Two complaints filed against the city...
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Two complaints filed against the city of Newport Beach in 2001 and
2002 have been dropped by the Orange County district attorney’s
office, contrary to the Jan. 3 Daily Pilot article “Brown Act
violation uncertain.”
That article incorrectly reported that one of two complaints that
the city violated the spirit of state open-meeting laws was still
pending, when the matter had been closed in the fall.
City leaders consider the district attorney’s dismissing the
complaint significant because that action clears the city of any
official charges that it violated either the letter or the spirit of
the state law commonly known as the Brown Act.
That act requires that most government decision-making be
conducted in a public forum, with exceptions for real estate
negotiations, for some personnel matters and for pending litigation.
Leaders of the Greenlight Committee had charged that two city
actions were in conflict with the objectives of that law.
In November 2001, Greenlight leaders asked the district attorney
to examine whether meetings between city officials and
representatives of the Koll and the Conexant companies were.
In July 2002, the Greenlight Committee asked the district
attorney’s office to consider whether the city’s closed-session
decision to hire airport lobbyists constituted a violation of the
Brown Act.
The district attorney’s decision supports the city’s position that
it acted appropriately in both matters.
An obituary that ran Tuesday misspelled the last name of David
John Curtin. The corrected version can be found on Page A4 today.
The hometown for a letter writer on Tuesday’s forum page was
incorrect. James D. Daily lives in Newport Beach.
A news brief on Tuesday incorrectly described the status of two
ficus trees on Main Street in Balboa Village.
The one in front of the pharmacy will be removed and stored for
future replanting at a location to be determined. The ficus tree in
front of the Balboa Inn will remain where it is.
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