Director’s firing shocks seniors, staff
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Alex Coolman
COSTA MESA -- News of the sudden firing of Costa Mesa Senior Center
executive director Alan Michael Meyers sent a shock wave through the
center’s staff, senior citizens and city officials Wednesday.
Offices of the executive director and the director of development at the
center had their blinds drawn and were being examined by Costa Mesa
Police in the wake of Tuesday’s abrupt termination of Meyers.
The director was fired Tuesday evening after police presented to the
center’s board documents suggesting that Meyers may have misrepresented
his past, fabricated parts of his job history and covered up prior
criminal convictions.
The board held a series of meetings Wednesday with staff members to
explain what had happened and what it would mean for the center.
Lori Clause, president of the center’s board of directors, said many
staff members were “flabbergasted and shocked” by the overnight changes.
“This is not something that any one of us would ever have imagined,” she
said. “When I think about it, my mind gets boggled.”
The board will meet next week to discuss its options for seeking a new
director, she said.
Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder said the city has launched “a
complete audit of all of the center’s financial records” in connection
with Meyers’ departure.
“We felt that we had enough reason to believe that a complete audit was
advisable both in the city’s interests and in the center’s interests,” he
said.
Roeder said the city has not seen any information that suggests any
financial misconduct had taken place at the senior center, which is
funded from by the city and private donations.
But whether or not any untoward financial details are revealed in the
audit, Roeder said the police report on Meyers taints the public image of
the center.
“Even if there’s not as much as a nickel missing,” he said, “there’s a
perception of what might have happened or what could have happened.”
The center’s board may need “to re-instill confidence of those who may
have heard of this and may question their contributions,” he said.
Orange County Treasurer John Moorlach, who served as the honorary
chairman of the center’s 1999 fund-raising campaign, described the news
about Meyers as “surreal.”
“Overall, the job that Alan Meyers has done as an executive director has
been satisfactory,” Moorlach said. “My reaction to this [news] was,
what’s the motive? Why?”
As copies of news reports circulated with coffee and doughnuts in the
center’s meeting room Wednesday, senior center regulars asked a few
questions of their own.
“Why wouldn’t they have checked him out before he got the job?” wondered
Armand Charest, a Costa Mesa resident who frequents the center.
Clause said the board had checked all of Meyers’ references before hiring
him and that they had appeared satisfactory.
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