City attorney won’t probe Garofalo, CIM matter
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Kenneth Ma
HUNTINGTON BEACH--The city attorney’s office said it will not
investigate Mayor Dave Garofalo for voting on a Downtown project after
accepting a $2,995 advertising check from the developer.
CIM Group’s check was made out to David P. Garofalo & Associates, a
company that the mayor said he owns, for an ad in the Huntington Beach
Conference and Visitor’s Bureau’s visitors guide.
Garofalo has denied any wrongdoing, saying the money ultimately made
its way to “the proper accounts.” Garofalo has said a conflict of
interest doesn’t exist because he no longer owns the Local News, the
publisher of the visitors guide. The Local News, which Garofalo used to
own, is a subsidiary of Air Quality Consultants.
He had yet to respond to further questions faxed to him by the
Independent at press time.
Assistant City Attorney Scott Field said it is the job of the Fair
Political Practices Commission to investigate conflict of interest cases.
“They are a specific-purpose agency,” Field said. “If there is to be an
investigation, they are the ones to conduct it.”
Field said the city attorney’s office would not forward the matter to
the state commission. City Attorney Gail Hutton is on vacation until
June 16.
In May, Garofalo joined his colleagues on the council in voting to
move forward on a proposed $46-million dollar hotel, restaurant and
retail project. Four months earlier, the project’s developer, CIM Group,
wrote a check to David P. Garofalo & Associates for a half-page color ad
in the visitors guide.
Under the Political Reform Act of 1974, public officials may have a
conflict of interest if they receive money from companies involved in
issues that come before them. As little as $250 received by a council
member within the last 12 months can trigger a conflict.
A five-member appointed commission decides whether there has been a
violation of the conflict of interest law. A fine of up to $2,000 can be
assessed for each violation.
Other advertisers in the visitors guide -- Rocky Mountain Chocolate
Factory, Golden West College, Sugar Shack restaurant and Huntington Beach
Realty -- said they wrote their checks to Air Quality Consultants or the
Local News.
Garofalo -- or a company he’s worked for -- has received since 1993
the right to publish the visitors guide. The Huntington Beach Conference
and Visitor’s Bureau is funded entirely by the city. However, the bureau
does not pay Garofalo for his publishing work, bureau president Diane
Baker has said. Instead, the publisher of the guide is allowed to keep
any advertising profits.
Councilman Dave Sullivan said Garofalo should disclose his business
affairs to clear up any concern over his conduct.
“Some questions have been raised that seem to me would require
answers,” Sullivan said.
Councilman Tom Harman said he would rather see the mayor make a full
disclosure than have the City Attorney’s office investigate the matter.
“These are allegations, and I’m not going to jump to conclusions,”
Harman said. “I’m going to give him the benefit of the doubt. But from
what I have read in the papers, it seems that Dave Garofalo is
stonewalling the press as well as the public, and I think it looks bad
for the council.” Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff said it would be more
appropriate for the Fair Political Practices Commission to investigate
complaints against Garofalo.
“At this time, it is not the job of the city to do so,” Dettloff said.
“This not a local issue, and this is an issue that will be answered by an
appropriate body. I don’t think it needs local action.”
Dettloff said Garofalo’s financial disclosure in March, required of
all City Council members, adequately addresses the recent concerns over a
possible conflict of interest.
“Mayor Garofalo is serving his community, and no one has ever found
that he has conducted himself in anyway that can be construed as
wrongdoing,” she said.
The CIM matter is the latest in a series of Garofalo’s business
dealings that has prompted questions of conflict of interest. Earlier
this month, Huntington Beach attorney Debbie Cook -- one of Garofalo’s
harshest critics -- filed a complaint with the Fair Political Practices
Commission, asking the agency to examine his dealings with other
advertisers in the guide and in the Local News, a paper he once owned.
The complaint contends the mayor received advertising revenue from the
Waterfront Hilton and Hearthside Homes, formerly Koll Real Estate Group,
and then later voted on their projects.
Garofalo has denied any wrongdoing in that case as well.
Katie Trueworthy, a spokeswoman for the state agency, said the
commission cannot confirm or deny receiving Cook’s complaint as a matter
of policy.
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