West View Water Authority post brings ethics filing
Water authority chief is named to authority board
Thursday, July 19, 2007
By Len Barcousky, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The president of West View council, who is employed as executive director of West View Water Authority, has begun wearing a third municipal hat -- prompting a conflict of interest charge.
West View council July 11 appointed Daniel M. Daugherty to one of two vacancies on the West View Water Authority board.
The next day, borough resident James W. Barr filed a complaint with the State Ethics Commission.
Mr. Barr's complaint charges that Mr. Daugherty already faced potential conflicts of interest by simultaneously serving as council president and as the Water Authority's paid executive director.
Those conflicts can arise because borough council, which Mr. Daugherty leads, appoints members to the authority board, which oversees Mr. Daugherty's work as executive director.
By appointing Mr. Daugherty to the authority board, West View council has made the potential for conflicts even greater, Mr. Barr charged.
"Isn't there another person in the borough who could serve on the authority?" Mr. Barr asked.
A 25-year resident, Mr. Barr is a perennially unsuccessful candidate for West View council. In the fall his name will appear for the eighth time on the ballot, this time on the Constitution Party line.
Mr. Daugherty abstained in the 5-0 vote council took July 11 selecting him to complete the term of the late Harry Gruener, who died June 24 at age 86. Mr. Gruener previously had served as a West View council member and borough manager.
Another vacancy on the five-member Water Authority board opened July 3, when David R. Glavin died. Mr. Glavin, 81, a former president of the Allegheny County Labor Council, had been a member of the authority board for 19 years.
Mr. Daugherty said his decision to serve on the Water Authority board had been reviewed by lawyer Fred Baxter, who serves as solicitor to council and to the Water Authority.
Mr. Daugherty pledged to abstain from any votes on council or on the Water Authority board in which he would have a personal interest. None of the other members of the board is an employee or a member of council.
Mr. Daugherty earns about $113,000 as executive director of the authority. Members of council and of the Water Authority both receive small stipends, but Mr. Daugherty said he is not eligible for either because he already gets a salary from the authority.
Mr. Barr predicted Mr. Daugherty would not be able to be an active and effective member of the authority. "He is going to have to abstain from most of the votes," he said.
The Water Authority and its work force both need broader representation, he said. "There is too much nepotism involved," he said. In his complaint, Mr. Barr wrote that four of the current six members of West View council have children who work for the authority. Council is made up of seven members but has a vacancy.
Councilman Barry G. Schell defended the decision to name Mr. Daugherty to one of the two vacant slots. Other municipal agencies and businesses have their top executives also serve on their governing boards, he said.
The loss of two authority board members in little more than a week made it critical that at least one of the empty positions be filled quickly, he said. "The board couldn't really conduct its business with two vacancies," he said. "And we didn't have any other candidates in mind."
Mr. Schell invited any West View resident interested in serving on the authority to send a resume and letter of application to West View Borough Council, in care of Manager Kenneth J. Wolf, 441 Perry Highway, Pittsburgh 15229.
The fifth seat could be filled as soon as council's next meeting at 7 p.m. Aug. 8, Mr. Schell said.
The State Ethics Commission has a policy that it will neither confirm nor deny even the existence of a complaint while it is being investigated or studied by a hearing officer, according to an agency spokeswoman.
Only if the allegations in a complaint are found to be credible would the commission issue a public order. The quasi-judicial process usually takes several months.
While West View is a small community of about 7,300 surrounded by Ross, the West View Water Authority is a regional giant.
The authority supplies drinking water to about 200,000 customers in 31 municipalities in Allegheny, Beaver and Butler counties. Its treatment plant on Neville Island can purify and pump up to 40 million gallons of water per day.
Thursday, July 19, 2007
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
CP Allegheny Picnic
The Constitution Party of Allegheny County will be hosting a picnic on Friday August 3rd. The picnic will run from 1pm until dusk. It will be at the Harmar grove in North Park. If you are interested in attending and want to help in some way(we need help with the food) please email me at jmurphpitt@hotmail.com or call at 412-826-0516, even if you can only stop by for a short time please let us know. Bring the whole family and friends and enjoy a beautiful day at the park.
Senate rejects House-passed smoking ban
Posted by Jan Murphy/The Patriot-News July 16, 2007 23:19PM
Categories: Breaking News, Midstate, Politics, State government
The state House made it clear last night that it wants a mostly smoke-free Pennsylvania.
Minutes later, the Senate rejected the House version of a statewide indoor smoking ban, sending it to a House-Senate conference committee to hash out the differences.
Sen. Stewart Greenleaf, R-Montgomery, said that action could delay the implementation of a smoking ban for months.
By a 141-62 vote, the House approved a ban that would order most indoor public places, including casinos, restaurants and taverns, to go smoke-free 90 days after the bill becomes law.
The House bill would exempt from the ban private homes, private clubs such as American Legions and sportsmen's clubs, tobacco-related businesses and a quarter of the rooms in hotels. It also would allow smoking in private residences within nursing homes or assisted living facilities and at cigar exhibitions.
Municipalities could enact stricter smoking bans. And the bill ordered county health departments or, in absence of one of those, another county department to serve as the smoking police.
The Senate rejected this version of the ban by a 13-36 vote
www.pennlive.com
Categories: Breaking News, Midstate, Politics, State government
The state House made it clear last night that it wants a mostly smoke-free Pennsylvania.
Minutes later, the Senate rejected the House version of a statewide indoor smoking ban, sending it to a House-Senate conference committee to hash out the differences.
Sen. Stewart Greenleaf, R-Montgomery, said that action could delay the implementation of a smoking ban for months.
By a 141-62 vote, the House approved a ban that would order most indoor public places, including casinos, restaurants and taverns, to go smoke-free 90 days after the bill becomes law.
The House bill would exempt from the ban private homes, private clubs such as American Legions and sportsmen's clubs, tobacco-related businesses and a quarter of the rooms in hotels. It also would allow smoking in private residences within nursing homes or assisted living facilities and at cigar exhibitions.
Municipalities could enact stricter smoking bans. And the bill ordered county health departments or, in absence of one of those, another county department to serve as the smoking police.
The Senate rejected this version of the ban by a 13-36 vote
www.pennlive.com
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