Let the process run its course
LINDA DIXON
It is interesting that Costa Mesa Mayor Allan Mansoor has chosen to
utilize the Daily Pilot as a public forum to explain away his actions
relative to the Ralph M. Brown Act open-meeting safeguards rather
than just letting the process move through the sanctioned discovery
steps (“Note intended nothing untoward,” June 23).
But then, that mayor often uses this forum to explain his actions
while choosing not to explain them in person from the dais.
Under the Brown Act, meetings of public bodies -- for example,
city councils -- must be open and public. This means that secret
communication -- for example, the exchanging of written notes among a
majority of the members regarding items on the agenda -- constitutes
a violation. It will be the role of an independent body to decide if
in fact a violation occurred in this situation.
To reiterate my claim:
1. Councilman Eric Bever passed a note addressed to the mayor and
Councilman Gary Monahan.
2. Monahan thereupon withdrew a substitute motion.
3. Bever, when asked, indicated to me that the note requested
Mansoor and Monahan to allow the vote to fund the historical
preservation committee and the Home Ranch homestead to go forward and
to bring up funding Angel’s park in the next action.
4. As questions about the note were being raised, the mayor
crumpled the note and threw it away. When asked about the note, the
mayor said it was a personal note.
Now, let the process run its course.
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Linda Dixon is a Costa Mesa City Councilwoman.
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