Advertisement

City official violated policy

Contract for retired police chief, union leader took effect without the required approval from City Council, officials say.

March 27, 2009|By Joseph Serna and Brianna Bailey

Newport Beach City Manager Homer Bludau did not follow City Council policy in September 2005 when he, then-Chief of Police Bob McDonell and then-president of Police Management Assn. John Desmond entered into a professional services contract without City Council approval, city officials confirmed Friday.

According to City Council Policy F-20, which covers contracts with former city employees, “All professional services contracts with former city employees or temporary employment contracts with retiring or former city employees shall require approval of the City Council.”

Nowhere from the day Bludau, McDonell and Desmond signed the “Agreement Regarding Post-retirement Continued or Part-time Employment for NBPMA Members” on Sept. 12, 2005, to the most recent City Council meeting was it ever approved by council members, said city officials, who wished to remain anonymous as to not jeopardize the city’s ongoing investigation into the matter.

Advertisement

The agreement allows retired officers to continue working with the department in their former position and at their most recent pay rate, but accrued on an hourly basis, without the city having to pay medical benefits or pay into the employee’s retirement account. The agreement essentially saves the city money for having an experienced officer working for them without some of the auxiliary costs while the employee gets paid hourly and begins to collect their retirement payments. The practice is common among cities statewide, officials said.

“We don’t know why it didn’t come before the council. In my understanding, the agreement was not valid,” Councilman Steve Rosansky said.

The council may have never voted on the agreement because Bludau believed it did not have to be approved by the body, Mayor Ed Selich said.

“My understanding is that the city manager ran it by the police department legal advisor and was advised it wasn’t necessary,” Selich said. “He was under the impression he didn’t have to bring it under the City Council.”

Then-City Atty. Robin Clauson, who has since retired, notified the council that the agreement was invalid sometime last fall, Selich and other council members recalled.

Daily Pilot Articles
|
|
|