Planning director is back on the job
The city’s planning director is back on duty after being put on a
very public leave of absence by the city administrator.
“It feels good to be back,” Howard Zelefsky said Monday after a
City Council study session. “Everyone has been real welcoming. I
don’t have words to say that describe how nice people have been.”
Penny Culbreth-Graft officially placed Zelefsky on a 30-day leave
Aug. 15, prompting questions throughout the city and real estate
development community about the fate of one of the most powerful men
in city politics.
Rumors abounded as to why Graft placed on leave the man with a
hand in nearly every major development in Huntington Beach.
Days after the move, Culbreth-Graft said she was trying to clear
up Zelefsky’s employment status. A contract he had negotiated with
former City Administrator Ray Silver had given him the extra salary
benefits attached to being an at-will employee who could be
terminated at any time, but it also granted him civil servant
protection, which carries strong job security.
Silver later said Zelefsky was given the contract during a
reorganization of the planning department that involved a complicated
management shake-up.
The result was that it would have been very difficult for
Culbreth-Graft to fire Zelefsky. To correct that problem, the first
step, which she took in August, was to strip him of his at-will
employment status and place him on a 30-day leave. Now that Zelefsky
has returned, he enjoys the protections of a civil service employee
and can be terminated only if CulbrethGraft documents insubordination
over an extended period of time, according to city and state
employment codes.
As for his current status, Zelefsky remains the top official at
the planning department, city spokeswoman Laurie Payne said Tuesday.
“Everything remains the same,” she said.
Zelefsky said he had no bad feelings about being placed on
administrative leave, and he planned to continue with business as
usual. He said he spent most of the absence on vacation in Maui.
Zelefsky was a popular figure in the planning department, both
with his staff and with large-scale developers seeking to push their
projects through the city. Pacific City developer Michael Gagnet once
referred to Zelefsky as the “voice of reason” in the city, while
Bella Terra developer Milton Swimmer said Zelefsky was instrumental
in ending a 10-year stalemate over the direction of the mall.
“It’s a juggling act, a balancing act,” former planning director
and developer Michael Adams said.
“At the same time that you’re trying to address council issues,
you have to balance city regulations and tell the council why they’re
there.”
Often, Adams said, it’s hard not to make foes.
“In that position, you have to be somebody on either side of most
issues, and it’s inevitable that you’re going to make enemies,” he
said.
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