Here’s a new area of stunning conflict. When we approved our 150 million dollar budget last fall, we smartly included twenty thousand dollars for use by the city council in seeking third-party legal opinions if we find ourselves in disagreement with the Mayor’s office. I have to credit my wise colleague Don Persson for recommending this line item in the budget, and astute colleague Denis Law for pushing it along. It was our intent not to use the whole amount, and only to use any of the funds in cases that would put our usual city attorney Larry Warren in a difficult situation. The council agreed at the time that the money could be allocated by the Council President, based on a request for outside legal council from any council member. Simple enough.
Then on April 17, when I made a motion to stop the mayor from interrupting the public as they were speaking at a hearing, the mayor ruled my motion out of order based on her accusation that I was trying to break the law. Not long afterwards, others suggested to me that it was time to seek an outside legal opinion. After all, the mayor accusing the council of breaking the law seems like a clear time for an outside opinion, wouldn’t it seem? Don Person and I worked though all proper channels, secured the legal opinion, and guess what….the mayor did not need to interterrupt the speakers who were worried they would lose their homes due to a zoning change. Yep, yours truly was not breaking the law by letting the public address their elected representatives at a public hearing. Amazing. I guess the US Constitution does mean something. But that’s the predictable part, here is the the interesting part….
On Thursday we discovered that the mayor was deliberately refusing to perform her administrative duty of signing the check for the outside attorney. Even though it was a council approved expense, it was authorized in the budget and she had no legal veto right, she simply refused to perform her job. In the best case her pride got in the way of her doing her duty; in the worst case she wants to be able to wrongly accuse without apology or repercussions. In any case, I was ready to let this bounce off, but others on the council are not feeling so generous.
We’ll see what happens next. Stay tuned!
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