Midcoast Council battles internal ‘dysfunction’
By Greg Thomas [ .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) ]
Published Wednesday, Jul 30, 2008
Midcoast Community Council Secretary Neil Merrilees has suspended his “themed meetings” approach to facilitating council discussion due to what he perceives as the disrespectful behavior of council members toward both audience members and guest speakers alike.
Hosting themed meetings was an idea Merrilees brought to the council shortly after his election in November 2007. He hoped that such meetings would focus the council on larger community issues on the Coastside and away from the minutiae that had seized previous councils.
Merrilees has hosted several themed meetings, but now he says that the council’s behavior has caused him to suspend the concept.
“Sometimes it seemed like the people who came were not being treated as respectfully as they should have been,” Merrilees said. “I was feeling a little bit embarrassed to have invited people and have the meetings be so dysfunctional.”
The council’s meeting on July 9 was the last straw for Merrilees. He invited the county building inspector, the inspector’s assistant, and the director of the county Planning and Building Department to discuss green building practices.
“They’re county officials and they’re not going to give me negative feedback (on their experience at the meeting), I think,” Merrilees said. “But I did get negative feedback from audience members — that they were embarrassed about how the meetings were run.”
Merrilees said he would entertain themed meetings in the future if members can “work out the kinks of the meeting process” and make it friendlier and more receptive to outside participation.
Merrilees had hoped that focusing the council’s semi-monthly agendas on specific themed issues would help the council attract greater participation from both residents and officials and provide a foundation for the kind of strength and support the council has been lacking.
“I want the relationship (between the MCC and county officials) to be as good as possible,” Merrilees said. “It’s incredibly important because the county government is our only government, and we can’t pretend that we don’t need them or that we’re separate from them. We do need them. But the respect has to be there first before people will come.”
For their part, other council members say they have not been disrespectful.
“All of us tend to get passionate and we tend to speak out of turn,” acknowledged Vice Chair Kathryn Slater-Carter. “I don’t think there’s any one of us that hasn’t been guilty of that.”
Slater-Carter views the MCC as a community forum for anybody to openly air issues and maintains that the council always makes it a point to recognize audience members and give them opportunity to speak.
Chair Leonard Woren thinks these complaints are “sour grapes from somebody who didn’t get what he wanted,” though he admits that the council needs to shape up a bit.
“I think there’s still room for improvement,” he said. “In particular, we don’t have much community involvement.”
Woren and Slater-Carter deny that the reason for the lack of involvement could be linked to the allegedly harsh atmosphere of the meetings. Woren noted that, to his knowledge, there hasn’t been much community involvement with the council in at least four years, since before he was elected to the board.
That lack of involvement has almost doomed the council in the past. County Supervisor Rich Gordon declined to appoint two members of the board a year ago because he hoped a lively campaign would stimulate community involvement with the advisory committee.
While Woren denied any disrespect, he said he has had it with some observers — including his colleague, Merrilees.
“If one of the people who was supposedly disrespected contacts me, then I will respond to it,” Woren said. “But I will not listen to Neil or Darin (Boville, of Montarafog.com, who videotapes the MCC meetings and shows them on his Web site). Frankly, I don’t care any more what they have to say.”
Merrilees says that, despite his frustrations with the council right now, he plans to stick it out for the long-term benefit of the Coastside.
“We’d had a list of theme meetings coming up, all of which are very important to people on the coast — parallel trail, design issues, trees,” Merrilees said. “But until we, A.) learn how to run the meetings better and, B.) act on the results of the meetings with letters of support to the county — until we get that process going — it could be that we’re just moving backwards.
“I’m not throwing up my hands and walking away,” he said. “I’m throwing up my hands and digging in deeper.”