Conflict alleged in police, firefighters support
June Casagrande
Several Greenlight candidates are alleging that campaign
literature touting the police and firefighters union’s support of
some candidates is a conflict of interest, particularly because two
of those candidates are council members who vote on union salaries.
A campaign mailer sent out in recent weeks includes portions of a
letter from the Newport Beach Public Safety Assn. endorsing
incumbents Tod Ridgeway, Gary Adams and council hopefuls Don Webb and
Bernie Svalstad. The mailer was paid for by the campaigns of those
candidates.
Greenlight candidates Madelene Arakelian and Rick Taylor have said
this relationship is inappropriate at best.
“Part of your cozy arrangement with [campaign consultant Dave]
Ellis is using the police and fire department unions to send out
mailers under their name but paid for by you and your slate of
candidates. Ethics in politics is in question,” Arakelian told
council members at their meeting last Tuesday.
Those endorsed by the unions called the charges “mudslinging.”
“Not only is nothing wrong being done here, but I’m proud of my
endorsements by our public safety personnel,” said Adams, who
described the Greenlight candidates’ comments as campaign
mudslinging. “There is no correlation between people being endorsed
by those groups and any favoritism. We’ve done what’s fair and right
and what we need to do to keep the best police and fire personnel in
the county, and I think that’s what the people of this city want.”
Ridgeway echoed this sentiment.
“I see no conflict at all,” he said.
City Clerk Lavonne Harkless said that the mailers do not violate
any campaign rules, in part because the police and firefighters union
conducts political activities through several political action
committees.
But the Greenlight candidates say that at the very least the
relationship between the union and the incumbents creates the
appearance of a conflict of interest: Council members vote on union
salaries, the union leaders then endorse the candidates, and, in
turn, their signed endorsement is made part of a brochure paid for by
the candidates.
“It raises an important question,” Taylor said in a statement. “If
any of these men were elected, how would they vote when faced with
sensitive personnel issues such as salary negotiations or personnel
cutbacks for either firefighters or police?”
Nine of the 11 candidates for City Council sought the union’s
endorsement, said Rich Thomas, president of the Newport Beach
Firefighters Assn. Taylor and Allan Beek were the only two who did
not interview for the endorsement.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.