EDITORIAL
If this were a boxing match, you’d order an immediate eight-count. You’d
send the opponents to their corners. You’d take a commercial break and
pray you could restore order.
Sadly, this is not a boxing match, though it has had its jarring moments.
It is, instead, a growing, gnawing dispute between the two groups of
citizens charged with taking care of one of Newport Beach’s most
venerable and treasured institutions -- the library.
The rift between the Newport Beach Library board of trustees and the
Newport Beach Library Foundation has widened rapidly in recent days.
How wide? Wide enough that the trustees felt the need to toss the
foundation out of the library itself, snatching back the one room it has
allowed the foundation’s lone paid employee to use. Wide enough that the
trustees accused the foundation of financial mismanagement and asked the
fund-raising group to fork over all its collected money. Wide enough that
the trustees threatened to strip the foundation of its very identity --
its name.
The foundation hasn’t blinked. Its members will not hand over the money,
they say. They will keep their name, thank you very much. And if they
must move, fine. But they won’t give up their fight.
The two groups are populated with the town’s elite, people whose resumes
speak of intellect and reason. The trustees, led by magazine publisher
Jim Wood, have a basic responsibility to spend money on behalf of the
library. The foundation, chaired by business executive David Carmichael,
is in the job of raising that money.
But pettiness has contaminated their relationship. The trustees in a
series of letters and requests have made it clear that they find the
foundation an obnoxious partner and want to get their hands on the
foundation’s bank accounts, including a $1.5-million endowment fund
created to see the library through good times and bad.
The fight has spilled over into City Hall itself, where the City Council
has offered to take in the foundation and find a room for its one
employee.
What caused this rumble is murky at best. What is clear, though, is that
library trustees have succumbed to their lesser instincts. To boot a
nonprofit that has raised nearly $2 million for the library is childish.
To threaten to strip it of its name is pathetic. To wrestle away its
funds is simply not legal.
The trustees are at fault for -- as Wood puts it -- creating a “barroom
brawl.”
The City Council, meanwhile, has let down its constituents by not
stepping in. True, the council’s authority is limited with the largely
independent board of trustees and the nonprofit foundation, but need they
sit by idling like spectators at a tennis match?
Where is the council? Where is the mayor? Where is the leadership? Where
is some overriding voice of reason?
Sadly, the council’s one public bit of action to date is to suggest that
the two groups might need professional help, some counseling. Probably
not a bad idea.
Someone needs to stop the embarrassment.
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