Peter
Ruggiero responds to complaint by former Town Council Prez Deb Carney
By
Will Collette
To see more classic Calvin and Hobbes, click here. |
The
Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA Party) has controlled the town of
Charlestown since 2008 and during that time, has practiced its well-established
penchant for secrecy. After all, the CCA Party runs its own affairs as a secret
society that favors anonymity and cloaks its affairs from outside view.
This
has led to a long string of violations of the state Open Meetings and open
records laws that have drawn condemnation from the Attorney General’s office.
The
latest case involves the CCA Party’s use, for the second time this term, of the
secret ballot to make decisions in the middle of a public meeting. The last
time was the Town
Council’s use of the secret ballot to pick Donna Chambers for a patronage
appointment to the Chariho School Committee.
The Attorney General ruled a public body can’t
do that and warned
Charlestown that if it did it again, it would be subject to fines and
sanctions for an intentional violation.
But
CCA Party leader Ruth Platner, who is also Charlestown’s Planning Commissar,
places secrecy above openness an herself above the law, decided to use a secret
ballot to pick a new consultant to work on Charlestown’s Comprehensive Plan at
Planning’s May 7 meeting.
Former
two-term Town
Council President Deb Carney filed a complaint against this action with the
Attorney General on June 8 (click
here and scroll to the end to read that complaint). Deb had also filed the
earlier 2013 complaint against the Town Council for its use of the secret
ballot which resulted in the state’s Carney v. Charlestown
decision that forbids the use of the secret ballot at public meetings and
affirmed the principle that public business must be conducted publicly. Click here to read that decision.
Commissar
Platner later said the failure to record the vote was due to the relative
rarity of split votes; she said the most Planning Commission decisions are done
by consensus or on a unanimous vote.
As a side note, Ruth will almost certainly get her wish next year since only CCA Party candidates are running for the five open seats in November and thus all are assured of winning. With every member of the Planning Commission owing allegiance to the CCA Party, Ruth won’t ever have to worry about dissenting votes.
As a side note, Ruth will almost certainly get her wish next year since only CCA Party candidates are running for the five open seats in November and thus all are assured of winning. With every member of the Planning Commission owing allegiance to the CCA Party, Ruth won’t ever have to worry about dissenting votes.
But
if the Town Council changes hands, breaking the CCA Party’s three-term grip on
power, well then, that’s a different story for Ms. Platner’s ambitions to mold
Charlestown into her own image.
However,
Platner was present when the Town Council committee its open meetings violation
through the use of secret ballot and present again when they had to correct
their action after the Attorney General ruled against the town.
CCA
Party Town Councilor (and candidate for re-election) George Tremblay
participated in the Town Council’s illegal secret vote. As Town Council liaison
to the Planning Commission, he was present – and said and did nothing – when Platner
led her commissionaries into yet another secret vote. I think you’d expect the
Town Council liaison to step in rather than allow the illegal vote to take
place.
Town
Solicitor Peter
Ruggiero filed a defense of the indefensible on June 23 (click
here to read) which basically says the secret vote wasn’t really a vote
citing Webster’s Dictionary; he argued it was actually a “poll.” Deb Carney’s
argument cited an actual Attorney General’s opinion, but I guess when all you’ve
got is the dictionary, then that’s what you use. Anyway, Ruggiero’s argument
was very similar to his losing argument in the previous complaint against secret
voting at a public meeting.
Ruggiero
also said the second, public vote was viewable on Clerkbase (provided
of course you can actually get access to it) and that the 4 to 1 vote was
included in the minutes. However, he admits the “minutes…are inaccurate and
require amendment to properly record the vote of each member….”
He
says this was not intentional and that “when
viewed under the entirety of the circumstances” no harm, no foul.
Well,
Peter did his duty to defend the paranoid acts of CCA Party leader Platner to
test the boundaries of secrecy in town government. We’ll see whether this
defense works better than his earlier one.
It’s
election season and you will be hearing the CCA Party expound its usual
platform positions, lead among them their abiding commitment to open and
transparent government, even though their history of actual practice shows a long
list of anti-openness and anti-transparency actions. Also click here for more examples.
They’ve
managed to lie their way through the past three elections.
We’ll see in November whether voters’ inattentiveness or short memories works for them again.
We’ll see in November whether voters’ inattentiveness or short memories works for them again.