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Library, director can't resolve differences
After a lawyer requests a continuance so he
can consult with Director Robert Balliot, the board of trustees
moves up its performance review of Ballot to Nov. 21.
01:00 AM EDT on Saturday, October 28, 2006,
Providence Journal Bulletin
KIA HALL HAYES
Journal Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN -- It looks like the ongoing
drama at the Middletown Public Library will continue, for at
least another month.
Residents and employees had hoped the
battle between Director Robert L. Balliot and the board of
trustees would come to an end last night, when the two sides
were to present recommendations to work out their
disagreements.
But as the board was preparing to give
Balliot his performance review, attorney Quentin Anthony
arrived and requested a continuance so he could consult with
Balliot.
Anthony said he was walking his dog last
night when a friend of Balliot's called and asked him to help.
"He felt that [Baillot] needed some
representation," Anthony said. The board agreed to give
Balliot its recommendations Nov. 21.
For months, Balliot has claimed that the
board has been trying to fire him for political reasons. Board
chairman John Grisham says the board's actions have been
"necessary and proper" and that "there are no
grounds whatsoever for valid complaint."
At last night's meeting, Balliot said the
board didn't follow open meetings laws, punished him for
providing others access to information, and has hired attorney
Dan Kinder with unappropriated funds.
Balliot said he's received nearly $4,000 in
attorney fees, but has no way to pay them. Kinder, who was
present at last night's meeting, was originally hired to help
with union contract negotiations, Balliot said.
"At this point, you're doing work that
has not been publicly approved," he told Kinder.
Kinder said he was an employee of the
library, but when he demurred to say who requested his
attendance at last night's meeting, residents demanded an
answer.
"Who hired you, when did they hire
you, and why are you here!" one woman yelled. Grisham at
one point had to ask the audience to quiet down so the meeting
could continue.
In an interview, Balliot said the board
members, most of whom have been replaced over the last two
years by the Town Council, are now using their seat to support
a political agenda.
"The people they're appointing don't
even have library cards," he said.
Balliot said it all started in December
2004, when he supplied Middletown First -- a citizens group
opposed to heavy development -- with documentation about a
Zoning Board meeting where developers were granted a variance
to build a 55-room hotel in an area zoned for 23 units on
Aquidneck Avenue.
"I'm supposed to provide access to
public information, no matter who asks for it," Balliot
said.
Middletown First posted the information on
its Web site, which is linked on the library home page. Council
liaison Edward Silveira and several board members then
expressed concerns about the link.
"We didn't want to be seen as possibly
promoting a political agenda," Grisham said.
In March 2005, the board decided to move
the link to the "nongovernmental resources" section,
where it remains today.
"It's going to stay open, active and
accessible," Grisham said.
But since then, Balliot says, the board has
been intent on firing him. The board considered giving Balliot
a six-month probation during last month's meeting. Instead,
both sides agreed to return with a written set of
recommendations.
Silveira says Balliot's assertions are
groundless.
"To suggest there's any political
interference is just ridiculous," he said.
Silveira said Middletown First was a
"politically driven, agenda-based Web site" whose
link did not belong on the library's home page.
"I don't think that that's the message
we wanted to give people in this community," said
Silviera, who also said the Dec. 14 zoning meeting had nothing
to do with the issue.
"The library board of trustees is a
volunteer board that works tirelessly to oversee the functions
of the library," he said.
Balliot's suggestions to the board were for
the town to investigate board members' use of town funds, for
board members to read and follow the library bylaws, and for
all members to get library cards.
In a 5-to-0 vote, with member Edward Wray
abstaining, the board voted to study relevant laws that deal
with open meetings, conflicts of interest, and public records.
Barbara Murphy, who is co-president of the
library union, said she was disappointed with last night's
outcome. On top of the director's situation, library employees
have been working without a contract for nearly four months,
and things are terrible, she said.
"The atmosphere is no good,"
Murphy said.
khayesATprojo.com / (401) 277-7469
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