In re Recall of Boldt

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 2017
Docket93522-0
StatusPublished

This text of In re Recall of Boldt (In re Recall of Boldt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Recall of Boldt, (Wash. 2017).

Opinion

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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Recall of ) ) No. 93522-0 MARC BOLDT, ) Clark County Councilor, ) ) JEANNE STEWART, ) EnBanc Clark County Councilor, ) ) JULIE OLSON, ) Clark County Councilor. ) ) Filed JAN 1 2 2011 )

GONZALEZ, J. -Clark County Councilor Thomas Mielke filed recall

charges essentially alleging that three fellow council members improperly held a

vote in executive session, improperly designated The Columbian as the newspaper

of record, and did not prevent the county executive from dissolving a county

department. The superior court judge dismissed the charges as legally and

factually insufficient, which Mielke appealed. We affirm the trial court. In re Recall of Marc Boldt, eta!., No. 93522-0

BACKGROUND

Clark County's Board of County Councilors (Board) operates under a "home

rule charter." A home rule charter is a municipality's organizational plan,

analogous to a constitution, drawn by the local government itself and adopted by

popular vote. BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 284 (lOth ed. 2014). In 2014, Clark

County voters increased the number of the Board from three to five members.

Under the charter, the Board is the legislative body and the county manager the

executive. CLARK CoUNTY CHARTER§§ 1.5, 2.1, 3.1. The manager has authority

to supervise all administrative departments established by the charter or created by

the Board, and to execute and enforce all ordinances. Id. § 3.2.

The Board adopted a budget in 2015 that included funding for a county

Department of Environmental Services. Former Senator Don Benton served as its

director. In May 2016, County Manager Mark McCauley "reorganize[d]" the

Department, eliminating administrative positions, including Benton's, and

reassigning the services to other county departments. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 520.

According to McCauley, he based this decision on his authority alone as manager.

In 2016, Councilors Marc Boldt and Julie Olson were elected to the Board,

joining Councilors Jeanne Stewart, David Madore, and Thomas Mielke. Tensions

rose quickly between councilor members. The councilors often disagreed, dividing

the Board into two factions: Boldt, Olson, and Stewart against Madore and Mielke.

2 In re Recall of Marc Boldt, et al., No. 93522-0

E.g., CP at 193-95,11,24,38 (Mielke characterized Boldt, Olson, and Stewart as

Madore's "political rivals"). Madore eventually became suspicious of Deputy

County Prosecutors Chris Home and Christine Cook and Planning Director Oliver

Orjiako, accusing them of providing false information to the Board regarding the

county's comprehensive plan update as required by the Growth Management Act,

chapter 36.70A RCW. Madore created a document purportedly showing

"inaccuracies of their testimony and posted it to the County's website." Br. of

Appellant at 2 (citing CP at 129-30).

On March 1, 2016, Home spoke about Madore's concerns and asked for

guidance from the Board about whether an independent investigation was needed.

Boldt, Olson, and Stewart stated that an investigation was not necessary, while

Madore endorsed proceeding with an investigation. On March 2, 2016, a union for

county employees threatened to file a grievance against Madore's "defamatory"

public allegations naming Home, Cook, and Orjiako. CP at 131-32. 1 On March 9,

2016, the Board met again, Horne provided additional background on an

independent investigation, and the Board discussed "moving forward" with it. CP

at 406.

1 Madore accused Clark County staff of misfeasance at public meetings, in Facebook postings, in e-mails, in an op-ed article, and in an AprilS, 2016 Clark County Focus television interview. CP at 235. 3 In re Recall ofMarc Boldt, eta!., No. 93522-0

On March 15, 2016, Orjiako submitted a complaint, alleging Madore created

a hostile workplace, to Clark County's director of human resources. In light of the

Board's discussions, McCauley decided on his own to move forward with an

investigation. McCauley directed his staff to locate an independent investigator to

look into the allegations made by and against Madore. While the recruitment

process was unclear, on March 19, 2016, attorney Rebecca Dean sent an

engagement letter to the county, agreeing to begin an investigation. McCauley's

declaration states that his staff proposed Dean's scope of work and he did not

discuss it with the Board based on his "past practice regarding contracts for

investigations of county employees." CP at 519. McCauley executed the contract

"based on [his] authority as County Manager under the Clark County Home Rule

Charter and related rules." Jd. The Dean contract was not posted on the county's

website.

The Board returned to conducting county business despite the allegations

from Madore and county staff. On AprilS, 2016, the Board considered bids for the

county's newspaper of record. Four newspapers submitted bids. The county

purchasing manager presented a report comparing the bids and advised the Board

that the previous newspaper of record, The Reflector, had "compromised the

County's ability to meet publishing deadlines and scheduled changes." CP at 443.

The purchasing manager also stated that The Reflector, a weekly newspaper, would

4 In re Recall ofMarc Boldt, et al., No. 93522-0

require duplicate postings in The Columbian, a daily paper, concluding that The

Reflector would ultimately be more expensive in total publishing costs. Boldt,

Olson, and Stewart voted for The Columbian; Mielke and Madore voted for The

Reflector.

Meanwhile, at an April20, 2016 board meeting, McCauley explained why

"he believed that he had unanimous support from the Board to proceed with an

investigation of Councilor Madore's allegations" and, because the contract

involved "investigations of one ofthe Board members," why "he decided that it

was not appropriate" to post the Dean contract on the website. Resp'ts' Br. at 8

(citing CP at 189-90). Interestingly, Mielke seems to confirm that the Board had

agreed to pursue an investigation, but believed there had been no agreement

regarding its scope. CP at 194 ("I thought we would agree to hire someone, but we

hadn't agreed on what's going to be investigated.").Z

On June 28, 2016, Mielke filed a recall petition against Boldt, Olson, and

Stewart in Clark County Superior Court. He claimed that the councilors: (1)

knowingly violated the Open Public Meetings Act of 1971 (OPMA), chapter 42.30

2 Dean completed her investigation by July 6, 2016. Her report concluded that Madore's allegations of staff misfeasance by Orjiako, Cook, and Horne were "[i]n all material respects ... false." CP at 23 5. She also concluded that the staff did not engage in misleading behavior or deceive the Board or manipulate data. Dean concluded that Madore attempted to directly micromanage the Clark County Planning Department's work on the 2016 comprehensive plan and "attempted to pressure Orjiako and Planning staff not to exercise independent professional judgment." CP at 236. 5 In re Recall ofMarc Boldt, et al., No. 93522-0

RCW, by authorizing the hiring of Dean, (2) grossly wasted public funds by

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