By Will Collette
For the second time this week, Charlestown town government had an “oops” event over its compliance with the state Open Meetings Act.
The first time was Thursday. That’s when the judge in
Donoghue v. Charlestown ruled that the Town Council did indeed violate the Open Meetings Act when they failed to properly inform the public that they intended to vote on February 13 to pay to the Charlestown Land Trust in the Y-Gate Scandal.
The second time was Friday when Town Solicitor Peter Ruggiero admitted the Charter Revision Advisory Committee (CRAC) violated the
law by failing to file the meeting minutes of its final and decisive meeting on
April 30.
On Sunday, June 10, I filed a complaint with the Attorney General’s Office charging
State law allows a generous 35 days to file minutes. By my count, there were 43 days
between April 30 and June 11 – Peter calls it 42, but by any measure, the
minutes were late. But more importantly, the Town Council was going to hold a
public hearing and a vote on the evening of June 11 – without that record – and
that made the violation more than just a quibble over counting the days.
I felt then as I do now that the public had the right to know that the CRAC members ended their deliberations bitterly divided and at war with each other.
Ms. Areglado produces the missing minutes on the day the public hearing was scheduled |
I sent a copy of my e-mailed complaint to Town Clerk Amy
Rose Weinreich and Acting Town Administrator Pat Anderson. Magically, on June 11, just hours
before the Town Council meeting was to take place, a draft of the missing
minutes appeared from CRAC Secretary Maureen Areglado. More details here.
Ms. Areglado’s husband Ron has frequently stood before the
Town Council to demand open and transparent government – by others – and has
filed his Declaration of Candidacy for the Town Council. Click here for a sample of Mr. Areglado’s oratory on openness and transparency.
Fortunately for the Town, the over-loaded June 11 Town
Council schedule caused the hearing on the CRAC charter changes to be bumped
until June 25. If the Council had conducted the public hearing and vote on
CRAC’s recommendations on June 11, their decision would probably have been invalidated
due to the Open Meetings Act violation.
In a filing with the Attorney General on Friday, June 29
[click here to read], Town Solicitor Peter Ruggiero confirms the late filing, but offers
the excuse that CRAC Secretary Maureen Areglado “was unavailable after the last meeting due to prior international
travel obligations and contracting an unexpected illness upon her return to the
country.”
Solicitor Ruggiero does not explain how Ms. Areglado was
able to instantly rally around to produce the missing minutes as soon as Town
Clerk Amy Weinreich told her about my complaint.
Look, I understand about scheduled vacations and unexpected
illness. But Ms. Areglado knew exactly when she was going on vacation but chose
not to carry out her duty before she left. And she wasn’t so sick that she
couldn’t whip those missing minutes out once she was called out on her
negligence. Or find them in her “To Do” pile.
Further, she and her husband are well-versed in the
requirements of the Open Meeting Act. They battled with Charlestown for months over a complaint they,
along with Mike and Donna Chambers, filed against Council members Marge Frank and Gregg
Avedisian , and former Councilor Forrester Safford. Click here
for more details.
Though the Areglados and the Chambers lost on their
complaint, [click here for details] it’s fair to say that in the process, they learned a bit about how
the Open Meeting Act works. By the way, in dismissing the Areglado's Open Meeting complaint, the Attorney General Office ruled it came down to "a question of credibility" and ruled that the complainants, Ron and Maureen Areglado and Mike and Donna Chambers, were less credible than the Council members they charged with the violation. Read the details. I didn't make this up.
Maureen Areglado attacking Bill DiLibero for lack of openness and transparency at April 9 Council meeting |
I don’t know what was in Maureen Areglado’s mind when she
chose to put off preparing those minutes until after her extended European
trip.
I do know that the CRAC’s last meeting was filled with controversy as the
feud between Donna Chambers and her fellow CRACer Robert Yarnall boiled over. Click here for more details.
Maybe Ms. Areglado just wasn’t in the mood to try to recount
the details of that very nasty fight.
Nobody's perfect and we all make mistakes. I have certainly made more than my share. But if you're going to raise an issue in criticism of someone else, expect that it might come right back at you. I can testify from personal experience that this is how the Golden Rule works.
Maureen Areglado stood at the Town Council podium on April 9 and castigated
former Town Administrator Bill DiLibero, charging him with breaching that obligation. [Click here for the recording of her remarks].
Now, the Charlestown Town Solicitor admits
that Ms. Areglado herself stands in violation of the same principle she cited
in her attack on DiLibero.
If the Areglados wish to be seen as champions of openness
and transparency in government, they would be a lot more credible if they
practice what they preach.