Pubdate: Fri, 22 Feb 2002 Source: Oakland Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2002 ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.oaklandtribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/314 Author: Cecily Burt, Staff Writer Cited: Drug Policy Alliance http://www.drugpolicyalliance.org/ CITY MAY FACE LAWSUIT IN BLOCKING DRUG FACILITY Public Hearing Bypassed, Critics Say OAKLAND -- The Oakland City Council skirted the state's open meeting laws in its haste to block a new Casa Segura drug treatment facility from opening in East Oakland, according to a national drug reform institute. Under threat of lawsuit, the Drug Policy Alliance has given the city 30 days to void an emergency ordinance, approved 7-1 on Feb. 5, requiring new needle exchange facilities and drug treatment centers to obtain a major conditional use permit. The permit requires a public hearing and Planning Commission approval to determine whether the facility is appropriate for the area. At issue is whether the council violated the state's Brown Act and its own Sunshine Ordinance, which require topics discussed by the City Council be publicly noticed 10 days prior to a scheduled meeting -- unless it is an emergency as narrowly defined by law. The emergency ordinance was drafted by Councilmember Moses Mayne (Eastmont-Seminary) on Jan. 31, after his constituents vowed to fight Casa Segura's plans to open a new drug education and treatment center on Foothill Boulevard. The site is near two schools, and residents were not swayed by Casa Segura's assurances it would not exchange needles at the site. To qualify as an emergency ordinance, the issue must reach the level where "prompt action is necessary due to the disruption or threatened disruption of public facilities," or a "crippling disaster" so serious that it "severely impairs public health, safety or both." In other words, it just can't wait. Another test requires that the urgent issue must have come to the attention of the city after the agenda was posted. The ordinance states several times that drug treatment facilities may present a "direct threat to the health and safety of the surrounding community which includes children who may be seriously harmed by contact with discarded needles." Mayne knew about Casa Segura's plans last year, calling into question the sudden need for action, critics say. Councilmember Nancy Nadel (Downtown-West Oakland) said facility directors also wrote to Mayne on Jan. 9, well before the agenda deadline. "I don't understand why he didn't do something in a timely manner instead of waiting until February," Nadel said at the Feb. 5 meeting. Councilmember Jane Brunner (North Oakland) also questioned whether the issue was so urgent it could not go through usual committee hearings. But Brunner's questions were referred by the chief assistant city attorney to Mayne for explanation. City Attorney John Russo said he would be discussing with the council the demand letter from Thomas Burke, an attorney with the firm of Davis Wright Tremaine. Burke demands that the council void its action on Feb. 5, and place the ordinance on a future agenda so the public can be heard, or face a lawsuit. Because of the legal threat, Russo would not say whether he thought the ordinance qualified as an emergency. He said his office was never asked its opinion, even though a Feb. 5 memo written by Mayne implied the city attorney had suggested adding new language to the document. "We have never been asked publicly or privately to this day for our opinions on this specific case," Russo said. "We were asked what kind of findings (in general) are necessary in order to declare an emergency, but they didn't ask if the situation met the criteria." David Greene, executive director of the First Amendment Project in Oakland, said it didn't sound as if Mayne's emergency met the timeline criteria defined by the Brown Act. "An emergency doesn't speak to an important issue," he said. "All issues are important. It speaks to timeliness, that something bad will happen if we don't follow the normal procedures, (that) if we don't act, it will be too late. The city would not have lost any ability to act if it had followed the Brown Act. Then the public would have had the opportunity to weigh in." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake