Tuesday, January 16, 2018

Our mayor is not conflict averse

UPDATES! As of 1:30 p.m. on Jan. 17, 2018, here and here...

The City of Plattsburgh government rang in the new year in the same way it rang out 2017--full of conflict. Councilor Mike Kelly lived up to his nickname, Hot Mike, when he melted down during the Jan. 4 meeting, accusing fellow council members who might disagree with Mayor Colin Read of insurrection bordering on treason.

Their heinous act? Some councilors didn't want to elect Read's choice as mayor pro tem. They didn't want to last year, either. It made Kelly sad.

Calling the democratic process, in which people get to vote on things, "a stunt," Kelly grew teary over the fact that not everyone in the city wants to accede to every Read whim. "The goal was then, and now, to disrupt city business," Kelly said.

That, or to put a governmental check on a mayor who likes to move fast and break things. And leave them broken.

Anyhow, Kelly literally wagged his finger at his opponents, which Councilor Becky Kasper took issue with. "Oh, I'll point fingers, Becky, as long as you keep being a divisive force on this council," Kelly answered. "You can count on that." The acrimony didn't quite rise to Korean Parliament level, but for a quiet little out-of-the-way 'burgh, it was kinda ugly.

But that was just round one. A few days later, Read announced he was hiring, at taxpayer expense,  former Congressman and current high-powered attorney Bill "Billable Hours" Owens, to shore up the mayor's legal flank in his war on the Town of Plattsburgh.

Phew. At least an older, cooler political head like Owens will step up and resolve this nonsense, right?
Owens says this process could take years and there is no guarantee it won't result in a lawsuit.
Right.

Thing is, amid all this ridiculous fighting, there appear to be some actual conflicts--of interest. Read sits on the board of directors of Arrow Financial Corporation, a company that owns a bunch of North Country businesses, including Glens Falls National Bank. The mayor is paid quite handsomely for this, according to Bloomberg.


And Glens Falls has a contract with the city that predates Read, but continues to this day, in which the bank is paid to hold city receipts in a lockbox. Once a month, the payment, usually around $1,500 to $2,000 a month, shows up on the city website, like so:



Of note? Bill Owens also serves on the Arrow Financial Board of Directors. Owens, like Colin Read, is now making money off the city and Arrow simultaneously, while Arrow has ongoing business with the city. Certainly, in small towns, people wear multiple hats. But New York State law explicitly states that government officials such as Read must disclose when those hats come into contact with each other and could influence the public's business.
With certain limited exceptions, if you or your spouse has, will have, or later acquires an interest in a contract with your municipality, you must disclose the nature and extent of that interest in writing. You must make the disclosure as soon as you become aware of the actual or prospective interest. The disclosure must be made publicly, to your immediate supervisor and to the governing body of the municipality, which must include the disclosure in the official record of its proceedings.
I did a FOIL request a couple of weeks ago to see if the city had any documentation of Read revealing these or other potential conflicts of interest. The city clerk responded that no such documentation exists.

Let's review:
-Read, scourge of those who sit on the back of garbage trucks, is paid $50,000 to sit on the board of a company that does banking business with the city.
-Read just hired an attorney to fight what looks like a quixotic legal battle, and that attorney is also paid to sit on the board of the same banking company.
-The mayor has not revealed how much the city is paying this attorney, who claims his lawyering on the quixotic case could go on for years.
-In fact, the mayor has not revealed any of this, even though, likely by law, and definitely by any ethical standard of public transparency, he should reveal it all, and probably step down from the Arrow Board, if he actually wants to build trust with his constituents and the council. Because the situation, to borrow the mayor's own hot-mic phrase, "stinks to high heaven."

No doubt the mayor is conflicted about it.