Huntington Beach city attorney clashes with City Council after age discrimination case settled
Tuesday nightâs Huntington Beach City Council meeting featured the sudden resignation of Mayor Pro Tem Tito Ortiz, but another oddity took place just minutes before that.
Huntington Beach City Atty. Michael Gates took the rare step of speaking before the council during public comments.
The move came in the aftermath of the city recently settling a $2.5-million lawsuit that alleged age discrimination, naming Gates and the city itself as defendants.
Neal Moore, 75, a former senior deputy city attorney who resigned in 2018, was paid $1.5 million in the settlement dated May 21. Scott Field, 64, a current senior deputy city attorney, was paid $1 million. Officials said the case cost the city about $1.5 million fighting the complaint, which originated in 2019.
In the lawsuit, Moore and Field said that Gates had made a concerted effort to push out older and disabled attorneys since being elected in 2014. The lawsuit said that Gates assigned older attorneys unachievable tasks and unrealistic deadlines, subjected them to unwarranted scrutiny and falsely accused them of poor performance, among other accusations.
As is standard with cases against the city, talks were done in closed session, unseen by the general public. Council members Dan Kalmick and Mike Posey had introduced an item for Tuesdayâs agenda that would require Gates to perform an analysis of the settlement agreement, including all costs incurred, but that item was pulled from the agenda Friday.
âRecords show that City Council was consulted about the lawsuit in closed session 10 times over the course of two years,â Gates said during his public comments Tuesday. âWhile of course, Iâm not going to reveal any closed session discussions ... clearly council conferred on this lawsuit repeatedly.â
Gates criticized Kalmick and Posey for âbringing this lawsuit back to center stage for more public scrutiny,â and claimed it was a political stunt.
The settlement will be paid with insurance money as it is funded by the Big Independent Cities Excess Pool Joint Powers Authority, Gates said. Outside counsel was used for the case, Gates said, but was approved by the City Council. He is only authorized to spend $100,000 on outside attorneys without the councilâs approval.
Kalmick said Wednesday in a phone interview that there was no war waged against Gates or the city attorneyâs office. He noted that he has been on the council for six months, not two years.
âEvents have occurred, and I donât have enough information about whatâs happened in the past,â he said. âIâve been briefed once on this, and it was like pulling teeth to get other information. We had outside counsel that was running this ... I asked to have the conversation in closed session, and it was not met kindly by Mr. Gates, to say the least.
âI hadnât seen the settlement, and the settlement was agreed to. I donât know the process because no oneâs explained it to me, and Iâve asked ... Iâm reacting to the situation. Iâve been trying to understand better how this lawsuit was resolved, and how we spent $1.55 million to defend a discrimination case that weâre never getting back. Iâm trying to get to the crux of why we spent so much money on this and why there wasnât an offer to settle early on, especially since our insurance company picked up the tab for the $2.5 million settlement.â
Later in Tuesdayâs meeting, Gates again clashed with the City Council over the size of his office in discussions over the 2021-22 fiscal year budget. Council members including Kalmick and Mayor Kim Carr discussed taking away one of Gatesâ two chief assistant city attorneys to help fund a new deputy director of homelessness and behavioral services position.
One of the chief assistant city attorneys left about six months ago, Carr noted, and the position has not been filled.
âWe have a department that has a total of 11 people but three managers,â Carr said. âMy concern is that we have this org chart that really doesnât work now ... Iâve been opposed to having two chief assistant city attorneys since 2019, so I think Iâve been very consistent here.â
After discussion, it was decided that one of the positions would instead be downgraded to a senior trial attorney position as opposed to removed entirely, saving the city about $14,000 a year.
Gates said he has already streamlined his office from 15 to 16 employees when he was elected to the current total of 11.
âIt feels like a full assault on what weâre doing in the city attorneyâs office,â Gates told the Daily Pilot Wednesday. âWe do fantastic work, and weâve really turned the office around over the course of the last six years ... These attacks by council are meritless and purely political. Any attempt to undermine what weâre doing or take resources away is nonsensical, and it doesnât serve the public.â
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