Also sworn in during the ceremony as councilmen were
incumbent Carolyn Guthrie and newly elected William
Moore.
Following Bennett's resignation August 27, 2008,
Charles [Chuck] Busby assumed the position of
'Interim Mayor' until his death 4 November 2008.
Then, the position open, the Citizen's Coalition
pressed for the election of a new Mayor.
While the council had been less than receptive to
this idea, Walter Akin stepped into the
Mayoral position, with Coalition organizers still
indicating they had enough signatures to press --
effectively -- for an election.
Hal Davidson, acting Vice Mayor, had indicated a
formal election will cost the town in excess of $
10,000.00, but a municipal attorney cited $
4,000.00 as a 'more realistic' figure.
The discrepancy -- and the question as to
whether or not the Town Council would agree to allow
their constituents to hold a formal election had yet
to be addressed as Town Manager/ Town Attorney
Daniel G. Field was unavailable for comment, and
Walter Akin stepped up to the position of 'acting'
Mayor amidst public outcry over the decision.
Although Field had openly stated he
believes there should be an election, the questions
he had raised indicate there could be obstacles to
allowing the election process to proceed. But at
that time,
these 'obstacles' were yet to be clearly defined by
any Town official, including Field.
The final position of both Field and Akin was that
no election would take place until March of 2010.
"I am only going to have the position until
March of 2010," Akin stated. "I could have kept the
position for four years."
"We don't want to wait," stated Dean Taylor,
Citizen's Coalition Chairman. "We need to get people
into office that will be concerned with Quartzsite -
with the welfare of Quartzsite's citizens. We have
to go forward with our demands for an election now."
Former Mayor C. Richard Oldham spoke to the Council
at a meeting in November, stating that during his
tenure in office, it was specifically stated that
there would be elections for the position of Mayor.
Oldham suggested that an election be held and
indicated the council was using an appointment clause
inten-
ded to be used only with vacant council seats.
"It's supposed to a directly elected Mayor by the
people of Quartzsite.
The lack of availability of the town's officials is
-- according to Citizen's Coalition representatives
-- commonplace.
"We are virtually unrepresented," stated Dean
Taylor, Coalition chairman. "We cannot get these
people on the phone, they won't answer in public. We
bring concerns to them and they shut us down three
minutes into our presentations without a response.
Then we can't address them again until the next
meeting, when we approach them publicly only to be
treated the same way again."
Other Coalition members reiterated Taylor's concern
about the handling of issues of concern to
Quartzsite's citizenry.
"We need a competent Mayor," stated one businessman,
who asked not to be identified. "We have all heard
they plan not to allow an election until 2010, and
we all feel -- in the wake of the current economic
issues throughout the country -- that we just can't
afford to wait until 2010 to get competent
leadership into Quartzsite.
Coalition members cited concern for the lack of
growth happening in Quartzsite and the 'forcing out'
of business throughout the community.
"Everywhere you look businesses are coming up for
sale here," the businessman continued. "Look at how
many have come and made deals, only to suddenly
decide on a location elsewhere, citing concerns that
they will encounter trouble with the 'elected
officials' in Quartzsite. It's as though we're held
hostage by the unbelievable level of incompetence
that is ruining our ability to do business. We need
to replace the existing council."
In years past, the Town of Quartzsite's by-laws had
stipulated that the position of Mayor would be
elected by the townspeople.
This by-law cannot be changed by the sitting
council. Only a referendum -- voted on by the people
-- could alter the existing by-law. Any attempt to
do otherwise is blatantly illegal.
Interestingly, the topic foremost among those
critical of the Town government currently governing
Quartzsite is the charge that the council is
unreceptive to the concerns [and the accusations] of
the people, avoiding questions and consistently
failing to return calls and inquiries pertinent to
matters concerning Quartzsite's citizens.
Further, the council has re-implemented a
'stopwatch' approach to open meetings by effectively
preventing citizens from speaking openly by using a
stopwatch and gavel to interrupt after allowing the
person to speak for the maximum period of three
minutes.
When Bennett took office, he promptly discontinued
the practice, noting that the citizenry of the town
had a right to voice their opinions at open meetings
of the council.
At the Wednesday evening meeting, Citizen's
Coalition representative Doug Guilford questioned
the town's handling of zoning issues following an
incident in which he, a Century 21 real estate
agent, had had a problem with zoning after
purchasing a property in Quartzsite he intended for
food vending.
Guilford charged that the town arbitrarily defined
zoning without proper research, causing issues that
took weeks to resolve.
"I did my due diligence," Guilford stated. "This
property was zoned C2. However, after purchasing the
property, I was informed by the zoning official that
it was not properly zoned for my project."
Guilford addressed the council with a
prepared statement and asked the council to
consider reviewing the town's zoning procedures to
provide a fair and unbiased basis on which to base
zoning. In the midst of his statement, he was told
to stop speaking. Another Coalition member finished
his statement for him.
Dean Taylor, the Coalition's chairman, was also
interrupted by the three-minute limit, also
requiring a second person, Gerald Wilcox, to finish
a
written statement he'd begun reading, which
cited problems with communications -- specifically
following the death of acting Mayor Charles [Chuck]
Busby November 4, 2008.
The Citizen's Coalition statement cited several
instances of poor or nonexistent communications with
the town including the mishandling of the death of
acting Mayor Busby.
Questions concerning Busby's death went unanswered,
some were openly antagonistic. One press
representative reported she had been told by a town
official, "We have nothing to say: Nothing. Nothing.
Nothing."
The Coalition statement was requesting the
appointment of an official 'Information Officer' to
be properly trained so that future incidents might
be treated in a more timely and professional way.
Charles [Chuck] Busby did not take steps to
re-implement the three minute time limit during the
time he was in office. It is unclear under what
circumstances this oft-challenged practice was
re-enacted by the town council -- but the open
discussions concerning the ramifications of these
and other council actions have been cited as the
reasoning behind the formation of a Citizen's
Coalition to represent the concerns, ideas and
opinions of a public body that openly claims they
are not being properly represented by the officials
currently holding office in the town.