City Hall battlers mull class action
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Deirdre Newman
Two persistent City Hall critics -- one up close and one who has
taken refuge in Las Vegas -- continue to push the city to change the
way it enacts and publicizes ordinances.
Neither is interested in the arcane workings of city and state
government code for his own sake. Each has ulterior motives.
Sid Soffer fled the Newport-Mesa area in 1995 after failing to
show up for a sentencing date after being convicted of building code
violations at several of his properties. Igal Israel is fighting the
city after it sued his parents based on code violations at their
property, which houses his business, Bengal Industries Development
Group Inc., on Newport Boulevard. Soffer is counseling Israel on his
family’s fight against the city.
Both contend they can’t be prosecuted if the city’s laws are
invalid because of the way they are enacted or publicized. Soffer is
threatening a class-action lawsuit involving everyone affected by
what he considers the city’s willful disregard of the state
government code.
“I’m going to drag everyone else in Costa Mesa that’s been screwed
around by laws that aren’t laws,” said Soffer, whose many businesses
in the city included a state house on Newport Boulevard.
The city has thus far acquiesced to one change both men have been
hammering away at regarding how laws are publicized. The state
government code says a summary of proposed and approved laws must be
published. The city had only been publicizing a descriptive title of
the laws, not a summary.
As of March, the city started including a description of the laws
along with the title. This addition was because of Soffer’s
critiques, deputy city clerk Julie Folcik said.
“I’m not saying we’re starting a summary per se,” Folcik said. “We
just felt it would be better for us to add a little more
information.”
Soffer still isn’t sure if the city’s effort to provide more
information is enough.
“Whether or not the summary is adequate, that’s another story,”
Soffer said.
While the two continue to lambaste city officials, Israel’s
parents’ case -- which he is handling -- is set to go to trial on
Nov. 16. Last week, he was offered a plea bargain by Deputy City
Atty. Marianne Milligan, he said. He refused.
“What am I pleading guilty to?” Israel asked. “I didn’t do
anything wrong. Their laws aren’t valid. And if they’re not valid,
what am I in violation of?”
At the Oct. 4 City Council meeting, Israel posted his telephone
number on the monitors in the council chambers and asked people who
had experienced similar issues with the city to contact him. He
received about four calls from that posting, he said.
He is determined to continue his fight in public view while his
parents’ case wends its way through the courts, he added.
“I’m just holding [city officials] accountable for their actions,”
Israel said. “They need to do things the way the government code
says, and they don’t. They dance around it. They think they’re above
the law, and they’re not.”
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