Resident Marolee Smith filed this ethics complaint against Port Angeles Mayor Patrick Downie on Tuesday night. ()

Resident Marolee Smith filed this ethics complaint against Port Angeles Mayor Patrick Downie on Tuesday night. ()

Ethics complaint filed against Port Angeles mayor amid fluoridation debate

PORT ANGELES — A third ethics complaint against members of the Port Angeles City Council was filed Tuesday night — this time against Mayor Patrick Downie.

Marolee Smith, a Port Angeles resident and former City Council candidate, filed the complaint against Downie during the council meeting’s second public comment session at the end of Tuesday’s meeting.

Downie, who chaired Tuesday’s meeting, said Wednesday he had not yet read the complaint and so couldn’t comment.

In the complaint, Smith said that at the council meetings

Jan. 5 and Jan. 19, Downie admonished a group of people who wanted to speak, mostly about water fluoridation.

Smith said Downie was “chiding, lecturing and threatening” toward the audience at the meeting.

The complaint does not ask for action to be taken against Downie. Smith said that should be left up to the panel that will review the complaint.

The complaint alleges in part that:

■   Downie “subjected people at the meeting to inappropriate, long-winded lectures, chided the citizens and actually ‘finger wagged’ at them, as if he were scolding children.”

■ He “admonished the citizens in the audience to NOT criticize individual council members, which was out-of-order.”

■ He “characterized the audience as: bullies, not courteous, threatening, intimidating, angry, disrespectful.”

■   The mayor’s “scolding, chiding, lecturing, and threatening (‘will cut off comment period if…’) and repeated insistence that people be ‘civil’ was out of line. Calling citizens intimidating, rancorous, angry, bullies, and insinuating that they were ‘a waste of time.’ ”

Smith said Wednesday she had intended to submit the complaint at a meeting two weeks earlier but was low on the list of speakers and did not get to the lectern to speak.

She said she knew the complaint could be filed outside of a meeting but waited until Tuesday’s meeting.

“I wanted to make a point, and I think I made that point. It wasn’t just for the council; it was for the audience as well,” she said.

Council members did not receive a copy of the complaint until Wednesday afternoon.

Fourth complaint

Previous complaints have been filed against Deputy Mayor Cherie Kidd, Councilman Dan Gase and City Attorney Bill Bloor.

The first, filed Feb. 4 by Smith, was only against Kidd. The second, filed Feb. 19 by Our Water, Our Choice!, an anti-fluoridation group, was against Kidd and Gase; and the third, filed by Port Angeles attorney Peter Perron of Port Angeles, was against Bloor.

All were filed as ethics complaints using a city code.

City officials have said the code does not apply to city employees, only elected or appointed officials, and so the complaint against Bloor has been referred to the city manager.

All of the complaints concern the conduct of council members and the city attorney in regard to protests of the council’s 4-3 decision to continue fluoridating the city’s water supply.

The first two complaints cite the Feb. 2 meeting.

The fluoride project, constructed by CH2M, was completed in May 2006. The city then began fluoridating the public water supply.

The $400,000 fluoridation project was funded by the Washington Dental Service Foundation, but only if the city agreed to continue fluoridating the water supply for a 10-year period ending May 18, 2016.

On Dec. 15, Kidd, Gase, Councilman Brad Collins and Downie voted to continue fluoridation of the city’s drinking water and on Jan. 19 reaffirmed that decision.

Some protested the council’s decision, citing the results of a non-binding water customer survey in which 43 percent of customers responded, with 56.64 percent opposing the continued fluoridation and 41.27 percent supporting the practice.

Panels seated

On Tuesday, the council, with Kidd and Gase recused to another room, selected a panel of three volunteers to investigate the second ethics complaint.

The council was given the choice of assigning the complaint to the same panel that was selected Feb. 16 — Grant Meiner, Danetta Rutten and Frank Prince — to investigate the earlier complaint against Kidd or select a new panel.

“I would welcome a set of three new eyes on this,” said Councilman Lee Whetham.

“If six sets of eyes come up with two different findings, there are things we can learn from this.”

Councilwoman Sissi Bruch said she could go “either way” on the decision.

Councilman Michael Merideth noted that the issues before the two were related.

The four members voted unanimously to appoint a new panel and selected Ken Williams, Jerry Dean and William Yucha to review the complaint against Kidd and Gase.

The first panel, with Meiner, Rutten and Prince, is scheduled to meet March 8.

Limited speakers

Also during public comment sessions, members of the public complained about the policy limiting public comments to 15 minutes, which allot three minutes of speaking time per person.

Several of the speakers said the limits cut the number of people who can speak and denied them the right of free speech.

Downie said the 15-minute rule was long-standing, and in the past, time limits had been printed on the sign-in sheet for those who wanted to speak.

He did not know when or how the notice had been dropped from the form and said the rule had never been changed.

A staff member was assigned to track each speaker’s time.

On Tuesday, nine people were registered to speak, eight of whom spoke on subjects regarding the water fluoridation issue or related free speech issues.

One speaker, Patricia Graham, brought her own egg timer to make a point of her three-minute time period to keep “my rights as a citizen.”

Graham said she said she no longer uses city water to cook or drink and that instead of forcing city water users to drink water with fluoride, children should be taught good dental hygiene.

“You should be ashamed of yourselves,” she said.

A 10th person who did not arrive in time to register to speak was allowed to comment when the nine registered residents had each spoken.

Downie also asked the packed crowd to leave their signs in the overflow area, just outside the chamber, rather than bringing them into the chamber itself.

Whetham said he opposed Downie’s decisions on the management of public participation in the meeting.

“I think it is very important people have a chance to weigh in,” Whetham said.

“This is not a council decision. This is a mayoral decision. I do not support it,” he said.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56250, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Chimacum Elementary School sixth-grade students jump on a rotating maypole as they use the new playground equipment on Monday during recess. The playground was redesigned with safer equipment and was in use for the first time since inspections were completed last Thursday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
New equipment

Chimacum Elementary School sixth-grade students jump on a rotating maypole as they… Continue reading

Microsoft purchases Peninsula credits

Carbon removal will come from area forests

Port Angeles School District to reduce budget by $1.9M

Additional cuts could come if government slashes Title 1 funding

Jefferson County discussion centers on fireworks

Potential future bans, pathway to public displays discussed

Natalie Maitland.
Port Townsend Main Street hires next executive director

Natalie Maitland will start new role with organization May 21

Olympic Kiwanis Club member Tobin Standley, right, hands a piece of stereo equipment to Gerald Casasola for disposal during Saturday’s electronics recycling collection day in the parking lot at Port Angeles Civic Field. Items collected during the roundup were to be given to Friendly Earth International Recycling for repairs and eventual resale, or else disassembled for parts. Club members were accepting monetary donations during the event as a benefit for Kiwanis community programs. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Electronics recycling

Olympic Kiwanis Club member Tobin Standley, right, hands a piece of stereo… Continue reading

Port Angeles Garden Club member Bobbie Daniels, left, and her daughter, Rose Halverson, both of Port Angeles, look at a table of plants for sale at the club’s annual plant sale and raffle on Saturday at the Port Angeles Senior Center. The event featured hundreds of plants for sale as a fundraiser for club events and operations. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Plant sale

Port Angeles Garden Club member Bobbie Daniels, left, and her daughter, Rose… Continue reading

Two people transported to hospitals after three-car collision

Two people were transported to hospitals after a three-car collision… Continue reading

Special candidate filing period to open Wednesday

The Clallam County elections office will conduct a special… Continue reading

Moses McDonald, a Sequim water operator, holds one of the city’s new utility residential meters in his right hand and a radio transmitter in his left. City staff finished replacing more than 3,000 meters so they can be read remotely. (City of Sequim)
Sequim shifts to remote utility meters

Installation for devices began last August

A family of eagles sits in a tree just north of Carrie Blake Community Park. Following concerns over impacts to the eagles and nearby Garry oak trees, city staff will move Sequim’s Fourth of July fireworks display to the other side of Carrie Blake Community Park. Staff said the show will be discharged more than half a mile away. (City of Sequim)
Sequim to move fireworks display

Show will remain in Carrie Blake Park

W. Ron Allen.
Allen to be inducted into Native American Hall of Fame

Ceremony will take place in November in Oklahoma City