City Council reiterates order on contract
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Theresa Moreau
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The City Council didn’t waver Tuesday: The city’s
Conference & Visitors Bureau must terminate its publishing contract for
its annual guide or lose its city funding.
Though a vote wasn’t taken on the matter, the message was clear.
“The ball is in the Conference & Visitors Bureau court,” Councilman
Dave Sullivan said Wednesday. “They got direction, and then they wanted
more direction, and we gave them the same direction. The question is: Is
the bureau going to follow the strong recommendation?”
The council’s position echoes a stern warning from City Atty. Gail
Hutton, who suggested the contract be terminated because it may violate a
state law that prohibits city officials from self-dealing when making
contracts. If the bureau doesn’t follow the advice, Hutton recommended
the city yank its funding -- which is 100% of the bureau’s budget.
At the center of the controversy is Mayor Dave Garofalo, who held the
publishing contract for the guide for five years before selling it to
local businessman Ed Laird of Coatings Resource Corp. in January 1998.
Garofalo continued on as a consultant after the sale and, according to
Hutton’s findings, acted as publisher while continuing to vote on the
bureau’s budget.
“The advertisers paid directly to David P. Garofalo & Associates for
advertising,” Hutton said.
The mayor stepped away from the dais Tuesday as the council prepared
to discuss the matter, citing a potential conflict of interest.
Last week, the bureau’s chairman, John Gilbert, sought further
guidance on the issue from the council, asking members to choose one of
two options -- either again order the bureau to terminate the contract
and agree to cover legal fees if Laird sues, or allow the bureau to honor
the contract through Dec. 31, when it expires.
The bureau planned to discuss the issue Wednesday. (For details on the
meeting, see story on the Independent’s Web page: https://www.hbindy.com.)
Whether the city will provide legal services if Laird sues is still a
matter of debate.
In a Sept. 1 memo to the council, Hutton said it was not within the
City Council’s power to defend the bureau if it is sued by Laird.
However, in a wavering response, Hutton also noted that, under the city
charter, the city attorney may or may not represent the bureau in that
litigation.
“Under the concept of express contractual indemnification, the answer
is also no,” Hutton said in the memo. “But under the concept of
equitable, or implied, indemnification, the answer is a possible yes.”
Sullivan on Wednesday expressed frustration over the issue.
“At the appropriate time, she’ll make that decision and ask the
council if they concur with that,” Sullivan said. “But I do find it a
little strange because the grant agreement that the city has with the
Conference & Visitors board said that they will undertake their own legal
defense and hold the city harmless for any legal problems they’ll
encounter.”
In her latest memo, Hutton described the bureau as neither a
city-created board, commission nor a committee and recommended the
council consider establishing the agency as one of the above.
“This would give the council greater control over the bureau’s
activities,” she said, “including the approval of future publishing
contracts.”
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