2007.04.07: April 7, 2007: Headlines: COS - Cyprus: Engineering: Water: Valencia County News Bulletin: Bill Turner claims claims the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District Board violated the state Open Meetings Act by holding meetings before regularly scheduled meetings
Peace Corps Online:
Directory:
Cyprus:
January 23, 2005: Index: PCOL Exclusive: Cyprus :
2007.04.07: April 7, 2007: Headlines: COS - Cyprus: Engineering: Water: Valencia County News Bulletin: Bill Turner claims claims the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District Board violated the state Open Meetings Act by holding meetings before regularly scheduled meetings
Bill Turner claims claims the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District Board violated the state Open Meetings Act by holding meetings before regularly scheduled meetings
Board member Bill Turner is taking five fellow board members to court, saying they violated the act on numerous occasions over the past several years. The lawsuit, filed Friday in state District Court, is the latest escalation in months of conflict between Turner and other MRGCD board members and staff. They have clashed over Turner's assertions of district impropriety and the district's claims that his water rights business is a conflict of interest. "The MRGCD has been breaking the law for so long, and they need to be stopped," Turner said. "The public needs to be aware of the malfeasance in that office." The lawsuit alleges board members Jose Otero, Gary Perry, James Roberts, Augusta Meyers and Jimmy Wagner constituting a quorum of the board have gathered before official meetings to plan agenda items and craft resolutions in violation of state law. Otero, the board's chairman, denied the allegation. "I think (Turner's) real push is to influence the upcoming election," Otero said. "I think this is all a strategy on his part to make the board look bad." The district's June 5 election is to fill three board seats those of Otero, Meyers and Hector Gonzales, the only other board member not named in the lawsuit. Bill Turner was a Peace Corps volunteer in the first and only Peace Corps project in Cyprus serving as a geologist doing basic water development survey mapping.
Bill Turner claims claims the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District Board violated the state Open Meetings Act by holding meetings before regularly scheduled meetings
Suit alleges conservancy board met privately, violating Open Meetings Act
Juan-Carlos Rodriguez Copyright © 2007 Albuquerque Journal; Journal Staff Writer
Albuquerque A conservancy district official claims the Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District Board violated the state Open Meetings Act by holding meetings before regularly scheduled meetings.
Board member Bill Turner is taking five fellow board members to court, saying they violated the act on numerous occasions over the past several years.
The lawsuit, filed Friday in state District Court, is the latest escalation in months of conflict between Turner and other MRGCD board members and staff. They have clashed over Turner's assertions of district impropriety and the district's claims that his water rights business is a conflict of interest.
"The MRGCD has been breaking the law for so long, and they need to be stopped," Turner said. "The public needs to be aware of the malfeasance in that office."
The lawsuit alleges board members Jose Otero, Gary Perry, James Roberts, Augusta Meyers and Jimmy Wagner constituting a quorum of the board have gathered before official meetings to plan agenda items and craft resolutions in violation of state law.
Otero, the board's chairman, denied the allegation.
"I think (Turner's) real push is to influence the upcoming election," Otero said. "I think this is all a strategy on his part to make the board look bad."
The district's June 5 election is to fill three board seats those of Otero, Meyers and Hector Gonzales, the only other board member not named in the lawsuit.
The New Mexico Open Meetings Act requires the board to notify the public of its official meetings and requires they be open to the public. The board can vote to go into a closed session under certain exceptions allowed by the act. A quorum is the number of elected officials required to do the board's business.
The lawsuit claims "pre-meeting meetings" took place in chief engineer Subhas Shah's office before publicly advertised board meetings and sometimes included MRGCD legal counsel Chuck DuMars or his law partner Tanya Scott. The lawsuit also names Shah, DuMars and Scott.
Bob Johnson, executive director of the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government, said such meetings don't necessarily constitute a violation of the Open Meetings Act.
"The fact that these people were in the same room together doesn't mean they were discussing public business," Johnson said. "Certainly it's suspicious, but the law does not say a quorum cannot be together outside of a public meeting."
DuMars said Turner's lawsuit is frivolous.
"There's absolutely no basis for any allegation of a violation of the Open Meetings Act," DuMars said. "For a while, these guys, who are friends, would sit around and talk maybe 10 minutes before the meetings but they stopped doing that as soon as Mary Smith said you should basically never have a quorum if you're going to talk."
Smith, a staff attorney with the state Attorney General's Office, at DuMars' request made a presentation to the board in June 2005 regarding compliance with the Open Meetings Act.
The lawsuit claims the "pre-meeting meetings" continued after that.
Roberts said he occasionally met with a couple of other board members when they arrived at scheduled meetings early, but their conversations revolved around their businesses.
Turner isn't the only one claiming to have witnessed the "pre-meeting meetings."
Attached to the lawsuit are affidavits from three people who say they saw quorum gatherings in Shah's office. They are Daniel Hernandez, an Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo and Flood Control Authority board member; James Maestas, an organizer with the New Mexico Acequia Association; and Lisa Robert, secretary of the Assessment Payers Association of the MRGCD.
"I was shocked to see a quorum together out of the public eye," Hernandez said in his affidavit.
Turner takes issue with a "pre-meeting meeting" in July 2005 that he claims was held to discuss Karen Hill, the MRGCD's secretary at the time.
Turner says a well-prepared resolution presented by Perry at the scheduled board meeting made him suspicious that it had been discussed and crafted in the earlier meeting.
The district has filed two lawsuits of its own against Turner, including one to remove him from the board for insubordination and alleged conflicts of interest with his water brokerage business.
Turner denied any conflict of interest.
"I don't deal at all in MRGCD water rights," he said.
Links to Related Topics (Tags):
Headlines: April, 2007; Peace Corps Cyprus; Directory of Cyprus RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Cyprus RPCVs; Engineering; Water; New Mexico
When this story was posted in April 2007, this was on the front page of PCOL:




Peace Corps Online The Independent News Forum serving Returned Peace Corps Volunteers
 | Chris Dodd's Vision for the Peace Corps Senator Chris Dodd (RPCV Dominican Republic) spoke at the ceremony for this year's Shriver Award and elaborated on issues he raised at Ron Tschetter's hearings. Dodd plans to introduce legislation that may include: setting aside a portion of Peace Corps' budget as seed money for demonstration projects and third goal activities (after adjusting the annual budget upward to accommodate the added expense), more volunteer input into Peace Corps operations, removing medical, healthcare and tax impediments that discourage older volunteers, providing more transparency in the medical screening and appeals process, a more comprehensive health safety net for recently-returned volunteers, and authorizing volunteers to accept, under certain circumstances, private donations to support their development projects. He plans to circulate draft legislation for review to members of the Peace Corps community and welcomes RPCV comments. |
 | He served with honor One year ago, Staff Sgt. Robert J. Paul (RPCV Kenya) carried on an ongoing dialog on this website on the military and the peace corps and his role as a member of a Civil Affairs Team in Iraq and Afghanistan. We have just received a report that Sargeant Paul has been killed by a car bomb in Kabul. Words cannot express our feeling of loss for this tremendous injury to the entire RPCV community. Most of us didn't know him personally but we knew him from his words. Our thoughts go out to his family and friends. He was one of ours and he served with honor. |
 | Peace Corps' Screening and Medical Clearance The purpose of Peace Corps' screening and medical clearance process is to ensure safe accommodation for applicants and minimize undue risk exposure for volunteers to allow PCVS to complete their service without compromising their entry health status. To further these goals, PCOL has obtained a copy of the Peace Corps Screening Guidelines Manual through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and has posted it in the "Peace Corps Library." Applicants and Medical Professionals (especially those who have already served as volunteers) are urged to review the guidelines and leave their comments and suggestions. Then read the story of one RPCV's journey through medical screening and his suggestions for changes to the process. |
 | The Peace Corps is "fashionable" again The LA Times says that "the Peace Corps is booming again and "It's hard to know exactly what's behind the resurgence." PCOL Comment: Since the founding of the Peace Corps 45 years ago, Americans have answered Kennedy's call: "Ask not what your country can do for you--ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man." Over 182,000 have served. Another 200,000 have applied and been unable to serve because of lack of Congressional funding. The Peace Corps has never gone out of fashion. It's Congress that hasn't been keeping pace. |
 | PCOL readership increases 100% Monthly readership on "Peace Corps Online" has increased in the past twelve months to 350,000 visitors - over eleven thousand every day - a 100% increase since this time last year. Thanks again, RPCVs and Friends of the Peace Corps, for making PCOL your source of information for the Peace Corps community. And thanks for supporting the Peace Corps Library and History of the Peace Corps. Stay tuned, the best is yet to come. |
 | History of the Peace Corps PCOL is proud to announce that Phase One of the "History of the Peace Corps" is now available online. This installment includes over 5,000 pages of primary source documents from the archives of the Peace Corps including every issue of "Peace Corps News," "Peace Corps Times," "Peace Corps Volunteer," "Action Update," and every annual report of the Peace Corps to Congress since 1961. "Ask Not" is an ongoing project. Read how you can help. |
Read the stories and leave your comments.
Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.
Story Source: Valencia County News Bulletin
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Cyprus; Engineering; Water
PCOL37191
30