I must have Dave-ja vu
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EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK
If in doubt, don’t vote.
This is simple, elected officials. If you don’t want to go the way
of former Mayor and Councilman Dave Garofalo, indicted as a felon on
conflict of interest charges, you must be very prudent.
Incredibly, though, it seems the painful Garofalo lesson has been
forgotten. Yet another Huntington Beach City Council member has been
called out for voting on an ordinance that related to her business
dealings.
Councilwoman Pam Julien Houchen, a Huntington Beach real estate
agent, initiated negotiations that led to the lease of a Downtown
office to the National Professional Paintball League, where it has
set up the league’s national headquarters. Her take-home commission
on the deal was $4,000.
Her husband, Bryan, remodeled the offices at a cost of about
$20,000, which is not a profit, but a contract price.
California law bars elected officials from voting on issues that
benefit anyone who has paid them more than $500 in the year preceding
the vote.
Now, hindsight, as they say, is 20/20.
When City Atty. Jennifer McGrath and Police Chief Kenneth Small
brought an ordinance to the City Council on Dec. 16 and then again on
Jan. 6 to amend the municipal code relating to the discharging of
weapons in the city, Houchen should have connected it to the
paintball event and her client and abstained.
She didn’t, and the change passed on a 7-0 vote with no
discussion.
Although the question of whether to vote was never brought to her
office, McGrath said, she would have told Houchen that she could vote
and says the councilwoman has done nothing wrong.
“Because the permit process applies citywide, it has broader
application, so I don’t think there is any conflict,” McGrath said.
It may not have been wrong legally, but it sure doesn’t look good
now.
Anyone who has watched the City Council, however, has, as I have,
seen Houchen abstain on numerous things. That leads me to believe
that it didn’t occur to her. She does not have the highly suspect
track record of Garofalo.
Legally, in terms of the ordinance, Houchen seems to be in the
clear. The question remains, did she at all influence the permitting
process.
One councilwoman, as she said, cannot influence the permitting
process.
But did she lobby for the paintball tournament to be held in the
city. She was quoted as saying what a great thing it would be for the
city ... .
It just looks bad.
I guess we’ll just have to wait and see what the Fair Political
Practices Commission has to say.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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