Friday, March 4, 2011

GOP connections, fiascos, and the hefty pricetag


How Much Could the Williams’ Fiasco Cost Taxpayers? (Voice of OC)

     …[T]he big question facing supervisors is whether to agree to hand [OC Public Administrator/Guardian John] Williams the payoff he seeks in exchange for resigning – estimated at a year or more of salary – which he argues he secured when voters re-elected him to office in 2010.
     Yet voices are rising against offering Williams any kind of payoff, complicating the negotiations.
. . .
     Williams assent was a byproduct of his local GOP connections, cruising into office with solid endorsements from GOP heavyweights such as County Supervisor John Moorlach.
     Yet by 2009, he was under fire from the county's grand jury, which issued two scathing reports that criticized Williams' growing bureaucracy and management staff….
     He also was the focus of a county audit that looked at his extensive travel, questioning whether he could legitimately charge taxpayers for work when he was off on educational conferences connected to his work as a school district trustee.
     Moorlach turned against Williams hard, especially after the grand jury reports, removing his endorsement before the 2010 election and becoming a vocal opponent.
. . .
     Both [BillCampbell and [JanetNguyen have now called for Williams' resignation.
     And while Williams won re-election to countywide office last June, in what could have been seen as a harbinger of Williams' collapsing support base, he lost re-election to the OC Republican Central Committee that same month.
     Those kinds of political insiders, so key to Williams' quiet rise, are now the very ones telling supervisors to play hardball as Williams tries to negotiate his way out.

"Surprise information" derailed action


from the Register:
     The fate of Public Administrator/Public Guardian John S. Williams is expected to be resolved in the next few days, county supervisors said following a special closed door meeting Friday morning.
     County supervisors have called for Williams to resign from office while the county is in the midst of restructuring his troubled agency. The move comes in the wake of intense criticism, the board’s vote Tuesday to strip him of his public guardian role and a lawsuit against the county for the handling of the multi-million dollar estate of TapouT co-founder Charles “Mask” Lewis.
     Williams has offered to step down from office in return for certain considerations that so far have not been made public, but the supervisors did not vote on whether to accept the terms. Supervisor Shawn Nelson said “surprise information” given to supervisors at Friday’s closed session derailed a planned discussion on a number of options to deal with Williams’ position.“If that information is accurate, we may not have to vote at all,” Nelson said. “It would make all of this a moot point.”
     Nelson declined to elaborate on the new information.
     “We’ve got to do what we think is prudent to protect the people of the County of Orange,” Nelson said.
To read the rest, click here.


Shades of the South: Hate Comes to Orange County

     Remember scenes from the civil rights era in the South? You know, those scenes outside newly integrated schools when whites gathered to heckle black students and their families, their faces utterly distorted by hatred and fear?
     Well, take a look at this:



     This is footage from the February 13, 2011 fundraiser dinner for ICNA Relief in nearby Yorba Linda. (Bear with it. It starts a little slow and at first you can make out what people are saying - but then it becomes all too clear. 6 minutes in length.)
     ICNA Relief is the social services branch of the Islamic Circle of North America, a leading American Muslim organization. The dinner raised money for social services projects. You know, homeless shelters, hunger programs, etc. The video was produced by CAIR, the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
     People attending the annual dinner were met by protesters and speakers such as local elected officials, including Rebel Girl's own congressman Gary Miller, his fellow congressman Ed Royce and Villa Park councilwoman Deborah Pauly who appears to openly advocated murder:
     "Let me tell you what's going on over there is pure, unadulterated evil. And I don't care . . . I don't even care if you think I'm crazy anymore. I have a beautiful daughter. I have a wonderful 19-year-old son who is a U.S. Marine. In fact, I know quite a few Marines who would be happy to send these terrorists to an early meeting in paradise."
     Watch and see.
     The footage of young children as they walked by the flag-waving hate-spewing protesters is especially disturbing. It's not hard for Rebel Girl to imagine this happening to her students, to yours.
     It's getting increasingly ugly out there folks.
     Those of us who haven't yet done so need to find a way to stand with the people who are on the receiving end of this kind of hatred.
     We need to condemn our local public officials who showed up and sanctioned this kind of behavior.
     Congressman Gary Miller: Call his office in Washington. Offfice is open M-F 8-5:30 EST - 202-225-3201
     Congressman Ed Royce: His Washington office: (202) 225-4111
     Villa Park Councilwoman Deborah Pauly: dpauly@villapark.org
     If you've never done this before, welcome to democracy. Don't be afraid. Think about how those people walking by those protesters felt. Hell, think about those brave Egyptians in Tahrir Square.
     Don't be afraid of picking up the telephone or writing and email whether or not you live in their districts or not. We all live in the same country.
     Be more afraid of what might happen if you don't.

*
See also Video: Councilwoman condemns Muslim speakers

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...