Garofalo OK on council abstention
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Angelique Flores
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Despite raising questions from critics, Mayor Dave
Garofalo broke no laws at last week’s City Council meeting when he
remained in the room during a discussion and vote involving a Huntington
Beach mall redevelopment, an issue from which he has been advised to
abstain, officials said.
“There are no specific rules on leaving the room,” said John
Symkowick, spokesman for the Fair Political Practices Commission.
Robert M. Stern, who helped draft the state’s political reform laws,
said council members should leave the room, just to be on the safe side.
“I would have advised the person not to remain in the room, just so
anyone couldn’t say there was any bias,” said Stern, president for the
Center for Governmental Studies, a nonprofit research organization in Los
Angeles. “It would be better for appearances sake.”
Although Garofalo did not vote on the matter, he called on the
speakers and called for the votes -- raising questions and concern about
the propriety of his actions.
Last month, City Atty. Gail Hutton advised Garofalo to abstain from
voting on any advertiser that has appeared in his publications -- the
Local News, the Huntington Beach Conference & Visitors Bureau visitors
guide and the Chamber of Commerce Business Directory. The district
attorney’s office and state officials are investigating Garofalo for
potential conflict-of-interest violations involving advertisers in his
publications.
The mall’s owners, Ezralow Retail Properties, advertised the mall’s
redevelopment in the 2000 visitor’s guide.
According to the Political Reform Act of 1974, “no public official at
any level of state or local government shall make, participate in making
or in any way attempt to use his official position to influence a
governmental decision in which he knows or has reason to know he has a
financial interest.”
Even if the law didn’t mandate Garofalo leave the room, his directing
of the speakers is somewhat questionable, experts said.
If it’s just a list of speakers the official is calling upon to speak,
it’s not a problem. But if he’s deciding on who speaks, it starts to get
more discretionary, Stern said.
Although critics such as environmental attorney Debbie Cook and
Councilmen Tom Harman and Dave Sullivan were outraged, Garofalo stayed
within the law by abstaining from the vote and the discussion.
The City Council does not require members to leave the room when they
abstain. Council members must only say they’re going to abstain from the
vote.
The Planning Commission has approved its own protocol, which advises
commissioners abstaining from an item to leave the room.
Gerald Chapman, chairman of the Planning Commission, said he has left
the room on a number of occasions when abstaining from votes.
“We’re not to do anything to influence,” Chapman said. “If you’re
there, the perception or faces you make could bring influence to the
decision.”
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