PTC taps Lindsey for
city attorney By MONROE ROARK
mroark@thecitizennews.com
The
City Council of Peachtree City reached what it
called a compromise of sorts in its appointment
of a city attorney.
Citing
public sentiment against Webb, Stuckey &
Lindsey senior partner Jim Webb related to recent
allegations against him, the council voted 3-1 to
appoint his partner Rick Lindsey individually as
the city's attorney, not the firm as a whole.
Councilman Dan Tennant cast the lone dissenting
vote, while Councilman Annie McMenamin abstained
from voting because her daughter works for the
firm.
The
action ends four months of speculation that
included two separate bidding processes, the
announcement of a libel lawsuit by Webb, Stuckey
& Lindsey against The Citizen newspaper, its
publisher and a private citizen, and an ethics
complaint against Webb that was recently
dismissed on a technicality.
Mayor
Bob Lenox made the motion but added that he felt
Webb deserved reappointment, saying that all of
the allegations against Webb thus far were just
that allegations.
I
think most of [anti-Webb sentiment] has been
based on personal animosity and political
motivation, said Lenox. But public
opinion, however misguided, matters.
Lenox
added in his motion that Lindsey would serve
under the same financial stipulations outlined in
the firm's bid, and he would have access to his
firm's resources when necessary. Lindsey said he
had no problem with this arrangement.
Councilman
Carol Fritz agreed with Lenox's decision, saying
that not reappointing Webb, Stuckey & Lindsey
would be akin to rendering a guilty verdict
without a trial.
Having
heard what she termed horror stories
from other municipalities concerning how legal
matters are handled, Fritz said that Peachtree
City has received excellent legal service from
its attorneys, who have been working for the city
since 1992.
Tennant
stressed that he has no personal interest in the
reappointment of Webb's firm, despite what many
in the city may believe, but his problem is with
potential conflicts, as he put it.
I
agree with Councilman Fritz that they are
presumed innocent, said Tennant. But
several incidents from the last few months tell
me we should not reappoint. I think we could do
better, and the city needs fresh blood in that
department.
Tennant
had argued in a March meeting that Webb, Stuckey
& Lindsey should not be reappointed because
they were not the low bidder for the job, and it
would not be a proper use of taxpayer money to
reappoint them.
Councilman
Robert Brooks called Lenox's motion a
compromise I can support, adding that the
costs are reasonable when weighed against the
quality of service, especially when considering
that several Atlanta firms were in the running.
Robert
Brown, a local resident and Planning Commission
alternate, read from a prepared statement that
outlined his opposition to Webb, Stuckey &
Lindsey's reappointment.
Brown
said that the costs should be looked at again,
noting that city staff made a different
recommendation after the initial bid. The bids
were redone because the council wanted the city
attorney and solicitor combined in a single
position, and some bidders initially sought only
one of those jobs.
The
Newnan firm of Glover & Davis was the low
bidder for the city attorney position the first
time around, but that firm withdrew the second
time because one of its attorneys is municipal
judge Mitch Powell, and the same firm could not
serve as both solicitor and judge.
In
addition to saying that the city could get a
better price, Brown said that the ethics
complaints against Webb were never properly
answered, and the city attorney should agree to
abide by the city's ethics ordinance and avoid
the appearance of impropriety.
The
complaint, filed by former Planning Commission
member Mike Hyde, alleged that Webb advised the
board concerning a proposed buffer ordinance in
1997 while owning property that would be directly
affected by that ordinance.
Attorney
Andrew Whalen III of Griffin, appointed by the
city to advise the ethics board, said that the
city attorney is not within that body's
jurisdiction under the city's current charter and
ordinances, and he recommended dismissal of the
complaint, which the ethics board did.
Brown
also said that Webb's suit against The Citizen,
editor-publisher Cal Beverly and local resident
Steve Brown (no relation) was a slap
suit, filed to intimidate the defendants, and is
illegal and Lindsey's statement at a previous
council meeting announcing the suit was improper.
The suit concerns two letters written by Steve
Brown suggesting a possible conflict of interest
over Webb's position on the board of directors of
a local bank.
At
the risk of being sued myself, I'll say this is
not what I want from attorneys representing this
city, Brown said.
Brooks
specifically addressed Brown's complaints, saying
that the buffer issue was not an ethics issue
because the council was fully aware of Webb's
interest and he made no effort to keep it secret.
The
lawsuit was much murkier, he said,
but he felt that it was beyond the realm of the
council and many of the public statements made
recently concerning Webb were indeed politically
motivated.
To
demonstrate this, Brooks read excerpts from an
e-mail that was composed in December by a local
attorney John Mrosek and sent to Councilwoman
Fritz. Without Mrosek's consent, the e-mail
recently was anonymously sent to a number of
local public officials and other citizens. Mrosek
has announced he is challenging incumbent
Superior Court Judge Johnnie Caldwell. (See
accompanying stories in this edition of The
Citizen.)
Brooks
said that the e-mail appeared to suggest an
attempt by various people to manipulate
news stories. There were several direct
references to Beverly, but Brooks stressed that
he knew of nothing to suggest that Beverly was
involved or even knew about what was discussed in
the e-mail.
In
conclusion, Brooks said that since most of the
objections from the public were against Webb and
not Lindsey, he supported this motion by Lenox.
Fritz
also pointed out what she thought was a fact
misunderstood by many citizens, which is that
Webb, Stuckey & Lindsey is not representing
the city in a suit filed in November by Pathway
Communities over the new traffic impact
ordinance.
The
city's insurance carrier appointed an attorney
from Atlanta to handle this case, Fritz said.
Lenox
concluded the discussion by saying that it was
far more common for a municipality to appoint an
individual as city attorney, even though most of
those appointees are members of larger law firms.
|