There’s little gray area with Brown Act
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Combining IKEA, Home Ranch and the Costa Mesa City Council, for some
reason, seems inevitably to lead to political squabbling and charges
of rule-breaking.
It happened in the fall of 2001, when residents claimed that
meetings about the controversial Home Ranch development between a
city committee and representatives of C.J. Segerstrom & Sons violated
the state’s open-meetings law. And it happened again this month when
the council was discussing how to spend $200,000 from that
development agreement.
Only this time, the one making the charge about a violation of the
law, the Ralph M. Brown Act, was one of the council’s own: Linda
Dixon.
That this latest instance involves the passing of a note from
Councilman Eric Bever to Mayor Allan Mansoor and Councilman Gary
Monahan has obscured, in many ways, the seriousness of the issue.
Yes, it is easy to make jokes about kids passing notes in a
classroom. Yes, there has seemed to be ongoing -- but not unfailing
-- division between the three councilmen charged with the violation
and Dixon and Councilwoman Katrina Foley. But no, the incident is not
insignificant. No potential Brown Act violation is. As we have said
in the past, it is imperative that public agencies, including but not
limited to city councils and school boards, adhere to the state’s
open-meetings law.
As a reminder, the act -- named for its sponsor, Assemblyman Ralph
M. Brown -- became law in 1953 after a newspaper series detailed the
frequency of secret, closed-door meetings at all levels of government
in California. Over the years, court decisions augmented the law, the
Legislature has made its own changes, and major revisions were made
in 1994.
The rationale behind the law is simple: “ ... boards and councils
and the other public agencies in this State exist to aid in the
conduct of the people’s business,” the law reads. “It is the intent
of the law that their actions be taken openly and that their
deliberations be conducted openly.
“The people of this State do not yield their sovereignty to the
agencies which serve them. The people, in delegating authority, do
not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for
the people to know and what is not good for them to know.
The people insist on remaining informed so that they may retain
control over the instruments they have created.”
As we have said before, even minor transgressions of the act
jeopardize the public’s business and control of its servants, who
work for us on matters both large and small. It is not a law with
blurry edges, but one that must be held firm to maintain the public’s
trust in its government.
That trust is sacrosanct. And it is why Dixon’s charge must be
investigated. And it is why the Daily Pilot will continue to ensure
all meeting doors are open.
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