he said. 

In Stockton’s century-old City Hall, there is sometimes no good place for modern technology. (Photos by Annie Barker/Stocktonia/CatchLight Local/ Report for America)

As for the earlier plan to buy 400 E. Main, it would have cost $40 million — but after losing the building in bankruptcy, the likelihood of getting its new owners to sell back to the city was slim.

“This is one of the rare instances where we’re presenting you with an option to make a purchase that would actually save money, rather than cost you money,” Wilson said of the Waterfront Towers proposal. 

“This is essentially the culmination of solid financial planning on behalf of the city.”

Wilson’s presentation provided no detailed information about what city staff knew about the condition of the towers, which were about 40 years old. The former city manager sent no response to a request for an interview for this report.

At least one councilmember believed parts of the buildings could be in disrepair. “I’ve heard from different public members that they have problems there with the windows leaking, and the heating and air conditioning system,” then-Councilmember Susan Lenz said.

“I mean, those would be items that we would have inspectors go in, to know what the full extent of those repairs would be?”

Former Economic Development Director Micah Runner assured the council that officials would find any major problems with the towers before committing to the purchase.

“(Just) like when you buy a house, (when you) buy a house you do the inspection, and you find out what the issues might be. Same process for this acquisition,” Runner said. “We agree on a purchase price, but then we go in and really do the necessary due diligence.”

Runner didn’t return a request for an interview. 

Many Stocktonians showed up to voice their opinions on the deal. A few were optimistic. “I’m ecstatic over the marina towers,” Kathleen Gapusan, a Stockton Marina boat resident, said at the time. 

But more were skeptical of the purchase — and the perceived lack of transparency surrounding the deal.

“It is time for the city of Stockton to stop shopping at garage sales for their city facilities,” Mark Stebbins, a former city councilmember and business owner, said.

The City Council approved the purchase in a 6-1 vote. Mayor Christina Fugazi — then a councilmember — voted yes, along with former councilmembers Elbert Holman, Lenz, Susan Lofthus, Dan Wright and former Mayor Michael Tubbs. 

Former Councilmember Jesus Andrade voted no. “I didn’t like the idea that we were just going to discard (a) beautiful building that represents civic engagement — the civic light of the city — and we were going to replace that with two corporate towers,” he told Stocktonia.

Andrade also suspected the cost of renovating the Waterfront Towers would be higher than officials had estimated, he said. He turned out to be right.

July 16, 2019

December 2019

The City Council hires architecture firm Indigo Hammond + Playle to design the renovations for the Waterfront Towers for about $1.4 million. It’s the first of three main building contracts the city will sign for the project. 

November 2021

The council hires Griffin Structures for $722,000 to manage the project.

May 2022

After soliciting proposals for construction work, which the city estimated would cost about $33.5 million, officials find that every bid far exceeds their cost estimate. In a presentation to the City Council, then-Public Works Director Jodi Almassy attributes the higher bids to the expensive nature of repairs, especially for the outdated heating and air conditioning system. The council agrees to hire Roebbelen Contracting Inc. to do the construction on the Waterfront Towers for about $42.3 million.

May 2023

As the Waterfront Towers project wears on, some people grow frustrated about the cost and delay. “When we ask for help with any issue, we are continually told that because of the bankruptcy, the city cannot afford it — whatever it happens to be, whether parks, trees, Pixie Woods, police, everything Stockton citizens want done has to be done by volunteers,” midtown resident Julie Devincenzi says at a May 23 meeting. “The city could, however, in 2017 afford to buy a shell of a building for a new City Hall, to the tune of $13.6 million,” Devincenzi said. “And then have to completely refurbish that $13.6 million building, (the) cost of which, as of last May, was projected to increase to $62 million. Another year has gone by since that. …  What’s the cost per year of this building that hasn’t housed anyone yet?”

Aaron Leathley is a government accountability reporter for Stocktonia.

Read next: Contracts started at more than $40 million. Here’s how they kept growing, mostly unseen.

A STOCKTONIA INVESTIGATION

Reporting: Aaron Leathley
Photojournalism: Annie Barker
Multimedia: Daniel Garza
Research: Hope Muñoz
Editing: Scott Linesburgh, Cassie Dickman, B.J. Terhune, Josh Susong
Graphics and design: Jim Sergent, Josh Susong


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