RESIDENTS ROBBED OF RIGHTS
The people of Lisbon are constantly being robbed of their
rights. Maine law is being ignored by
the very people who are responsible to ensure the town is compliant at all
times. Town Attorney, Roger Therriault
and Town Manager, Stephen Eldridge continues
to strip Lisbon residents of their
right to be informed on town matters. What
is very ironic is that these two individuals are the very ones who have taken
an oath to protect our rights. Case in
point, under Maine Revised Statute 401, the people have the right to be informed
on town business. Below is a copy of
this statute for your review.
The second line of the first paragraph sums it up very
clearly. “It is the intent of the Legislature
that their actions be taken openly and that the records of their actions be
open to public inspection and their deliberations be conducted openly.” If you review the minutes of the meeting of
January 29, 2013, you will see where after coming out of their Executive
Session a motion was made and voted on but what the motion was is not recorded
as required by Maine Revised Statue 401.
This certainly is NOT “open to
public inspection” and how can you keep records of the events when the town
does not record what the actual motion is?
The town council
has been hiding behind Maine Revised Statue 405 and going into Executive Sessions
without any explanation. Above I
have provided you at copy of this statute for your review. It is very clear to me; the town council,
town attorney nor town manager has read this statue. This very first paragraph states “An
executive session may not be used to defeat the purpose of this subchapter as
stated in section 401.” I
believe this means all actions of the town council are to be above board and
not hidden behind closed doors. This
statute provides for closed door sessions to discuss critical topics that
should not be disclosed to the Public but the Public is entitled to know the
“precise nature of the business” being discussed. A general title such a Personnel Matters does
not meet the requirements “precise nature of the business”.
If you read paragraph 4, it is very specific as to how a
motion to go into Executive Session is required to be made. It reads “A motion to go into executive
session must indicate the precise nature of the business of the
executive session and include a citation of one or more sources of statutory or
other authority that permits an executive session for that business.” Our town council certainly does not meet this
requirement of the law. Someone makes a
motion to go into executive session, someone second and a show of hands and
then off to the executive session. This
does not inform the Public of the “precise nature of business” being discussed
behind closed doors. The words precise nature was put into
the statue for a reason.
If you take the time to read these statutes governing the
town councils responsibilities under Maine law, you will see Lisbon’s town
council does not come anywhere close to complying with the law. These
councilors swore under oath to obey the very laws they are violating. Is it the town council’s fault; I think
not? The fault lies with the two individuals
who are required to provide legal guidance to our councilors and that is Roger
Therrault and Stephen Eldridge. These two individuals have been
trained in these matters and are tasked to ensure our councilors comply with
Maine laws. Instead, they let our
councilors violate their oath of office and to break Maine law.
As a result of this, the residents of
Lisbon have been denied the right to be informed on town business.
Larry Fillmore
Concerned Citizen
2 comments:
Larry,
You need to find another exercise other than jumping to conclusions. The only thing we voted on during our executive session was to end the executive session. And that goes for the most recent session on the 12th also.
Gregg
Gregg, Do you even know the Rules of Procedure?
Don't you Just Love It when a little known blog has to bring the truth out to the people because the CORRUPTION is so Rampant?
Peter
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