Officials have been largely defensive, but now some community leaders are battling back.
Airport activists, arguably one of Newport’s oldest activist groups, were upset last week when Burnham ended his contract as a consultant on John Wayne Airport issues, citing attacks from residents.
“I’m just amazed that anybody would be attacking him,” resident Nancy Skinner told the council Tuesday. “He’s done so much for the city, and we really need him for the airport.”
Rehab-home activist Bob Rush has charged that while Burnham was advising the city on rehab-home regulations, he also was operating a related business.
Burnham has said his wife works for drug courts but has nothing to do with rehab homes.
Rehab-home activists said their goal was only to get Burnham to file financial disclosure forms with the city, not to resign.
“They [airport activists] are free to work with whoever thy want to, but Bob Burnham’s track record with respect to group homes showed very poor judgment and they should be careful,” Rush said Wednesday.
Even before Burnham’s departure, City Attorney Robin Clauson asked to hand over all group-home issues to a new outside law firm because residents also have questioned her agenda.
With accusations of conflicts and cover-ups flying about, at least one resident wonders why city officials haven’t defended their own from the attacks.
“I’ve never seen a board or a City Council sit back and let somebody spew mistruths and degrade and tear apart staff,” resident Bob Caustin said. “If you remain silent, I believe that’s the same thing as tacit endorsement.”
City officials maintain that Rush and other residents haven’t produced any credible evidence of the conflicts they allege.
On Tuesday when Rush challenged Rosansky to explain whether he’d ever had a financial interest in rehab homes, the mayor asked Rush several times to produce evidence. None was produced.