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October 30, 2009

State slaps Worcester for closed-door planning purge

 

The state has found that Worcester County's commissioners violated Maryland's open-meetings law when they decided last spring behind closed doors to consolidate county departments - a move that led to the firing of 11 planners and inspectors amid controversy over the county's plans for development along the coastal bays near Ocean City.

The shakeup came as environmentalists expressed alarm over proposed zoning changes in Worcester that would allow more residential and commercial development in some sensitive areas bordering the state's coastal bays. The string of fragile lagoons along Maryland's Atlantic shore are in better shape overall than the Chesapeake Bay, but their health is slipping amid growing pollution, University of Maryland scientists have found.

County commissioners defended the staff reorganization, which eliminated Worcester's planning department, as a budget-trimming move.  But in response to a complaint by the Assateague Coastal Trust, the state's open meetings compliance board declared that the commissioner were not legally entitled to go into executive session on May 26 to talk about it. Their closed-door deliberations also roamed beyond the personnel matters they had cited as their reason for excluding the public, the board found. The county commissioners later voted in an open session on June 2 to affirm the decision they'd made in private earlier.

Kathy Phillips, the coastal trust's executive director, issued a statement saying she wasn't surprised by the state's findings, delivered to her in an Oct. 27 letter. "It is unfortunate that our elected officials felt they did not have to be accountable to the law," Phillips said, "and worse, they did not understand their actions behind closed doors should have been conducted in the light of sunshine."

For more on the coastal bays, go here and here.

(Baltimore Sun photo by Kim Hairston)

Posted by Tim Wheeler at 9:30 AM | | Comments (1)
Categories: News
        

Comments

The Maryland Open Meetings Act has been in place for what, 25 or 30 years? I think that's enough time for the county commissioners and their staff to read the law, understand it, and follow it.

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About the bloggers
Tim WheelerTim Wheeler reports on the environment and Chesapeake Bay. A native of West Virginia, he has focused mainly on Maryland's environment since moving here in 1983. Along the way, he's crewed aboard a skipjack in the bay, canoed under city streets up the Jones Fall from the Inner Harbor, and gone deep underground in a western Maryland coal mine. He loves seafood, rambles in the country and good stories. He hopes to share some here.

Contributor Christy Zuccarini has been blogging about the local DIY craft scene for a year for Baltimoresun.com. She brings her pespective on all things handmade to B'More Green, where she will highlight projects you can do yourself as well as crafters who are integrating sustainable methods and materials.
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