NEW: Rep. Morgan Calls on AG Kilmartin to Investigate Coventry Fire District Meeting

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NEW: Rep. Morgan Calls on AG Kilmartin to Investigate Coventry Fire District Meeting

Rhode Island State Representative Patricia Morgan (R-Coventry, West Warwick, Warwick), has called on Attorney General Peter Kilmartin to investigate actions taken over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend by the Board of the Coventry Fire District.

In a release sent by the House Minority Leader's Office, the Board is "alleged to have violated the state’s Open Meetings Act by amending the notice of meeting after the fact, and by discussing matters in executive session which by law are to be dealt with in public session."

Morgan requested the investigation today in a letter to the AG’s office, and said both actions had the same intent: to mislead the public about the nature of the meeting and the matters discussed.

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“The Board’s explanation for this ‘emergency’ meeting is not at all credible. What are they hiding?” Morgan asked.

Morgan Details Meeting

Morgan said the inquiry comes as a result of an early-morning meeting on Thanksgiving Saturday, which was originally posted on the Secretary of State’s website on Wednesday, Nov. 26 as an emergency meeting to discuss a personnel matter. 

Morgan stated that when "outsiders" arrived, they were told to wait outside the building because the Board was in executive session. The meeting, which was to have lasted one hour, last 3 1/2 hours, and when the Board reconvened, it took up on two items related to tax collections, but Morgan said "neither item was advertised nor could be considered an emergency".

Rep. Patricia Morgan
Morgan said she suspected the meeting was called to discuss Coventry Fire District Chief Paul Labaddia, who was filmed playing golf "when he was supposed to be working, drinking in local bar during normal working hours, and smoking what appeared to be marijuana after retrieving it from his fire district vehicle". The Board has hired attorney William Harsch to investigate the charges, but he has yet to formally issue his report.

“The public cannot know what was discussed in executive session, but one member said the reason for the meeting was to discuss ‘financial planning.’ There are two problems with this. First, such a discussion is clearly not an emergency. And second, it would have been illegal for the Board to have this discussion in executive session under the Open Meetings Act,” said Morgan.

 “The Open Meetings Act was not enacted for frivolous purposes," Morgan continued.  "The public has a right to accurate information beforehand to know what the Board is planning to deal with, and elected officials have a responsibility to fully disclose."


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