Five years have passed since Independent took city to court over
salary list
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Six years ago, Independent editors asked city
officials for a list of the top 25 highest-paid city employees.
Their answer was quick: no way. And that wasn’t all. A lawyer in the city
attorney’s office told the editors: It may be public information, but you
don’t have the financial resources to withstand a long legal battle to
get the salaries released. The city, he said, has deep pockets, and the
information will never be made public.
And so began a yearlong legal battle. With the backing of the Los Angeles
Times -- a sister newspaper -- the case finally ended up before an Orange
County judge, who quickly ordered the salaries released.
The paper’s success led to California’s first case law on the subject. It
also started a similar examination of public employee compensation
packages throughout Southern California.
“I think it’s great,” said Jim Ewert, legal counsel for the California
Newspaper Publishers Assn. “It reinforces the Legislature’s intent that
government operate openly.”
The city had tried to keep the door shut. The lockout began in 1994,
after a former resident, Leon McKinney, requested access to the total
compensation packages of the city’s top 25 employees.
City Atty. Gail Hutton argued that disclosing the names and exact
compensation of city employees violated their privacy rights.
The Independent took up McKinney’s cause by filing a California Public
Records Act request, which was denied. After numerous attempts to get the
information released, the paper filed suit.
When the case came up for a hearing in July 1995, a judge dismissed
Hutton’s claims with little fanfare. He ordered the city to pay all of
the Independent’s legal fees, which reached $12,000.
“I think it’s a shame that the city resisted so vehemently against what
the newspaper industry feels is very clear statutory law on the issue,”
Ewert said.
But even now, some city officials said they don’t agree with the
decision.
“One should be allowed some privacy in their lives,” Councilwoman Shirley
Dettloff said.
The list represents little more than city employee bashing, she said.
“The list only has value if you’re looking to find fault,” she said.
Morale at City Hall takes a blow, especially when names are published
alongside the person’s salary, said Bill Osness, the city’s director of
personnel.
“The employees feel they have to explain themselves to their neighbors,”
he said. “They feel, I think, defensive.”
But Councilman Dave Sullivan -- who was elected eight years ago on a
platform supporting city reform -- said he supports “the public’s right
to know.”
“After all, the city employees are, in the last analysis, the employees
of the citizens of Huntington Beach,” Sullivan said. “And as their
employers, they have a right to know that information, since they pay
their salaries.”
As much as Sullivan would like to control the rise in salaries and
benefits, he said he can’t do it alone.
“This is a democracy,” he said. “It takes four [council] votes.”
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