Balancing the County’s Budget Deficits
on the Backs of Children
on the Backs of Children
By Ray A. March
Part 24
Jan. 30, 2002, 4 p.m.
Kangaroo Court Convenes
In odd anticipation of an unusually large audience, the commission ignored Kristin Domenichelli‘s warnings and instead decided to fire Donna Michelson at a special meeting held in the chambers of the Alturas city council.
Fearing that Michelson would make a scene or disrupt the meeting, the commission asked -- and received -- law enforcement officers from both the Alturas police department and Modoc County sheriff’s office to provide “civil standby” security.
An estimated 30 people, including members of the Modoc County Board of Supervisors and a number of county agency employees, watched as it took the commissioners just 19 minutes to dismiss Michelson, who it turns out wasn’t even present. Michelson had left as the meeting got underway. Her absence did not stop the commission from its determined mission as Carol Harbaugh quickly made the motion to fire her and Phillip Smith seconded the motion, bringing it to a vote.
Of the six commissioners voting, four voted in favor of firing Michelson, one commissioner voted no and another, Rusty DuVall, abstained saying he had not been on the commission long enough to make an informed vote.
The sketchy minutes taken in Michelson’s absence do not reflect how the votes were cast but they do indicate that two members, Supervisor Patricia Cantrall and Donna Geldreich, were not present.
Remaining unexplained because of the inadequate recording of what became known as the “unadopted” minutes is why did the minutes show there were seven members of the commission present when only six apparently voted.
Present were: Dr. Edward Richert, acting chair; Tracey Cochran, Alice Lybarger, DuVall, Harbaugh, Nelson and Smith. Earlier records show that Cochran, whose vote is not known, joined the commission at the same time as DuVall, who opted to abstain.
The commission gave no reason for firing Michelson. However, later documents show she was fired “without cause,” meaning the commission did not have good reason to fire her based solely on her job performance -- even though the commission had met in the previous closed session purposefully to discuss her handling of the concept paper during the public forum where representatives of the various agencies were defensive and personally attacked her.
Immediately after the commission fired Michelson Carol Harbaugh had the locks on the front and side doors of the commission’s office changed. The $84.67 bill from Boyd & Boyd Locksmithing was paid by Harbaugh the next day.
Two weeks later, at its Feb. 13 meeting, Phillip Smith made a motion, seconded by Dr. Edward Richert, to write letters of gratitude to the Alturas police department and Modoc County sheriff’s office for the security they provided at the Michelson dismissal hearing.
With the majority of the commissioners united in favor of the letter, only Rosemary Nelson abstained from voting, remarking that “having the authorities at the special meeting felt like overkill to her and that she wasn’t afraid of Ms. Michelson.”
However, it wasn’t until Aug. 13, 2002 -- more than seven months after the Michelson firing -- that the commission then chaired by Tracey D. Cochran actually sent the letters of appreciation to the police and sheriff for standing by at the Jan. 30 firing.
Curiously, while the commission felt it was important enough to call on law enforcement backup in case Michelson somehow got out of hand neither the Alturas police nor Modoc County sheriff deputy apparently saw their “civil standby” roles significant enough to made official reports to their files, according to sources in both offices.
There is only a routine mention in the “unadopted minutes” that an estimated 30 spectators, including elected officials, were present to witness the bizarre theatrics of the commission, including the commission’s incredible oversight in having someone present to take the official minutes when it fired its only employee.
Consequently, complete, detailed records of Michelson’s firing are apparently nonexistent.
During the course of the Modoc Independent News’ investigation of the Children and Families Commission’s handling of Donna Michelson and her repeated admonitions to move the Prop. 10 funds to an outside bank account which led to her firing, a spokesman for First 5 recently said Michelson had been placed on administrative leave prior to being fired.
This is not accurate, according to Michelson.
“I was never placed on administrative leave,” she told the Modoc Independent News. “I was served by the sheriff to appear at city hall (if I remember correctly, that same day, Jan. 30) and fired in front of the whole city. I was never called into a closed session, which is the appropriate thing to do.
“I was contracted as an independent contractor whereby I had to pay my own medical, retirement and use my own vehicle. I traveled back and forth to Sacramento requesting funds for the commission exceeding well over a million dollars upon my departure. I was only reimbursed for my travel and lodging expenses once I returned to Alturas.
“I had no petty cash fund and any extras for the office came out of my pocket. All authorized expenditures by me were signed by two board members. The only reason I was fired is because I wanted to know where the money was being kept and how it was being spent.
“Yet when I was fired, I was treated as a county employee and told I had to pay so much of my share of social security and was not paid the two years salary remaining on my contract, or another penny after that date. It's all a fabrication to make me the fall guy for all the money misappropriated by the board. I never misappropriated or spent an unauthorized penny of the Children's First 5 money.
“I insisted on setting up a separate bank account and hiring an accountant to keep track of the money. The board fought me every step of the way. Carol Harbaugh wanted control over that program (once it started making money) like her, (Mike) Maxwell, Phil Smith, Judi Stevens controlled every other program in that county.
“ They kept shifting the money, paying among the departments, putting it in the general fund and using it at their leisure. I had notified Sacramento, the federal government and local government to no avail.
“So, Carol Harbaugh started her smear tactics, Maxwell threatened me, and the rest of the board turned their heads, including the Board of Supervisors. I knew they were trying to get rid of me for doing my job and because I would not blindly authorize money or sign checks without knowing where the money for Children's First 5 was.
“ It’s my understanding Carol Harbaugh and Judi Stevens had complete control over the funds. So, one day I was summoned to city hall on the pretense that it was an emergency meeting, but the reason was to be publicly fired or terminated without cause.
“Of course, they told the town I was stealing money. I was told I had to pay some $5,000 plus dollars as my contribution to Social Security, which I did, then when I was terminated, they said I was a county employee under the county office of education and thus Carol Harbaugh had the right to fire me. It’s too many lies for me to keep track of.”
Next: Part 25
The Children and Families Commission had rid itself of a thorn, now it could go about its business as usual without a watchdog looking over its shoulder. And that’s exactly what it did, except it came perilously close to violating the Brown Act as it continued to ignore state law requiring that the Prop. 10 Trust Fund be kept separate from the county treasury.
11 comments:
By all accounts Ms. Michelson was not considered a team-player, and to her credit was unable to go along with the illegalities of these other spineless "public servants."
Ironic and astounding that the tax-dollar misspending sycophants and their overlords would have ANY (not only one, but two separate law enforcement agencies) on hand to intimidate this woman and anyone who might support her, thus adding legitimacy to their illegal "borrowing" of taxpayer dollars.
Would that we had more like this around here at that time (and even today) - Modoc would surely be a better place for it.
sounds like Ms Michelson needed/needs a good lawyer. What a joke these people are! Someday, pehaps someone will sue that county, and/or those buffons in power and heads will snap back to attention. Pathetic!
The new good old boys are using character assassination, rumors and threats to control or silence those that dare to disagree or try to root out corruption just as their predecessors did. The Kangaroo court of a month ago with Jeff Bullock as the victim is an example of shutting somebody down just as was done to Michelson. They don't stop when the person is removed though. The character assassination of Supervisor Bullock continues in emails and conversations. They all had their chance to put him down at the kangaroo court but some chose to wait until later to do it when he's not around. I have no doubt that the same thing was done to Michelson. These are bully tactics of high school years – shut him/her down and then pour on the humiliation and rumors to keep him/her down and quiet. They were all given a chance to pile on Bullock at the meeting but some chose to wait until he wasn’t around.
The common denominator between Bullock and Michelson is the public way it was done when a closed session was really called for.
The BOS members do these things and then they want us to trust them to do the county budget in secret meetings -- when pigs fly.
I can think of no more humiliating experience than to be removed from the chairmanship and be replaced by the class bully who commonly uses public threats and humiliation to control people. The same tactics were used against Michelson.
What Donna Michelson really needed was someone unaffected by, unafraid of, or uninvolved with the cronyism, nepotism, favoritism, and lying by omission which allowed these millions of dollars to be wasted.
For years, the Modoc County Record newspaper either knew or should have known what was going on only several blocks from their office, but instead printed absolutely nothing about these goings-on in their newspaper – then or now. In fact, they have treated the taxpayers with the same contempt that CAO Maxwell, Pat Cantrall, and the others actively involved in the illegal borrowing have done.
Their argument has been that if the taxpayers didn’t know that the illegal borrowing was for their own good, well then (by gawd) the taxpayers were a bit slow, and as such weren’t due an explanation when it first began, any more than they are due an explanation now.
The irony of all of this is that those most instrumental in borrowing the money illegally (or not reporting it as soon as they found out about it, e.g., the Modoc Record) have for the most part been unaffected by the financial turmoil their actions and inactions have created for the rest of their neighbors.
CAO Maxwell, Carol Harbaugh, and Auditor Stevens have left county employment and retired with almost full pay and benefits for the rest of their lives. Treasurer Knoch was somehow reelected and continues her trek towards that taxpayer-paid nirvana already inhabited by her former cohorts. Pat Cantrall will soon join the band of merry mis-appropriators, while the Modoc Record has suffered no real loss of readership or county supplied income, simply because it has been reporting only what is “politically correct,” and not what has actually been taking place in Modoc County over the past ten years.
By not telling the public what was going on, and because each of them knew or suspected collectively that the illegal borrowing was going on, the perpetrators became complicit, and took the path of least resistance, and in doing so shackled their neighbors and their neighbors children with debt undeserved; and by not offering adequate explanations for their actions (or lack thereof) beforehand, they did it all with concern only for the consequences to themselves, ignoring their neighbors stake in Modoc County and what might happen if they were wrong.
Unfortunately for the rest of us, they did not follow the counsel of Thomas Jefferson, who noted that:
“I never did, or countenanced, in public life, a single act inconsistent with the strictest good faith; having never believed there was one code of morality for a public, and another for a private man.”
But to this day the likes of Cantrall, Maxwell, Harbaugh, Knoch, and the Modoc Record forgo any real explanation or contrition for acts unbecoming their neighbors, relying instead on the inescapable knowledge that the taxpayers in Modoc have proven to have little stomach, few advocates and, as a consequence, a short memory to help them to survive the wrongs that have been done to them.
Thomas Jefferson also had a good quote about the relationship between government and newspapers, noting that:
“Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”
Unfortunately, for many years now, the taxpayers in Modoc have had neither.
Written records always seem to dissapear or be nonexistant when county officials do something wierd. No records of the crazy spending of the last 15 years, no records of budget committee meetings, no records of the Michelson firing meeting. It seems they have decided that written records are not needed for the important stuff. No doubt when the fire districts are audited we will find the same situation - no records. Where did the money go? We have to accept the word of those that kept no records. This nonsense will not end unless somebody goes to jail but that won't happen until we get a real district attorney or the fed comes to town.
5:34 AM - The Record newspaper led the way in pioneering and promoting the "if it isn't written down, it never happened" Modoc mentality.
This latest with Donna Michelson is just a recent example of their longstanding practice of non-reporting on issues that, had they printed them as they happened, would have saved the Modoc taxpayers millions of dollars and dozens of jobs.
Many times it is hard to put a price-tag on being silent, but in this case the numbers are right in front of us.
As others have noted on this blog, this scenario is a lot like what Wall Street banks did to the nation.
Just like the Wall Street bankers, by being silent, a very few individuals in Modoc County were responsible for the huge loss of jobs and the resulting economic decline and debt that their neighbors now have to deal with.
And just like the Wall Street bankers, the silent minority in Modoc maintains its code of silence in order to keep the lie alive, all without a peep of remorse to those most impacted by their mistakes.
“To sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards of men.”
~ Abraham Lincoln quotes
Apparently Michelson was an "at will" employee despite her reference to a contract. If the contract specified otherwise, she surely would have sued. No reason to fire her needed to be specified. Clearly from the previous articles she was at constantly at logger heads with the commission.
Greg, Fort Bidwell
"Next Part 35: ... ignore state law requiring that the Prop. 10 Trust Fund be kept separate from the county treasury."
Ray, we have been over this before, please cite the law, precedent, or Attorney General Opinion, or stop repeating the falsehood.
Greg, Fort Bidwell
Something is wrong here concerning income tax with-holding. If she is a contract employee she is responsible for paying 100% of her income tax quarterly, if she is an employee the employer (Modoc County) should have been deducting it from her check and paying it quarterly. Sounds like somebody (Modoc County) was trying to have it both ways: Tax advantage of a contract worker and control like a wage employee. That would make this a federal IRS problem. No statute of limitations when dealing with the IRS.
It seems that a lack of record keeping for financial transactions and meetings is all too common for Modoc County politicians, department heads, or CAOs. This atmosphere of "trust us, we don't need records" needs to end. Some county entities still resist open citizen oversight. Using the "we can't afford it" excuse to avoid public financial oversight.
Illegal meetings and illegal voting to sanction illegal activities.
How apropos.
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