Library, foundation continue to bicker
- Share via
Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- Nearly six months after a bitter feud between the
library foundation and board of trustees erupted publicly, the problems
have yet to be completely solved.
While most of the major disagreements over mismanagement have been
addressed, there are still lingering issues over which body gets to claim
the high-profile Distinguished Lecture Series as its own. Traditionally
considered a trustee event, the foundation has footed a good portion of
the bill.
Still, Mayor John Noyes, who has been refereeing meetings between the two
groups, and others say they’re coming close to drafting a final agreement
outlining their respective roles.
Trustee chairman Jim Wood said the board is ready to make peace, but is
still waiting to hear from the 20-member foundation board. Foundation
chairman David Carmichael would not comment on precisely what is going on
within the foundation, but did say it has “agreed in principle with the
memorandum” and is “waiting for the fine-tuning.”
“It’s a situation where you’ve got two groups which are working out the
final details of their agreement,” Carmichael said, adding that in the
end, the dispute was “no big issue” and simply a case of
miscommunication.
However, the allegations of financial mismanagement were serious enough
for library trustees to threaten to sever ties with their main
fund-raising body.
The library, perhaps the city’s greatest monument to a collective
community effort, had unwittingly become a boxing ring showcasing an
increasingly heated match. The fight -- pitting former city politicians
and other high-profile residents -- became so embarrassing that the City
Council was finally forced to step in at the end of January to pull the
two entities apart.
The dispute over control of the foundation’s savings had been festering
for more than a year before it surfaced publicly last fall.
While the foundation attempted to build an endowment fund to help the
library during bad financial times, the trustees rejected the idea and
wanted the $1.5 million for more immediate uses. Among other things, the
trustees also demanded clearer financial reporting and a reduction in the
foundation’s operating costs.
The relationship between the two is symbiotic. While the foundation
raises money for the library, the board decides how the dollars are
spent.
The lingering tug of war over the Distinguished Speaker Series ties in
directly with the disputed operating costs. Trustees claim the costs were
anywhere from 50% to 70% of the money the foundation raised. A large
chunk of what the trustees considered operating costs, however, was the
award-winning series, which has featured such noted speakers as social
activist Susan Faludi and TV journalist Tom Brokaw.
Still, relations appear to be better than they were two months ago, when
frustrations escalated to such a level that the trustees sent a letter to
the foundation demanding that unless foundation members signed a
cooperating agreement, they would have to move out of the library office
and turn over the endowment fund. It was this event that caused
Councilwoman Norma Glover to ask the city attorney to intervene.
In the end, after studying the situation, City Attorney Bob Burnham
temporarily capped the dispute when he pointed out that the trustees
could not control the foundation and did not have exclusive rights to the
library’s name.
The foundation must remain legally independent of the trustees in order
to operate as a private, nonprofit organization, Burnham said. Therefore,
the trustees could not gain the financial control they sought.
Moreover, the foundation had already seen to it that, if disbanded, the
money would go to the Orange County Community Foundation and still end up
as an endowment fund for the library.
After a cooling-off period, both parties have been back at the
negotiating table, hoping to salvage everything they’ve worked so hard to
build.
In seeing a renewed spirit of cooperation at the meetings, Noyes has said
he is optimistic the problems can be ironed out. Still, until the
agreement is signed and the ink has dried, talks could fall apart as they
have in the past.
However, once all has been resolved, Wood says he hopes they can throw a
big party at the library to celebrate.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.