I’m going to give Santa Barbara County Supervisor Janet Wolf the benefit of the doubt, because it really was just a slip of the tongue. Many people might not have even noticed.
But I heard it, there among a late-morning debate about the latest version of a sheriffās services contract at the Nov. 4 Board of Supervisors meeting.
It sounded like āChief.ā
Wolf was talking to Vincent Armenta, whoās been the tribal chairman of the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians for something like eight terms now. Heās most often referred to as Chairman Armenta.
But after he stepped up to the podium during public comment and spoke about putting politics aside and encouraging the board to actually, you know, work with the tribe for once, Wolf appeared a bit flustered when she began her response and ended up calling him āChief.ā
Thatās what I heard, anyway.
To be fair, she first called him āSheriff,ā so she was obviously a bit off her game. True, Sheriff Bill Brown and the Chumash have been working together on a contract of payment for services for about two years now. Thatās the blink of an eye in terms of how quicklyāor notābureaucratic cogs turn through the molasses of modern meetings and whatnot. But itās a significant amount of time for the people putting blood, sweat, and ink into hammering out this deal that would see the tribe paying for the full-time equivalent of one deputy patrolling that corner of the valley.
To be clear, that corner of the valley is already somewhere the sheriff is supposed to be keeping an eye on. The countyās top law-enforcement official currently has jurisdiction and authority there, a responsibility to make sure this patch of land and the people on it stay safe, and the Chumash are essentially saying, āHey, we know you have to do this already, but letās sign a contract to make it all super-official, and weāll even pay you for it. The thing youāre already doing. Weāll give you money. To keep doing it.ā
Back in June, the supervisors got a whiff of that cashāessentially $850,000 of free money, which would make any public official salivate into his or her personal stash of red tapeāand did exactly what you would expect elected officials to do when offered dollars with minimal strings attached and while facing a more-than-a-million-dollar budget shortfall: They turned it down.
The board voted 3-2 against signing any sort of contractādespite the tribe and the sheriff saying it made good senseābecause of concerns that centered on the tribeās sovereign immunity status and a fear of not actually getting the money once the deal was inked.
Really? Our established local leaders were worried about the native residents of this land breaking their promise?
Iām surprised the tribe didnāt just pack up right then and there to move to the moon. Itās a bit far away, sure, but I hear the climate is more hospitable there than it is here.
But they didnāt do that. Not only did they stick around, they agreed to renegotiate some of the terms of the contract: āThe county wants to be sure it gets paid? OK. Sure. Weāll put up the cash for the cost of 180 days of service up front. Canāt argue with that! And whatās that? Youāre concerned that weāll expand our territory and stretch the deputy too thin? Well, OK. How about we agree that, as it stands now, the contract will only require services for reservation land. No Camp 4. What you see is what you get.ā
If it were me delivering those words, Iād be saying them all through gritted teeth. If I had teeth. Actually, no. I donāt think Iād be saying them at all. But it werenāt me. It were Chairman Armenta, whom Supervisor Wolf called āSherriffā then āChiefā and then finally āChairman.ā
Oops.
Some tribes do call their top representative āchief,ā so I may be making a little too much of the title flub, but I donāt think Iām overblowing this sheriff services deal, even though Iāve written about it before. I know Iām not putting this out of proportion, because public speakers at the Nov. 4 meeting continued to tell the tribe that they should waive their right to sovereign immunity for this deal. This deal that involved the tribe offering to pay for something thatās already being provided to them.
I donāt get that, but hey. I donāt get a lot of the opposition to the Chumash in this area. It just seems to be part of the landscape, like vineyards and oak trees.
After a lengthy discussion, the supervisors finally got their acts together and voted to approve the contract 5-0. Itās about time.
Ā
The Canary is singing, āCh-ch-ch-changes!ā Send Bowie lyrics to canary@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Nov 6-13, 2014.


