News

Judge gives Footlighters its building back

Mendocino County Superior Court Judge Jeanine Nadel has ruled that MCTV must give back the Fort Bragg Footlighters building and pay the theater company $36,315.

The two nonprofits have been battling in court since 2009 over a decision made in 2006 to give the big white building at 248 E. Laurel St. away. Footlighters formed in 1957 and had used that building since 1967.

In court findings filed May 1, Nadel wrote that then-Footlighters board president Bud Farley acted illegally in transferring the building to the local public access TV station in 2007. Farley believed Footlighters was about to dissolve.

“248 E. Laurel St. belongs to the Fort Bragg Footlighters and it always will. It is OUR home,” wrote Junice Gleason, current Footlighters board president.

“Footlighters has endured a lot in the last six years. We went from having our own “Little Theater” as our home to being kicked out on the streets. We are just so happy that it came out in court. You can”t dispute the facts. Finally we have justice,” Gleason said.

Mendocino Coast Television Executive Director Elizabeth Swenson was scrambling to get a special board meeting together and react to the judgment, which MCTV found out about from this newspaper on Monday, May 6.

” I am shocked but mostly deeply saddened at what this will mean for MCTV and the coastal community, the county even,” Swenson said. “For the last many months, I have been telling myself one never knows what is going to happen when you go to trial, but I strongly felt we would prevail.”

Nadel rejected the main defense that MCTV had acted in good faith and that nobody had objected in a timely fashion. Footlighters didn”t object to the building giveaway back in 2006, when it was headline news. Objections came up in 2007. A legal demand letter was written in August 2008 asking for the building back. Suit was filed in 2009.

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Frank Hartzell

Frank Hartzell has spent his lifetime as a curious anthropologist in a reporter's fedora. His first news job was chasing news on the streets of Houston with high school buddy and photographer James Mason, back in 1986. Then Frank graduated from Humboldt State and went to Great Gridley as a reporter, where he bonded with 1000 people and told about 3000 of their stories. In Marysville at the Appeal Democrat, the sheltered Frank got to see both the chilling depths and amazing heights of humanity. From there, he worked at the Sacramento Bee covering Yuba-Sutter and then owned the Business Journal in Yuba City, which sold 5000 subscriptions to a free newspaper. Frank then got a prestigious Kiplinger Investigative Reporting fellowship and was city editor of the Newark Ohio, Advocate and then came back to California for 4 years as managing editor of the Napa Valley Register before working as a Dominican University professor, then coming to Fort Bragg to be with his aging mom, Betty Lou Hartzell, and working for the Fort Bragg Advocate News. Frank paid the bills during that decade + with a successful book business. He has worked for over 50 publications as a freelance writer, including the Mendocino Voice and Anderson Valley Advertiser, along with construction and engineering publications. He has had the thrill of learning every day while writing. Frank is now living his dream running MendocinoCoast.News with wife, Linda Hartzell, and web developer, Marty McGee, reporting from Fort Bragg, California.

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