Hamlin's burning Ship of State
The Real ReasonMuch of the community remains in shock about Supervisor Warner’s seemingly abrupt decision to step down. As The Blog reported the day before his announcement, rumors had been circulating that Warner was planning to quit. The reason cited by knowledgeable insiders was always, “health.” Warner told friends that while his health had taken a downturn, it was his wife’s concern for his well being that was driving his decision. This explaination was repeated so often that Warner was clearly the source.
In truth, Warner’s health is fine. Despite a bad cold and recent knee surgery he is as healthy as he has ever been. “Poor health,” is a cover story.
So is the feeble rationale he offered to the Hamlin Republican Committee on Tuesday night. There he claimed that the job did not pay enough money and he couldn’t support his family on the income from this part time job. Warner’s salary and benefits comes close to $30,000 annually. Not bad for a part time job. He also claims to be an ad salesman for a local publisher of a free newspaper. Can money really be the reason he is quitting? Six years into the job and he is feeling the pinch only now?
No, that storyline is also a cover up.
The real reason that Supervisor Warner is stepping down is because of pressure from the Town’s insurance company to settle the Larry Gurrslin “Wrongful Termination” lawsuit! Warner has been told he must settle or risk losing insurance coverage for the town!
He refuses to settle!
On October 13, 2003, Warner conducted a kangaroo court which resulted in a 3-2 vote by the Town Board to fire Hamlin’s Building Inspector, Larry Gursslin. The Supervisor’s persecution of Gursslin was extraordinary. Both Councilmen Paul Rath and Ed Evans went on record opposing the firing. They stated that the town had established procedures for terminating an employee and that these procedures were not being followed. Rath said that the Hamlin “Employee Handbook” laid out a clear process and it was being ignored. He warned that the town was opening itself to a lawsuit. Warner pressed the issue and Gursslin was terminated with votes from Warner, George Todd and Shirley Hollink.
Until now, most of the facts surrounding the Gursslin matter have been hidden from the public. However, a careful examination of public record sheds light on the events. In the summer of 2003 Gursslin served a summons on the homeowner of a very expensive property on Summer Haven Road. The summons resulted from the homeowner’s refusal to comply to an “order to conform” from the Building department. The order was to remove a fence which had been built in violation of Hamlin’s zoning code. The homeowner refused to correct the violation and enlisted powerful, “outside” political influences to help crush the complaint. This political leverage came in the form of a letter and phone calls from the homeowner’s neighbor. The neighbor is a well known Rochester attorney and allegedly very influential in the Monroe County Republican Party. In the letter he demanded that the Supervisor intervene in the zoning matter and menaced Warner with hints of serious political damage if the matter was not fixed. The implication was clear: Get your Building Inspector under control; leave my neighbor’s fence alone- even if it is a violation- or suffer serious political consequences from the Republicans downtown!
Warner crumbled. He rushed to Gursslin and demanded that the matter be droped immediately. Gursslin refused. He told Warner that it was a matter of law, that the summons to Town Court had already been issued and that it would be resolved by the judge. Warner was furious and commenced the action to fire Gurrslin. The community was startled by the speed at which the Supervisor drove the termination. He held a “special” town board meeting to set the hearing on a Saturday morning when he knew both Rath and Evans were out of town! Warner never revealed to the public, or the Town Board, what the rush was about. In fact, he was in a hurry because he wanted to fire Gursslin before the court date! With Gursslin out of the way, he could quash the summons! That is what happened.
Making matters worse, and in violation of the law, Warner purged town records immediately after Gursslin left office! This was reported, with photographs, on The Blog on Tuesday, October 21, 2003.
There is no doubt that Warner’s termination of Larry Gursslin was “unlawful.” There is no doubt that the Town of Hamlin will lose the lawsuit. That is what brings us to Warner’s sudden decision to quit.
People close to the legal negotiations have indicated that the town has made several offers to Gursslin to settle, but he has refused. The sticking point is an apology! Gursslin believes that the Town (Warner) severely damaged his reputation by not giving a public reason for the firing. By terminating his job, with only two months to go on his contract and failing to name a cause, the Town created an environment of speculation. That speculation has caused unmeasurable harm to his public reputation and made finding new employment difficult. He wants Warner to write, sign and publish a clarification of the matter and apologize for the action!
Warner refuses.
This, in turn, has created a very difficult situation for the company which provides litigation insurance to Hamlin. All insurance companies have a dollar range which they will pay out for various types of injury. This range will be negotiated with a plaintiff to settle their case. If the company feels their client is wrong, they offer a higher dollar amount. Hamlin’s insurance company has made it’s best monetary offer, but Gursslin won’t take it without the apology!
Larry Gursslin has not sued for money, he sued to recover his reputation. Only that will resolve the issue. It is likely that Gursslin’s own attorney has urged him to take the offer but he will not accept any conclusion which doesn’t include a published apology and clarification.
Warner refuses to apologize. Stalemate.
How does this lead to Warner’s decision not to run? Because he has been so intractable, and Gursslin so insistent about an apology, the prospect of a settlement is at an impasse. Gursslin is ready to take the matter to trial. Hamlin’s insurance company does NOT want that. Not under any circumstances. They know the Town was wrong, the termination was unjustified and, probably, that Warner acted illegally in destroying documents related to the matter! The insurance company does not want a trial because they are confident they will loose and, if there is a jury trial, the payout could be huge. The costs of litigation alone, separate from any settlement, would be far greater then the range of acceptable dollars usually offered in this type of suit.
The insurance company is in a terrible bind. Warner refuses to apologize, which is the linchpin for any settlement. If the matter goes to trial the outcome will likely be much worse then any settlement. What can they do?
Then can cancel Hamlin’s policy. They can force the Town to seek other coverage from other carriers at extraordinarily higher premiums. That is what they are telling the Supervisor. Apologize to Gursslin or the town’s insurance will be cancelled.
Warner still refuses. He is willing to jeopardize the legal well being of the entire community because of pride!
He has only one way out. He must get the insurance company to delay a trial until after the election. After the election, an apology to Gursslin will fall to the new Supervisor. Once inaugurated, the new Supervisor will quickly publish it and settle the case. Warner will retain his false pride and, possibly, avoid prosecution for destroying town records.
Those are the real reasons why Austin Warner is not seeking reelection.
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REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003**** REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003 **** REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003 **** REPRINT OCTOBER 21, 2003****
Getcha Free New Identity Here!A new kind of “Open Government”In these days of rampant identity theft homeowners are urged to protect themselves. Experts suggest that you shred bills, returned checks and bank statements so they are not plucked from your trash. They even advise that you remove subscription labels from old magazines before they are recycled.
But, here in Hamlin, that might not help.
The reason is the Warner Administration has adopted a new form of “Open Government” which puts many of us a risk.
The attached photos show several containers outside the Town Hall. These wer put outside yesterday. Outside for everyone to enjoy! Outside for the public to casually page through, or if you like, take a handful of files home for yourself to enjoy later.
What are in the piles? Town records. Specifically, old Building Department records. Documents which include: Building inspection reports on people homes and businesses; site plan maps, correspondence between the Building Department and various governmental agencies; letters from attorneys; copies of deeds; transfers of property. Your basic stuff.
What is the matter with this town? At a time when there is a legitimate risk of identity threat, the municipality puts hundreds upon hundreds of records out in the parking lot for all to share. The files are filled with people’s names, addresses, phone numbers and correspondences. It is mind boggling.
Setting aside the horrific breech of customer confidentiality, there is an equally troubling question as to why these records are so suddenly being dumped.
We all remember the events at Enron and Global Crossings when incriminating documents were destroyed to prevent their discovery. Why are these records, some of them dating back to only 2002, being thrown away now? Is there a relationship between the sudden firing of the Building Inspector and the rush to destroy documents from his department?
Gursslin has said that he was never confronted with charges or allegations of wrongdoing so he believed his dismissal was arbitrary and capricious. If it is true that there is no evidence of any wrongdoing, then it might benefit the town to destroy hundreds of records in anticipation of litigation. Is this possible?
Whatever the motivation, the sudden public dumping of a large number of documents- into the public parking lot for all to grab- is a distinct violation of public trust and government responsibility.
Helpy Selfy