HomeMy WebLinkAboutMIN FEB 17 2004 J
M I N U T E S - CITY OF BEAUMONT
With Corrections As Approved
Lulu L. Smith EVELYN M. LORD, MAYOR Nancy Beaulieu
Andrew P. Cokinos CITY COUNCIL MEETING Becky Ames, Mayor Pro Tern
Bobbie J. Patterson February 17,2004 Audwin Samuel
Lane Nichols, City Attorney Kyle Hayes, City Manager Rose Ann Jones, City Clerk
The City Council of the City of Beaumont,Texas, met in a regular session on February 17,2004,at
the City Hall Council Chambers, 801 Main Street, Beaumont, Texas, at 1:30 p.m. to consider the
following:
OPENING
Invocation Pledge of Allegiance Roll Call
Presentations and Recognition
Public Comment: Persons may speak on scheduled agenda items/Consent Agenda
Consent Agenda
Mayor Lord called the council meeting to order at 1:30 p.m. Rev. Ed Hillyer of Forest Park United
Methodist Church gave the invocation.Councilmember Patterson led the Pledge of Allegiance. Roll
call was made by Rose Ann Jones, City Clerk.
Present at the meeting were Mayor Lord, Councilmembers Smith, Beaulieu, Cokinos, Samuel and
Patterson. Absent: Mayor Pro Tern Ames. Also present were Kyle Hayes, City Manager; Lane
Nichols, City Attorney; and Rose Ann Jones, City Clerk.
Proclamations, Presentations, Recognitions
Presentation made by Max Duplant, Finance Officerand Ted Williams,Auditorfrom the firm
Cook Shaver Parker&Williams who conducted the 2003 audit for the City of Beaumont. The
audit report revealed that the City received a "clean opinion"which means everything was
found appropriate in the financial statement.
Public Comment: Persons may speak on scheduled General Business Agenda Items 1/Consent
Agenda.
None
CONSENT AGENDA
Approval of minutes - Minutes of February 10, 2004
Confirmation of committee appointments
A) Approve a resolution authorizing the acceptance of a ten foot(10')wide water line easement
to provide mandatory access for the fire prevention services - Resolution 04-040
Minutes-February 17,2004
B) Authorize a resolution accepting maintenance of the street, storm sewer,water and sanitary
sewer improvements in Fairfield Phase I Subdivision - Resolution 04-041
Councilmember Cokinos moved to approve the Consent Agenda. Councilmember Beaulieu
seconded the motion.
AYES: MAYOR LORD, COUNCILMEMBERS SMITH, BEAULIEU, COKINOS,
SAMUEL AND PATTERSON
NAYS: NONE
MOTION PASSED
GENERAL BUSINESS
1. Consider approving an ordinance calling the General Election for May 15,2004 to elect a Mayor
and two (2) Councilmembers-At-Large - Ordinance 04-013
The City Charter dictates that all elected officials shall be elected on a regular election day
established by the Election Code of the State of Texas. The City of Beaumont has established
the third Saturday of May to conduct this election, and will conduct a joint election with the
Beaumont Independent School District. The City of Beaumont will elect a Mayor and two(2)
Councilmembers-At-Large fora one(1)year term. The Beaumont Independent School District
will elect two (2) Trustees for Districts 3 and 5.
The General Election will be conducted May 15, 2004.
Councilmember Cokinos moved to ADOPT ORDINANCE 04-013 TO CALL THE ELECTION TO BE
HELD ON MAY 15, 2004 TO ELECT A MAYOR AND TWO (2) COUNCILMEMBERS-AT-LARGE;
DESIGNATING POLLING PLACES AND APPOINTING ELECTION OFFICIALS FOR SUCH ELECTION;
PROVIDING THE FORM OF THE BALLOT AT SUCH ELECTION; DIRECTING THE GIVING OF NOTICE OF
SUCH ELECTION; PROVIDING FOR A JOINT ELECTION WITH THE BEAUMONT INDEPENDENT SCHOOL
DISTRICT; AND CONTAINING OTHER PROVISIONS RELATING TO THE SUBJECT. Councilmember
Smith seconded motion.
AYES: MAYOR LORD, COUNCILMEMBERS SMITH, BEAULIEU, COKINOS,
SAMUEL AND PATTERSON
NAYS: NONE
0
MOTION PASSED
WORKSESSION - Public Workshop convened at 1:40 pm
* Receive information from the Police Department relating to motorized scooters
Tom Scofield,Chief of Police conducted the workshop. Last year 5,900 nationwide emergency
room injuries were reported due to motor scooters. In the City of Beaumont,there has only been
Page 2 of 35 Minutes-February 17,2004
one reported scooter accident where emergency treatment has been required. There is an
increasing number of these near accidents being reported. The speed of these scooters is
between 18 and 22 mph. It is felt that this speed is too dangerous for children to be riding in the
streets with no safety regulations in effect. The Police Department is recommending that these
scooters be prohibited from use in the city streets. This would not include motorized
wheelchairs.
Discussion from Councilmembers included a concern for complete prohibition of scooters,
restricted road use, age and safety regulations. It was recommended that Council receive
more detailed information about the different type of scooters as well as some additional
recommendations for city regulations.
Another workshop is being scheduled for two weeks.
Workshop adjourned at 1:55 p.m.
COUNCILMEMBER COMMENTS
SEE VERBATIM COMMENTS
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3 of 35 Minutes-February 17,2004
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MAYOR LORD: All right . Two weeks, if
that ' s agreeable . And believe it or not, I think that ' s
the end of the formal agenda. So, we ' ll ask
councilmembers if they have any comments to make on
various matters .
Shall we start with you, Councilman Smith?
COUNCILMAN SMITH: (Inaudible)
MAYOR LORD: Councilman Beaulieu.
COUNCILMAN BEAULIEU: I think we're
missing a good story there.
Yes, ma'am. I would like to point out to
people the wonderful new signs that we have on Main
Street with our museums . I 've had several people
comment to me about it, about how much easier it makes
to identify which is the Energy Museum, which is the Art
Museum, and encourage people driving through Beaumont to
stop off and see some of our attractions . So, I think
it ' s a really good addition. I congratulate the folks
who took care of that .
MAYOR LORD: I think there will be more of
the same kind, will there not, as different things --
yes . Thank you, councilman.
Councilman Cokinos .
COUNCILMAN COKINOS : No thank you, mayor.
MAYOR LORD: Councilman Samuel?
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COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: No thank you, mayor.
MAYOR LORD: Councilman Patterson?
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Yes, mayor. Thank
you.
I guess it ' s, more or less, for my benefit as
much as it is for the taxpayers ' benefit and my
constituents . One of the things that -- that -- that I
pride myself on and that I feel good about is that I 'm
able to sleep good at night but over the past week I 've
kind of had a couple of restless nights and I 've been
kind of tossing back and forth whether or not I should
say something and I came to the conclusion that is only
the right thing to do and is -- I would only feel better
had I said this .
I 'm a little concerned about the -- the issue
with the Ethics Commission and the fact that our mayor
was fined and that our city, our taxpayers paid the
fine. I 'm real concerned about that and I 'm -- I don' t
like it . I don't like the fact that we had to pay a
personal fine. I think it ' s wrong and I think we are
using --well, we 're not being prudent in our spending.
And no matter how small or how large, it still affects
the total budget of our city. It affects the
accountability of our city. It affects the
accountability of elected officials as we are. I 'm
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also -- that ' s one issue.
I don't agree with the City paying an
individual councilmember's fine . They didn ' t pay mine.
I- didn't ask for it . They didn ' t offer. I would not
have accepted it. And I know that we all do some
things, sometimes we make mistakes or we make wrong
decisions; but if we 're going to be the leaders of our
city and send out a message to our -- our citizens as
well as our young people, who are really watching us at
this point, then we need to take ownership, admit we
made a mistake, suffer the consequences, whatever that
may be, and move on but not pass our -- pass it on to
the taxpayers. That ' s one thing.
The other thing is that when there ' s a issue
like this and it ' s not discussed with the full council
and the full council is not abreast of it and is not
abreast of the fact that there ' s a fine upon an
individual -- if there ' s a fine upon an individual, if
they choose not to say, that ' s their business but when
they choose to use City money to pay that fine, then it
is our business .
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: You're right.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: And I think that
that should have been discussed with us as council .
Now, I don ' t know how any other councilmember feels. I
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don't believe -- I wasn't here last Tuesday, and I
apologize for that. I was under the weather. I don 't
know if any other councilmember has addressed it; but I,
as one councilmember, feel it is important to address,
that we just can't have that . We can't do that. And
now knowing that there may be a couple of other City
officials maybe facing the same charge -- we don't know
what the outcome of that is -- is that also going to
come out of the City coffers, too? We don't know. We
don't know, but we can't set a precedence with stuff
like that. We just can't do that. I just don't feel
that it ' s right.
And the fact that the money was paid without
our knowledge as a council -- well, I guess I should
speak for me. As a councilmember I didn't know the fine
was paid out of the City' s coffers until it was paid. I
didn't know that a fine was made until I heard it on the
media. I was not abreast of any of that . That was the
first time I heard of it, and I really think that it was
wrong. It was wrong for the City attorney, the City
manager to suggest that we should pay, and paid before
even discussing it with council, the fine.
And just that ' s my take on it, and I wanted to
publicly say that . I did not want to be remiss in not
voicing my opinion on that, because I am part of this
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council and I am elected by the taxpayers whose money
we're using to pay an individual elected official ' s fine
and I think that before -- we already know that Mr. Lee
-- and I hope I 'm not doing anything wrong by saying his
name but he ' s filing charges against other elected
officials or appointed officials or staff. We need to
discuss . That needs to be a discussion among council .
That should not be -- there should not be any more money
spent out of the City coffers for individual fines; and
should that happen, we need to make sure that that does
not happen.
And I 'm -- I 'm really a little appalled that it
happened and it happened without the full council ' s
knowledge. And I say "full council" because I 'm a part
of this council and, so, if there was a -- a forum of
such, then I was not informed of that particular forum.
And that ' s basically what I wanted to say.
MAYOR LORD: I think I 'd ask -- excuse me
but no applause or comments are allowed, if you read
your rules of decorum, no matter what the subject matter
is, even when I love what you're saying, but I would
like the City attorney, please, to address some of those
issues that the councilman brought up.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Let me add one more
thing because I don't want to be derelict in saying
Pt� 3
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this, too. I did find out in questioning a City staff
about some -- something that I wanted to do in terms of
Operation One Vote and educating the voters . I found
out a couple of days before that the videotape was going
to be taped. Okay. And I want -- I don't want anybody
to get the understanding that I didn ' t know anything
about it . I did find that out only because I inquired
about a project for educating the voters and videotaping
it myself. Okay? That ' s how I found out. There was no
discussion before. There was no discussion after. That
was not a decision made by the council to do that . And
if it was, again, I would say I am part of the council
and there was never that particular type of forum.
MAYOR LORD: Mr. City Attorney, Mr. City
Manager wishes to speak.
MR. HAYES : I mean, you brought this up in
a public meeting. So, we might as well get the facts on
the table.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Yeah. You're
right .
MR. HAYES : The mayor was acting in her
Official capacity as the mayor relating to that program,
which was a City program, with the City manager, the
City attorney, and the City clerk at that time. The
difference between what the Texas Ethics Commission did
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relating to the mayor, which she was singled out by
Mr. Lee -- the difference between when you were fined by
the Texas Ethics Commission, you paid your fine, it was
related to your election report . It was a matter of --
it was a personal matter --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: That was a personal
matter. I 'm sorry.
MR. HAYES : -- with you. Yes, ma'am.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: You're right.
That' s not my -- that' s not what my concern is about.
MR. HAYES : Outside the capacity of your
office. That ' s the difference between why we paid this
for the mayor, totally different . And the City attorney
can correct me if I 'm wrong.
Second, when you're acting in your official
capacity, whether you're a police officer, you work in
Clean Community, if you're involved in an accident -
(UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKERS)
MR. HAYES : -- if you' re involved in an
accident, if you' re involved in any other wrongdoing, as
long as it ' s not criminal, the City -- the City will
hire your attorney and help you through that process .
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Channel 6.
MR. HAYES: That ' s the difference, meaning
if there was a criminal finding, then an employee is on
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their own to handle it for themselves . So, the
difference between the City paying this relating to the
mayor and what happened with your fine, totally
different, No. 1 .
And then second, we -- we have a hundred and
fifty million dollar budget, the City of Beaumont. We
are paying -- I mean, whether it be travel, purchases,
expenditures, every day, what we bring to the council is
items over $25, 000 or items that we think you need to be
aware of, controversial, maybe a purchase, could be
$15, 000, but you need to be aware of it. And in this
case the mayor was acting in her official capacity as
the mayor out there, the taping of that program. I was
involved. The City attorney was involved. And that' s
the difference.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Mayor --
MAYOR LORD: Mr. City Attorney. And then,
of course, you may speak again.
MR. NICHOLS: Am I next?
MAYOR LORD: Yes .
MR. NICHOLS: Okay. The statute that the
Ethics Commission found violated requires for a person
to be found violative of the statute that they be a
public official or an employee of a public body. So,
the mayor as Evelyn Lord but not as the mayor could not
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have been found responsible for a violation of that
of that provision. So, it wasn' t personal. It was
personal only because it ' s a person and she was picked
out by Mr. Lee but she holds an office and because she
held that office, she was responsible under this
statute, notwithstanding the fact that none of us
believe that there was any violation of the statute.
The only reason she was picked out was because somebody
picked her out and she could not have been held
violative of that Ethics Commission provision had she
not been an officer or employee of the City of Beaumont.
So, for that reason aTrd bdcause from the
beginning the project was designed to inform the voters
about what was going to occur, we all considered it to
be a City project. It would not have been done by Lamar
University but for the fact they had a contract with the
City to do that and to provide this service for free.
So, it was all a City project beneficial to the voters,
I think, in the long run and the idea that we couldn't
pay it doesn't bother me at all .
MAYOR LORD: I would also add that I
offered to pay it myself, but it was determined that it
would be properly done by the City because it was a City
project .
Now, I think Councilman Beaulieu and then
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Councilman Patterson, Councilman Samuel .
COUNCILMAN BEAULIEU: Thank you, mayor.
Excuse me . A couple of thoughts came to mind
as all this discussion started. And I did see your
comments, Bobbie, to the Enterprise. But a couple of
things that crossed my mind as I evaluated this were,
one, I think the reason it didn' t come up before us when
it happened, when they decided to do the video is it
wasn' t considered controversial, it wasn't considered
anything unusual because the intent was just to say why
are we -- why are we doing this charter thing. This is
very unusual . People need to know why we were
recommending to them as a council that we have some
charter changes . And I think that was the intent of --
of the project initially.
I didn't look at it because I 'd already been
through that discussion with all of you. So, I knew why
we were doing it . So, I didn ' t look at it. So, I don ' t
know if anybody got too enthusiastic and perhaps that' s
why it is interpreted the way it is, but I think the
intent was very clear and very clean in -- in its
i
motive . I understand that doesn' t excuse it. If people
decide that there ' s (inaudible) legality, then that ' s
fact.
But as far as who paid the fine, if I 'm acting
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on advice of our City attorney in my capacity as a City
councilperson and legally they tell me "This is what
we ' re going to do and this is -- it ' s okay to do it" and
I do it, I expect to be covered. I expect somebody to
step up and say "You were acting on good faith advice
from an attorney that was employed by the City" and I
think that ' s where we left this . It ' s that our mayor
was acting on advice of our council and it ' s not a
personal thing. If I don' t file my ethics report, then
it' s me that -- personally and nobody told me -- I
didn't -- Lane Nichols didn't tell me I didn't have to
do it or, you know, you don't have to send it in or --
and it ' s just between me and Ethics Commission.
But this $500, I think, is strictly -- it ' s
just like the other indemnities that we pay for City
officers who have car accidents, who -- people file on
us and we -- we say "Okay. They were acting on City
business . We 're going to pay their fine. We 're going
to pay their -- we're going to pay to have these cars
repaired, " whatever. So, that is why that $500 didn' t
bother me .
Now, whether people should have come and told
us that there was some discussion about it being filed
with the Ethics Commission, I mean, maybe we could have
been kept more abreast of that . I don't -- I don' t know,
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what the decisions were made on that but personally I
think we -- we have competent City staff and a mayor I
have a lot of confidence in and I don' t -- I don' t think
that there was any intent to deceive or hide from or
deal people out of the equation. I certainly did not
feel insulted that they didn't ask me what I thought
about it and nobody' s asked me today what I thought
about it either, but here I am telling you. But I
appreciate everybody' s concern over it .
I think certainly, in light of past occurrences
in our community, we ' re all very sensitive on the issue
of public ethics and trying to evaluate carefully that
what we do is appropriate and within City statutes and
within the State statutes . I don' t know anybody that
cares more about ethics than our mayor does, and I
certainly stand behind the decision and the attempt that
they made to help people understand what the issues were
on the ballot, however faulty or -- you know, I don't
know -- not having seen it, I don't know what they're
criticizing exactly except I assume there was too much
enthusiasm and somebody said "Yeah, we really ought to
pass that. "
But if that happened, I 'm sure there was an
oversight. But a fine ' s been paid and I think we move
on. But _paying the fine out of the City doesn't bother
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me a bit because she was acting on City counsel ' s
advice, City -- not City council --
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: City legal counsel .
MS . BEAULIEU: Lead counsel . Thank you.
MAYOR LORD: C-o-u-n-s-e-l .
COUNCILMAN BEAULIEU: Yes . I can' t spell
it either, but there you go.
MAYOR LORD: Yes . Councilman Patterson.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Okay. First of
all, when you say that it was a City project and that
the mayor was acting in official capacity, if I as a
councilmember wanted to put a project like this on on
behalf of the City, I can do that, is what you're
saying, as a capacity -- because in my estimation and
basically from reading the charter and the state
election code, each and every one of us appear -- or
councilmember per se, each and every one of us should
not be making any individual directives or decisions and
then staff just follow that at the taxpayers ' expense
and saying that we ' re in an official capacity.
Any directive that you or you get comes from
j the council, each and every one of us, not one
particular person. Had the mayor discussed this with
council, this came from council, yes, I would say she
was acting in official capacity. However, that did not
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occur. Yes, our citizens needed to be aware what the
charter change was . The charter change has taken place
pretty much every five years and there ' s an election on
it every pretty much five years . Am I correct?
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: That ' s not correct.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Last one was in --
let ' s see -- nineteen eighty- -- not the last one.
There was one in 1986.
MR. NICHOLS: Don't make me lie. I don't
know --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Well, we have the
charter book up here and --
MR. HAYES: Periodically it ' s been
reviewed.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: -- and it' s been
pretty much every five years except for -- this last
time it was a long time because it was in 1986. So, we
decided to go ahead and do a charter change in 1996 or
something like -- ten years . I 'm sorry. Not five
years . Ten years . Ten years . Okay? And I guess I
could agree that it might have been a good idea to give
information -- just to give information about the
charter change, yes, because I think it ' s a good idea
but I still think that when you say she acted in
official capacity as our mayor, she acts on behalf of
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council, you act on behalf of council directed by
council . Okay? And that did not only happen. Okay?
And then the other thing was -- I didn' t
exactly know what the statute was . I don' t believe and
I did not say -- and I don' t want anybody to put words
in my mouth -- that it was an intent to deceive or
mislead. But, yes, I was insulted. Maybe none of you
were. I was . And so, I 'm speaking on my behalf because
this is how I felt . I felt insulted that she act on the
capacity -- official capacity of the council and I
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wasn't privy to what she was acting upon. Suppose it
+ would have been something really, really illegal that
she didn't know and that she didn' t have the advice of
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counsel or he didn't know.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Can I ask a
question?
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: I -- I -- you know,
I respect the City manager. I respect the counsel . But
he has advised me a couple times wrongly, too, not
intentionally but it came back to bite me, but it was
something that I did, he said, and it got out and, hey,
that ' s the way it fell . Okay? None of us are perfect
and I understand that and that ' s not my point. We all
make mistakes, but we have to own up to our mistakes --
okay? -- and not at the expense of taxpayers, though,
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not at the expense of someone else .
I don't believe -- I don ' t care if -- now, if
they said that on behalf of council, the council was
fined, and then we sought legal counsel and he said that
we should pay it on the behalf of the City, I can see
that. That ' s not what happened. That is not what
happened at all .
MAYOR LORD: Can I ask a question?
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Those are my
points . I just can't -- that ' s me as one councilman.
That' s my opinion. It ' s not up here. I 'm not stating
this for no debate or whether you want to question what
I feel . That ' s how I feel . That ' s what I said. Now,
you can tell me how you feel and that ' s fine, but don't
try to interpret what I 'm saying. Take it for what I
said. It is what it is . It is what I said and it is
what I feel and that' s all I was saying.
MAYOR LORD: I think, Councilman Samuel,
you wish to speak; and then you wish to speak again.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: I just had a
question. I just wanted to make sure I understood
what -- what --
MAYOR LORD: Do you want to straighten
that out now?
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Go on while you. . .
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UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Can I just
interject a question? Thank you, councilman.
So, are you saying, though, that the mayor
should not -- who does -- you know, covers a lot more
ground than any of us, because we look after our little
districts we ' re elected from, wards, whatever we call
it, are you saying, though, that the mayor shouldn't do
anything, initiate any project, do any -- I 'm trying to
think of a right word -- but shouldn't initiate anything
without all of us signing off on it?
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: That is not what I
said.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Well, that' s why
I 'm asking because that ' s -- that' s what it -- that ' s
how it sounded to me and, so, I 'm trying to understand
what you're saying.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Okay. You asked
that question. I gave you a answer. That ' s not what I
said.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Oh, okay. If
that ' s your answer. I think we ' ll just agree to
disagree, then, councilman.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Okay. But I 'm
saying, something as -- you saying -- he said this was
official capacity of the -- of --
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MR. NICHOLS: Can I clear (inaudible) ? I
said you can' t be found violative of this statute unless
you' re in your official capacity. She was found
violative of the statute as the mayor. That makes her
in the course and scope of her employment. I didn't say
anything about the council didn't have agreement or the
council does have to approve it. All I said is she was
there as the mayor, and for that reason she was found to
be violating the statute.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Okay.
MAYOR LORD: I would hope that further
discussion --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: I heared what you
said. That ' s not --
MAYOR LORD: I would hope -- excuse me.
I 'm using the privilege of the chair now. I would hope
that further discussion would be more on a peaceful note
with one another. It ' s not my intention that we should
become acrimonious with one another. It doesn't help
US. It doesn 't help the City. It doesn' t help the
situation.
Councilman Samuel .
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Thank you, ma'am.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Wait a minute,
mayor. Are you saying that I 'm becoming that way?
20
MAYOR LORD: No, that ' s not what I said,
ma'am. I said the conversation --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Well, what is the
point of saying that? I don' t think that we are
becoming that way.
MAYOR LORD: Because I see you beginning
to go at one another and I --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: No, we ' re not going
at one another. I 'm just addressing my concerns .
MAYOR LORD: That ' s my opinion,
councilman.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Okay. Well, I 'm
just saying I 'm not.
MAYOR LORD: Councilman Samuel.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Thank you, mayor.
The first thing comes to my mind is judge not
that you not be judged. By the same measure that you
judge, so shall you be judged.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Amen.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: This whole situation
has many dynamics . You're hearing some feelings being
expressed because of an injustice that goes on here
every day and we 're silent about it -- or some are
silent about it . We all have our opinions about the way
statutes are interpreted. So, I ' ll simply request that
21
we get an attorney general ' s opinion as to whether we
were proper in paying the fine. That ' s not -- I think
that ' s the proper way to deal with it . I 've made
statements before, mayor, I did not feel -- personally I
did not feel that was appropriate but it was done by the
City and it was not done by council but it was done by
an administrative decision. And if that comes out to be
wrong, then it was not a part of my decision and I can
stand with that. But I am requesting the attorney
general ' s opinion to determine whether we' re proper in
that or not .
I do agree with Councilmember Patterson that we
need to know so that we will not do this . If -- if
there are other fines that come from it, we need to know
if we're right or not. '
Now, what I 'm saying: I think one of the first
things I will address -- and it kind of addresses your
question -- according to the charter, the mayor has the
same rights, duties, responsibilities as any other
member of council with the exception that she presides
over our meetings . It does not give her any
administrative responsibilities or duties . She has the
time. She spends the time here at City Hall . I 'm not
going to say, you know, she shouldn' t do some of the
things she do.
4 a3
' 22
But whatever she does, I think the danger in
her taking actions on her own are just as this: When I
saw -- and addressing you, Mr. Hayes, I think this is
something that should have come to council . Once there
was a fine assessed and we were going to pay it, I think
we needed to know so that I wouldn't find out in the
paper. I -- there' s no -- I don' t think there' s any
question about that.
Now, as I told the reporter as she interviewed
me, did I feel like the session was appropriate, I felt
like it was good intent. I don' t feel like the mayor
went out to purposely violate any codes . If it
happened, it happened. But what I do have a problem
with is the first thing I see in the paper is that "City
fined by the Ethics Commission. " We weren't fined by
the Ethics Commission. The City was not fined. This
City council was not fined. I take offense to that.
Secondly -- and some will say it' s being
speculative, but I 'm going to say it ' s a truth -- had it
been me, Audwin Samuel, violates the code -- commission
code --
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Exactly.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: -- it would have been
there not only one day but every day that week.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Yes, sir.
� a�{
23
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: First day it' s found
at the bottom of the paper, no names mentioned in the
caption. Second day it ' s not there at all . Third day
it' s there at the bottom with the ex-mayor being
headlined and the present mayor being at the bottom. I
have a problem with that justice. That ' s not City.
That' s not the City. It ' s not the City council ' s
position but that ' s the racism that exists in this City
and we act like we don't see it .
Now, I understand what you' re saying. Why am I
bringing this up, there ' s no reason to be divisive.
It ' s divisive already. And until we address the wound,
the wound will continue to exist and will not heal .
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Yes.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Fourth day it ' s on the
front page of the regional section.
Mayor, this is not about you personally; but
it ' s about the way it ' s reported. It just happens to be
you in that position. I understand how you feel . I
dealt this -- with this for the past three years . So, I
know what it feels like . Someone questions your
integrity. Someone questions whether you did it
intentionally. I 've been going through that for three
years . I had to wake up in the morning going to the
front page of the paper being found guilty before --
P% �-5
' 24
presumed guilty before proven innocent . It ' s different
for you simply because of the color of your skin.
Anybody they' re seeing this, you may say it ' s
wrong but I 'm viewing it from the way that I see life .
I 'm calling it like it is because it ' s here. Until we
look this ugly monster in the face, it ' s going to
continue to be a predator in our community and if you
don't see it. . .
MAYOR LORD: I think a lot of us see it
and we do what we can about it.
Bobbie, I have a question, Councilman
Patterson, and I don't know the answer to it, but I
would really like for guidance. Did you bring your --
when you used the same facilities to film your One Vote,
did you bring this before council for approval?
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: No, ma'am. I
didn' t do it in the capacity of a city councilmember.
MAYOR LORD: You used the Lamar facilities
which are only available, I understand, because we have
the contract .
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: I didn't do it in
the capacity of the City. I didn' t do it in the
capacity of a City councilmember. I didn' t do it from
the City Hall or council . Okay?
MAYOR LORD: We didn' t do it from City
' 25
Hall or council either. It ' s required that you be
elsewhere.
I think, Councilman Smith, did you have
something --
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Hold. Hold. Hold.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: No. No. Come on
back. Come on back. Finish it .
MAYOR LORD: I 'm sorry. I thought he had
finished.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Well, I --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: No. I was talking
about you.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Now, mayor --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Let ' s close it out,
I mean, put closure to --
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Hold it, Bobbie. Hold
it, Bobbie.
MAYOR LORD: You answered my question.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: That is totally
different . If Bobbie had used our contractual agreement
to be on the Public Access Channel, then that would have
been the same thing as we 're dealing with here; but did
you use Public Access Channel?
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: I called the
gentleman at Lamar. I called the City manager and asked
26
him to check with the City attorney to see if it was
okay, not as a capacity as a councilmember, not as the
capacity in behalf of the City but Operation One Vote .
This was three or four years ago.
MR. HAYES: This administration, yeah.
MR. NICHOLS: You asked me about
(inaudible) .
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: I didn't ask you
about that. I asked him.
MR. NICHOLS: Yes, you did.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: I asked him to ask
you.
MR. NICHOLS : You called me and asked me
about that.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Oh, you're talking
about the recent one that I just had?
MR. NICHOLS: Yeah.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Oh, yeah. That
one, yeah; and I didn't do it, did I?
MR. NICHOLS: (Inaudible)
MAYOR LORD: Did Councilman Smith have
something she wanted to add? You want to use your mike,
please, councilman.
COUNCILMAN SMITH: I am sick and tired of
the whole mess .
1
27
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: So are we.
COUNCILMAN SMITH: And I don' t think that
there was anything wrong. I think the mayor was trying
to give some information because the public was asking
questions about what was this for and what it would do
and how it would impact City council and we -- the --
the charter, those were changes that needed to be made
long ago and I just feel that we've spent enough time on
this . We need to get back to work, and I don't think
that there ' s any racial intent in this . I think you're
making it a racial thing.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Oh, Councilmember
Smith.
MAYOR LORD: Please. No matter what side
you're on out there, please do not make comments.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: I 've been sick and
tired just like you are sick and tired. You're sick and
tired now. This has been two weeks . You hadn't said
you were sick and tired before today of all this --
COUNCILMAN SMITH: I haven't said
anything.
0
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: -- big cloud over
City --
(CONCLUSION OF SIDE A AND BEGINNING OF
SIDE B)
p� DA
' 28
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: -- in our City; is
that what you' re saying?
COUNCILMAN SMITH: I 'm talking about this
situation right here.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: I don't see the racism
in her going on Public Access Channel making a mistake,
no, I don't see that as being racist. The fine coming,
no, I don' t see that as being racist. The City paying
her fine, I don't see that as being racist. What I do
consider to be racist is the way that we have allowed
the media here to address it and you sat back and said
nothing, the Beaumont Enterprise particularly.
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: May I comment,
mayor?
MAYOR LORD: Yes, ma'am. It' s your
this is your forum and I do not stop my councilmen
our councilmen from saying what they want to say. You
may have noticed --
COUNCILMAN BEAULIEU: I 'd like to lead this to more
ground that we have in common. I do -- I do agree with
you, Mr. Samuel, that we can' t get too much
communication. It would have helped to -- to know what
was going on better than we knew and I think that we
learn something every time we realize we 've not
communicated as clearly or as frequently or as
�� 30
29
thoroughly as we should as a council with each other or
from staff to us, vice versa. I certainly agree with
that .
I will also agree with you -- I mean, I will
tell you that I went with Mr. Sammy Bean and sat down in
the editor' s office at the Enterprise to talk to him
about the very issue that you' re raising. This was more
in line with athletic coverage than the other issues
that we're discussing here today but certainly mattered
just as much to him that his players or the players that
he supported or the kids at that school that he was
concerned about got equal coverage and fair play and I
sat -- went with him, sat there and made the argument
with him that they look at that more clearly and that
they evaluate more clearly and I think, yes, we should
demand of our media as much fairness as possible.
I will tell you on the other hand, though, is :
It doesn't matter how much you complain. We don' t call
the shots at the newspaper, and you know that. I know
you know that . I mean, that ' s a frustration we all deal
with. I _don' t like everything Channel 6 puts on the
air. I don't like everything that -- that the
Enterprise prints . That ' s the Country we live in. I
agree that it will always need work and I can appreciate. `
the frustration that you see in that respect .
30
So, on that note I would like to say that I
think we have some common ground in this but obviously
we 've all come to this with different experiences . But
to focus on what really is -- this discussion is about
is this one incidence with the mayor and I agree with
everything you said about intent and correctness and
there was no -- certainly no racial overtones to any of
that and I think it ' s good that we can say that because
I think there was probably a time in this City when we
couldn't say that. So, let ' s at least admit there' s
been progress and agree that we ' ll go forward and try to
improve on that .
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL: Well, my last comment
will be : Thank you, Councilmember Beaulieu. I
sincerely appreciate your honesty and your coming
forthright. That ' s something I can truly appreciate
because it ' s a breath of fresh air. At least you stand
and you state where you stand and you let it be known,
whether it be with me or not . I can appreciate that.
But at least you do acknowledge truth, and that ' s all
I 'm talking about. Thank you.
MAYOR LORD: Thank you, Councilman Samuel .
Councilman Patterson.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Yes . And I can
appreciate your -- your standing and speaking up for
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31
what you think and even if we agree, we disagree, at
least, you know, we do know where we stand.
,
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: That ' s right .
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: Okay. But as I
said before, my comments was the last part, not that I
was trying to say there was any intention of you doing
anything illegal or racist or anything. As I said
before, the awareness of what ' s going on in the charter,
I think that was -- I said it from the beginning, the
fact that we were not aware of the fine and we wasn't
aware that the City -- I still believe that the council
should have been aware of that and that that should -- I
still stand that it should not have been paid by City
council -- I mean, by. the City' s funds .
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Well, let' s end it
with we agree --
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: And that's the
way --
UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: -- on
communication.
COUNCILMAN PATTERSON: -- I feel . Okay?
I 'm done .
MAYOR LORD: And now, if no other
councilmember has anything to add, we would cordially
invite any member of our audience who wishes to speak.
`� 33
Public Comments (Persons are limited to three minutes)
Roberto and Ella Flores 2425 Buchanan Beaumont TX
Concerned with the drugs in the neighborhood and child safety;encouraged others to protect
their neighborhood
Marie Hubbard 1990 Nora Beaumont TX
Concerns with the Police Department
Rev. Samuel LaDay 7498 Boyt Road Beaumont TX
Voiced his concerns about the Ethics Commission, fine from the Ethtics Commission, and
racism of the city
Walter Swift 4325 Crow Road Beaumont TX
Variety of concerns including the unfinished sidewalks with wheelchair access, bicycle paths
and the fine from the Ethics Commission
Renada Bernitta Jackson 8464 8461 Landry Lane Beaumont TX
Fine paid by City; money for the MLK statue
Patricia Gray 2185 Bourbon Beaumont TX
Complaints of racism on City Council
Doris Smith 28551 Grand Pine Beaumont TX
Need for more buses to make travel easier especially for the senior citizens in the Pine Street
and the Parkdale Mall area
Jackie Spivey 5620 Helbig Road Beaumont TX
Concerns with the Police Department and court system
Bennie Mendoza 5655 S. Kenneth Beaumont TX
Wanted to let Council know he felt they were doing a good job; belongs to COPE on College
Corridor and they patrol every night
Page=o of 35 Minutes-February 17,2004
There being no Executive Session, Council adjourned at 3:00 p.m.
Audio tapes are available upon request in the City Clerk's Office.
Evelyn Lord, ayor
Rose Ann Jones, City C rk
35
Page 6 of 35 Minutes-February 17,2004