Members of Save Our Sequim, including chairman Jodi Wilke, seen here at a rally in October 2019, and Jon Gibson, owner of Parkwood Manufactured Housing Community, seek to halt the application for the medication-assisted treatment (MAT) facility from moving forward with a lawsuit through Clallam County Superior Court. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)

Members of Save Our Sequim, including chairman Jodi Wilke, seen here at a rally in October 2019, and Jon Gibson, owner of Parkwood Manufactured Housing Community, seek to halt the application for the medication-assisted treatment (MAT) facility from moving forward with a lawsuit through Clallam County Superior Court. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)

Lawsuit against Sequim looks to halt MAT clinic

Save Our Sequim, Parkwood owner file jointly in Clallam Superior Court

SEQUIM — Members of Save Our Sequim and Jon Gibson, owner of Parkwood Manufactured Housing Community near Carlsborg, have filed an injunction action against the City of Sequim to stop the processing of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe’s proposed medication-assisted treatment facility.

The Complaint for Declaratory, Injunctive and Mandamus Relief was filed May 5 in Clallam County Superior Court.

Save Our Sequim (SOS) members and Gibson seek the following in regard to medication-assisted treatment (MAT) facility:

• A declaration that the city acted improperly with the project’s classification as an A-2 staff-reviewed process rather than C-2, a quasi-judicial review because it’s an “essential facility.”

• A declaration that waiting for an appeal on the project’s classification at the end of the application process takes too long and wastes time and resources.

• A declaration that the city’s provisions for the process are unconstitutionally vague and overbroad in delegating authority to Barry Berezowsky, Sequim director of community development.

• Prohibit the application from continuing.

• Place a moratorium on all land use decisions under Sequim Municipal Code Title 20 until the code is revised.

• Plaintiffs recover attorneys’ fees.

Sequim City Attorney Kristina Nelson-Gross said the city has 20 days, or until Monday, to respond.

“We will address it in accordance with usual processes with litigation,” she said.

Berezowsky issued his approval for the 16,806-square-foot MAT facility on May 15, and community members have until June 5 to file an appeal.

SOS chair Jodi Wilke said that, despite the city approving the application, their legal action won’t be amended and they are awaiting guidance from the court system before filing another appeal.

“We’re going to wait and see what the court has to say,” said Wilke, who also is running for a seat in the state Legislature.

Gibson, a California resident who has owned Parkwood for about 20 years, said the city codes are vague and confusing, and he feels the codes have been applied inconsistently by city staff.

Gibson said he’s unsure of the potential impact the MAT would have on Parkwood, a retirement community for more than 300 residents aged 55 and older.

“I’m concerned for the health, safety and welfare of our community,” Gibson said.

“If we assume the staff wants to do the right thing, we need to help them by cleaning up the code.”

Lawsuit

Wilke said SOS has been fundraising and researching the lawsuit for some time and recognizes that “it would have been better to file sooner.”

She said part of the suit challenges the city’s methodology.

“They won’t hear appeals until after the application is done,” Wilke said. “That’s putting the cart before the horse. If you disagree with that decision, you have no recourse at all. It could be 120 days down the road. That’s not a speedy trial. How is that constitutional?”

Gibson said he and SOS are funding the legal work separately but filed it together. He said he is not a member of SOS but has been following the MAT discussion since it was announced.

“Hearing some of (SOS’s) information, it’s obvious to us there is a significant number of people involved from various walks of life, like professionals, who started to raise some serious questions,” Gibson said.

“Unfortunately, with so much of what’s going on, all the facts are not seeing the light of day.

“The truth loves light. That’s part of what we want to do. We want to make sure everything is crystal clear.”

Wilke said when the tribe sought grant funding, the landscape might have been different for opioid treatment in the area, but she believes it’s since changed and the North Olympic Peninsula is better equipped to handle patients.

“Their entire business plan migrates people into Sequim for this care that aren’t connected to this community,” she said.

However, Wilke said she “never wants to overgeneralize people” and that SOS is not against people getting the help they need for addiction.

“We also don’t want the community negatively impacted in the process,” she said. “There are many ways (the MAT) will negatively impact the community.”

For more information about Save Our Sequim, visit www.saveoursequim.org.

Read the MAT application at www.sequimwa.gov/471/Current-Projects.

________

Matthew Nash is a reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. Reach him at mnash@sequimgazette.com.

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