Study session turns heated
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A simmering feud over charitable donations exploded at a Costa Mesa
City Council study session Tuesday. A policy change is likely to
result, but that may not be enough to clear the air.
The issue was raised when Councilman Eric Bever requested an
investigation of Councilwoman Katrina Foley’s use of city money for
donations to local organizations, including Little League. Each
council member gets $2,000 a year in discretionary funds, which have
typically been used to pay for conferences, training, cellphones and
computers used for council business.
But other than state laws and the municipal code, no specific
policies govern how the money can be spent. That may change, because
the council will be considering new regulations on discretionary
spending at a future meeting.
City Attorney Kimberly Hall Barlow told council members her legal
opinion is that Foley’s expenditures were lawful, but that didn’t
head off an argument that escalated into Bever calling Foley
“arrogant” and Foley accusing Bever of defaming her character.
Bever repeatedly said at Tuesday’s meeting that Foley’s spending
may have violated state law. Foley took issue with that, calling it a
“politically motivated attack.”
When asked Thursday, Bever said he doesn’t know whether Foley
actually broke the law, but “a perception of an ethical breach is not
a good thing for the individual or the body they serve on.”
Foley said she followed the correct procedures in making the
donations and didn’t do anything wrong. She said she hopes the
council can move past Tuesday’s argument, but she wondered why Bever,
just a day or so before the meeting, had requested her cellphone
records from the city.
Foley gets wireless Internet service for her computer through the
city, but she doesn’t have a city-issued cellphone, so her phone
records aren’t public.
“You still have the question of why does he want that; what is he
trying to find?” she said.
Bever said he requested the records because the reports council
members are given on discretionary spending aren’t very clear, and “I
was just curious as to what the expense was.”
Tuesday’s spat was not the first heated exchange City Manager
Allan Roeder has seen at a council meeting, but that didn’t make it
less tense.
“I don’t think it was comfortable for anyone,” Roeder said.
The discretionary spending issue will likely resurface at a
council meeting in November. But it’s unclear which way council
members will lean on a new policy -- or what the tenor of the meeting
will be -- since only Bever, Foley and Mayor Allan Mansoor attended
Tuesday’s study session. Councilwoman Linda Dixon and Councilman Gary
Monahan were absent.
And though Foley wants council members to improve their relations
-- she’s even suggesting a retreat -- for now things don’t seem to
her to be getting better.
“I think that’s quite obvious that they’re getting worse,” Foley
said.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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