The new resolution proclaiming support for Sheriff Glenn Hamilton not enforcing the new “Red Flag” law was drafted by Hamilton and County Attorney Dave Pato and was approved unanimously by the Sierra County Commission without a roll-call vote, although resolutions require roll-call votes.
The action was taken at the March 17 meeting, especially held in Truth or Consequences City Commission Chambers so it could be heard on KCHS radio station to aid in keeping people at home during the coronavirus pandemic.
The radio station is owned by County Commissioner Frances Luna, who also owns and publishes and writes for the Sentinel newspaper, erasing any check and balance between the Fourth Estate and local government. It is also inequitable for a government to show favoritism, unavoidable in this case, with one paper having immediate access to documents, while the Sun has to scramble for them.
The resolution was not made part of the Sierra County agenda packet online before the March 17 meeting and will never be put online to make it accessible to the public.
“Absolutely not,” said Human Resource Administrative Director Serina Bartoo, when asked to put it online. She was supported by County Manager Bruce Swingle and County Attorney Dave Pato, who repeatedly said the County only has to notice items on the agenda and the packet is “a courtesy.”
The Sierra County Sun noted constituents complained the policy was not made public before it was passed and Pato said, “And they can register their complaints.”
Pato did not acknowledge the short-circuiting of constituents’ constitutional right to petition their elected officials, which cannot be done properly if the policy being adopted is hidden.
The Sun was first told by Bartoo to fill out an Inspection-of-Public-Records-Act request to get the resolution opposing the Red Flag law, which can take up to 15 days to fulfill.
Then the Sun was told it could just request a copy and pay for it. The Sun went to County offices and requested a copy and was told again an Inspection of Public Records Act request was necessary. After a second trip and payment, the Sun was given a copy the same day.
This insistence on IPRA and payment for documents after the fact, with a mere agenda notice of the issue is “within the law but not in the spirit of the law,” said New Mexico Foundation for Open Government Executive Director Melanie Majors.
Look for the Sun’s complete report on the resolution tomorrow.