I listened carefully to Lawyer Mascarin at the in-camera meeting of  Tuesday last.  The  picture continues to take shape.  As days pass and information grows,  reason presents. 
My challenge now  is to convey my understanding of a complicated situation in a clear and unambiguous format.
Yesterday I listed  times and circumstances of  legal services independently retained by the Mayor at taxpayers' expense. over the past  thirty months.The list was not complete
Town  solicitor, Shelley Pohjolla was asked  several times to provide  an opinion  on my public utterances. .  The  Solicitor's time is a public resource.  Her advice  was " a Councillor  is entitled to state an  opinion. Councillor Buck goes to the line.   She does not cross it".
Ms. Maclean, Interim Solicitor,  worked two or three days a week between Shelly Pohjolla's departure and a new solicitor being appointed.  Ms Maclean was instructed to write an opinion on the significance of  failure to sign the Code of Conduct. A full page  was submitted with  no law cited  to compel a councillor to sign the document
Two lawyers over a  two year period  were retained  to create a case for  wrong doing against a former Mayor and political rival.  Phones in an unsecured area of the town hall had been monitored .  The effort to prove invasion of privacy ended  with an appearance by the second lawyer at an in-camera meeting,   where he stated firmly, if an  invasion of privacy was successfully argued and  a damage suit launched,  no award  would be  possible because  no damage had occurred.
He was surprised that no Councillor had received his  previously submitted written opinions.
Mr. Mascarin is the latest solicitor retained by council to examine my utterances  and conduct for legal infractions. Council had  apparently delegated Mayor Morris, and  Councillors MacRoberts and MacEachern to meet and instruct Mr. Mascarin  on the specifics of  his task.
DVDs of council meetings, Blog Posts ,Letters to the Editor and comments to the Aurora Citizen Blog were subject to his scrutiny.
Thirty-three pages were submitted.  Except for recording secretary, no  corporate staff attended the meeting. It was strictly a council affair.
Mr. Mascarin made  comments  to me personally at the start of the meeting. They were  along the same lines of Mr. Rust D'Eye, that I noted in my previous  post. They inferred ,  I might hear something  which might work to my advantage in the event of litigation if I attended the meeting.  It  would  represent a Conflict of Interest for which there are serious penalties in law.
Later ,  a Councillor expressed severe  frustration  "they" were having to " talk about strategy while the person  against whom the strategy was to be used was in the room".
A citizen who suspects  town business  is being improperly discussed  behind closed doors, can legally   request an  investigation.  A Councillor , knowing  matters being  discussed behind closed doors do not conform to the approved  list and has the temerity to say so, can be accused of breaching confidentiality. The  contradiction  cannot be squared.
Insurance coverage  was recently discussed behind closed doors. If a Councillor is sued  as a result  of carrying out  responsibilities, legal indemnity is provided by the town.   The  insurance provider takes charge, assigns legal counsel and generally has a controlling hand in the matter.
On the other hand, Legal costs are not provided when legal  action is taken by a councillor  against  another party.
Action  for defamation is  a matter for civil litigation. Not  town  business. Because of information, on legal indemnity , in an e-mail to the town solicitor, I questioned  the propriety of the Mayor independently retaining legal services.
Subsequently , a recommendation was made from an in-camera meeting for council to approve retaining the latest  legal services.
Twice now, I have  been formally advised, of a possibility of incurring a  Conflict of Interest by attending a meeting of  the council of which I am a duly elected member. The reason given,? I might hear something to my pecuniary advantage should  litigation ensue.
Since  I do not ever contemplate litigation  against my town I perceived  no likelihood that I might ever be in a Conflict of Interest.
Ah, foolish moi  ! At last I understand. The  litigation referred to would  be against me. I would be the person   sued.... by council colleague or colleagues.
But wait a minute!  that doesn't make any sense.
An unknown sum of  tax dollars, has  been  expended in pursuit of  evidence of breaches
of  various Acts of Town Legislation. Abuse of Public Resources is referenced as well as The Code of Conduct.  Penalties of Reprimand or  Three Months Suspension of  Remuneration  are often cited.
The town has many Bylaws governing Policies and Practices. Administrative Policy No. 50 which specifically governs procurement practices.  has recently been the focus of  Mr. Mascarin's attention on the  instruction of Council.
During 2008 budget discussions, after  the first year of  the Mayor making  a practice of  retaining  legal services on  her own volition, Mr. Gutteridge. Chief Financial Officer, recommended  a line item be included in Council's budget to provide for the expense of legal retainers by Council.
The Mayor and Councillor MacEachern strenuously objected. Services retained by council should be part of the corporate legal services budget, they stated adamantly. Mr. Gutteridge shrugged ;   "If that's how you want it  Madame Mayor, that's how it will be"
As a consequence, there is  no   adopted Council budget  for  legal services.In my judgement, no public funds can be legitimately expended for the purpose.
Administrative Policy No. 50   governing procurement practices.; On page 8 Clause 13 states:
"Elected Officials shall not approve nor acquire any goods or services".
Action for defamation has  been  identified  several times in the last  weeks as  a civil matter. It cannot be undertaken with public funds. No insurance coverage is provided to meet the cost.
Considering the facts, if any party  is at risk of  Conflict of Interest  by attending a meeting which  contemplates litigation . it would surely have to be the party contemplating the litigation  and using public resources  to forward  the intent.
The obligation of a councillor to abide by the Code of Conduct even if the document has not been signed is frequently referenced.  I think, if an elected official needs a document to spell out  what constitutes responsible and honourable conduct, they are clearly not competent to fulfill the most important and basic requirement of the task.
Be that as it may. Clause 3 . of the Code states in Communications and Media Relations;
Members of Council will accurately and adequately communicate the attitudes and decisions of Council, even if they disagree with the majority decisions of council.
and further:
Information concerning adopted policies, procedures and decisions of the Council shall be conveyed openly and accurately.
Amen to all of that I say . And  I would argue that 's exactly what I am about in the here and now.
.
Sunday, 21 June 2009
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