Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” - Martin Luther King, Jr.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Did Mayor operate outside state law?

“The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results.” (Anonymous)

The South Iredell Community Development Corporation (SICDC) has paid its debt in full to the Town of Mooresville. All’s well that ends well.

Or is it?

Although we have extended sincere thanks to the SICDC for remedying this situation after it was exposed, we believe the mayor should not be let off the hook for his part in the matter.

Mayor Bill Thunberg – who also sits on the SICDC board of directors – single-handedly, and apparently without authorization from Mooresville commissioners, signed away the town’s collateral when he signed release deeds on two pieces of property that the SICDC sold earlier this year.

And it appears he may have acted outside of state law in doing so.

Town Attorney Steve Gambill recently stated in an e-mail to the Report: “State law does not address, nor lay out, the specific authority a mayor has. It seems to me that it would be a practical impossibility for the law to address each thing a mayor can do.”

And Gambill is right. But just because the law is silent about the mayor’s specific authorities does not mean that the mayor has a “free pass” to do whatever he wants, whenever he wants. In fact, state law very clearly spells out that the authority of the people is invested in the “body politic” – and in our case, that is Mooresville’s board of commissioners. Essentially, outside of breaking tied votes, the only power that the mayor has is that which our town commissioners expressly and deliberately grant him.

N.C. General Statute 160A-12 states: “All powers, functions, rights, privileges, and immunities of the corporation shall be exercised by the city council and carried into execution as provided by the charter or the general law. A power, function, right, privilege, or immunity that is conferred or imposed by charter or general law without directions or restrictions as to how it is to be exercised or performed shall be carried into execution as provided by ordinance or resolution of the city council.”

Bottom line: Neither state law nor the town charter clearly specifies the mayor’s authorities. And in the absence of those specifics, the “city council” (Mooresville’s board of commissioners) is obligated by state law to provide that power to the mayor “by ordinance or resolution.”

Yet, on behalf of the town earlier this year, and without the town board's authorization, Thunberg signed release deeds on two pieces of property that the SICDC sold in the Mooresville Business Park for a combined total of $1 million – despite the fact that at the time the SICDC owed the town more than $388,000 and had defaulted for two consecutive years on its repayment plan with the town. (See “SICDC defaults on payments to town,” April 10.)

Because the mayor – who we would certainly assume was aware of the SICDC’s debt and default – signed the release deeds, the town could not foreclose on those two specific properties and sell them to secure the money that the SICDC owed, in the event that the organization refused to pay the town.

An agreement forged between the SICDC and the Town of Mooresville in 2002 (which was unanimously approved by the town board at that time) stipulated that the SICDC would pay the town 10 percent of its outstanding balance each year and half of all proceeds from land sales in the Mooresville Business Park on Mazeppa Road until the debt was paid in full. But before the town received a check last week, the SICDC was not only two years behind on its annual payment, it had also not paid the town any portion of the $1 million it had made from the two land sales earlier this year.

Thunberg’s signing of the release deeds put the Town of Mooresville in an extremely vulnerable position. And while the town did eventually receive a final payment from the SICDC, our mayor’s actions have raised serious and fundamental questions about the democratic process in our town – such as who holds the power and who has true authority over the public’s business and our assets.

The short answer is that the people hold the power through our six elected commissioners, and our mayor did not have the authority to sign those release deeds because our commissioners had not granted him express permission to do so.

But at least two town officials say the way the situation was handled is acceptable, simply because that’s the way it’s always been done.

“In the nine years I’ve been here, the Mayor has always signed release deeds,” said Town Clerk Janet Pope when asked by the Report to produce any and all documentation showing that the town board had authorized the mayor to sign the release deeds.

Whether or not the mayor signs release deeds, however, was never the question – the question was whether he typically signs them with or without town board approval. But when asked that question, Pope did not respond.

Stated Gambill: "I believe the Mayor was acting as his predecessors had acted in an attempt to facilitate the closing of loans which would generate funds so that the Town could be paid.

"In these two instances," Gambill continued, "the town did not have advance notice of the closing dates in order to take them to the Board, and the release deeds were presented to the Mayor for signing so that the loans could close.

"All of this to say that sometimes a Mayor has to make a decision and act according to the circumstances," Gambill said. "Please note that I was aware of the release deeds and concurred with the ability of the Mayor to sign them so that funds could be generated from the sale of this property."

Gambill basically states that the mayor was acting in the best interest of Mooresville taxpayers by signing the release deeds to "generate funds so that the Town could be paid."

But the SICDC did not pay the town immediately after closing on the property. In fact, three months passed from the time the mayor signed the first release deed until the town was paid, and that payment arrived only after the matter was publicly exposed.

Why did the SICDC not send the town a payment as soon as the properties closed?

HUD-1 settlement statements, which are forms used to give borrowers and sellers a complete list of their incoming and outgoing funds for a real estate transaction, provide two separate lines for a seller to list any money it owes another bank/agency. If any debt is listed in those two lines (titled “Payoff of first Mortgage” and “Payoff of second Mortgage”), those banks/agencies will be cut a check at the real estate’s closing.

But according to the settlement statements provided to the Report by the SICDC last week, the SICDC did not disclose its debt to the Town of Mooresville on either settlement statement for the tracts of land sold earlier this year.

If Thunberg had the power to sign the release deeds, he also had the power not to. Because he has an obligation to protect the taxpayers of this town – and his position as mayor should have easily trumped that of an SICDC board member –Thunberg should have never signed a release deed without the SICDC paying its debt current or at least disclosing its debt on the settlement statements so that the town would have known that “the check's in the mail.”

Gambill also stated that the town “did not have advance notice of the closing dates in order to take them to the Board,” so “the release deeds were presented to the Mayor for signing so that the loans could close."

It is intellectually dishonest to insinuate that a sense of urgency existed and that the mayor was therefore justified in operating outside his powers. Why? Because closings don’t happen overnight. The SICDC failing to give adequate notice to the town should have been the SICDC’s problem – not the town’s. Mooresville’s town board can call a public meeting at any time of its choosing, as long as it gives the public a 48-hour notice of the meeting. In other words, the town board could have called a special meeting to grant the mayor the authority to sign the release deeds. And it would have taken only two days, from start to finish, to make that happen.

Further, we might be able to buy the “no-advance-notice” argument if it had only happened once. But Thunberg signed two release deeds – one on Jan. 18 and the other one more than one month later, on Feb. 27.

Reminds one of the old adage: Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.

Gambill also says that he “concurred with the ability of the Mayor to sign” the release deeds. But from the perspective of state law, Gambill is not the “body politic” any more than the mayor is, so Gambill’s concurrence with Thunberg’s actions is irrelevant. What is relevant is that it is incumbent upon the town attorney to ensure our elected officials adhere to the law.

At the end of the day, the mayor signed the release deeds without the consent or approval of elected commissioners because "that’s the way it’s always been done" in Mooresville. But just because it’s always been done that way does not make it right or lawful.

Furthermore, this isn't the way it's always been done in Mooresville. Take, for example, this very month’s town board meeting: our commissioners were asked to “authorize the mayor” to sign a document related to a real estate transaction. To be specific, and to quote the April town board agenda, commissioners were asked to “Consider adopting a resolution accepting the bid of $1,375,000 from LB Builders Construction Groups, Inc. for the Bandit Lane property and authorize the Mayor to sign the offer to purchase contract.”

Why did the mayor have to receive board authorization to sign documents related to that transaction, but not for the release deeds on the two tracts of land that the SICDC sold earlier this year?

The mayor does not and should not have the authority to sign anything he wants, anytime he wants. That is a slap in the face of the very democratic principles he was sworn to uphold. After all, this is a person who state law does not even allow to vote except in the event of a split vote by commissioners.

Immediate Calls for a Specific and Clearly Defined Policy
If, as Gambill admitted, state law “does not address, nor lay out, the specific authority a mayor has,” then the onus is on Mooresville’s town board to immediately develop and enact a policy that does. Commissioners have two choices: they can either establish a policy that gives the mayor carte blanche authority to sign documents at his pleasure, or they can require the mayor to receive town board authorization each and every time he signs a document on the town's behalf.

We should not, and will not, be satisfied with this particular story’s “happy ending,” because through it, we have learned that our business can apparently be conducted and carried out by one single person. And I do not care how benevolent that person is or believes s/he is, in our system of government it is not acceptable that s/he alone holds that much power.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

It was very disturbing, to say the least, to read this article. Why would a reporter have to point out such seemingly obvious things to the town administration? Who is responsible for this monumental oversight? Regardless, this loophole must be closed right away.

Anonymous said...

CENSURE THE MAYOR

A new policy is not necessary. All we need is a Mayor that is considerate enough of the trust put in him by the people of Mooresville that he does not act without clear, absolutely chrystal clear authorization to do so. As pointed out, the Mayor is not given authority to sign documents without authorization. Anytime he is not certain of his authority, all he has to do to clarify the situation is ask the Town Board for authorization. However, the circumstances of there being two incidents of the Mayor acting without authorization by the Town Board is a clear indication that Mayor Thunberg believes he can disregard the law and act unilaterally for the people of Mooresville. I believe a more appropriate measure than a new policy would be a censure of the Mayor to put him on notice that this type of behaviour is not appoved or appreciated by the people of Mooresville. Perhaps requiring him to attend some classes taught by the Institute of Government would be appropriate as well since he apparently needs a remidial course on the duties of an elected official and in particular the office of Mayor.

Anonymous said...

He would not attend any classes. He already knows everything. He is always too busy running his jewelry store.You can tell that he is not the brightest bulb in the light..look he listens to Frank Rader and does what he is told to do.

Anonymous said...

To the person who asked "Why would a reporter have to point out such seemingly obvious things to the town administration?" it's simple...in the "Good Ol'Boy World of Politics" it's just..."'cause that's the way we've always done it"....and that is supposed to be enough of an answer.

When will the old town politics die off? This isn't a sleepy little mill town and the mayor isn't the King....we're not Mayberry and Thunberg is "Andy".

Deliver us from pompous politicians.


A cranky 6:26.

Anonymous said...

The way things have always been done... hmmm. Is that a synonym for "good ole boys"? The reason things are the way they are in town is no one seems to know what is going on or bother to follow the rules. The attorney never seems to advise (is he even there?), the board never listens ( look at the sewer plant mess), the interim-manager appears to be taking care of his realtor and developer friends and on the take, and the mayor is on his own planet. Every one is doing what they want and the heck with what is right! What should we expect? All the bad decisions equal a good government? What a bloody mess!

Anonymous said...

The Mayor and Town Attorney are both in the bushes once again.It appears that is where they do most of the Town's business. I strongly urge the Board of Commisioners to intercede immediately, and take this" King Power" away from The Mayor.We the people of Mooresville are no longer going to put up with "it's always been done that way",and times are a changing.All of you officials better get on board, because you all will be left outside looking in. Jaime,once again, thank you for digging up all the stuff most people don't even know about.

Anonymous said...

In order to restore public trust with regard to this particular matter, Mooresville Commissioners can quickly enact a well-defined and concise policy delineating the signature powers of whomever occupies the position of mayor. This is best done without delay in order to put out this latest fire and to prevent deepening suspicions. A good policy will be a gift that will keep on giving. We can learn from this mistake, correct it and move forward, having created a cleaner, healthier form of government locally.

Night Owl

Anonymous said...

All you people or most of you I am sure that are complaining had your chance to get a new Mayor but you chose to put this crook back in office. You had a good man in Larry Gregory. He knows about finance and has no ties to anyone or any group here in town. Most people I guess read the Mooresville twice weekly slander sheet which endorsed Thunberg. You people need to get your act together and vote opposite of what the slander sheet reccomends. They are in the business of selling newspapers and good news does not sell papers. Remember next time vote for Larry Gregory for Mayor. He will not hide anything under the table and will be fair and honest.

Anonymous said...

To the "Censure The Mayor" guy: I see your point for sure. But we definitely need both: a new mayor AND a new policy!! Who knows how corruptible the next mayor (or the next or the next) will be? A policy ties their hands so they can't wink & nod at people they like and promise them they can slip something through using their signature when the commissioners aren't looking.

Anonymous said...

The mayor was probably notified when the Two(2) parcels of property went under contract, because as a board member of the SICDC, he would have known. The average time for a residential contract is 30-45 days to close, and on a commercial sale even longer for due diligence/zoning etc.Why weren't these two sales brought up at a town board meeting? The closings would have had to have been scheduled in advance-they didn't just call and say--come over after lunch to close. The town attorney should have protected us as well, instead he didn't advise the mayor to not release until the funds were in escrow to protect the town--instead they were released to the SICDC--who has defaulted on other payments previous! I find it hard to believe this was another isolated case of "oopps"--we need better legal counsel, and a strict policy on the mayor's powers,etc.,. I feel so much better now--I have a mayor who can do what he wants, a town attorney who isn't advising on protecting his "only" client, and a town manager who takes care of his friends--Thank you Boss Hog--where are the Duke Boys when you need them--retired--we're lucky we have "Super Gatton!"

Anonymous said...

Thunberg knew or should have known he didn't have the authority to sign those deeds. How could anyone in that position believe that they had the authority to transfer town property without some sort of consent. For Pete's sake, they made the Library stop selling used books because it violate policy. Did the Mayor not think transferring millions of dollars worth of property might be subject to some sort of regulations as well? But then, here we sit pounding away on our keyboards. Will anyone show up at a Town Board meeting or contact your Commissioner? We should you know. Gatton can't do it alone, nor should she be expected to.

Anonymous said...

Screaming at the Rain!! That is what all of the folks that read this blog are doing--things won't change until there are criminal charges brought regarding conduct! Do we really think the "Bugle" will cover this? They didn't even mention the Thunberg link with the SICDC, so Gatton is the only real news in town--unless you quilt! The best that anyone can do is bring these things up at Town Board meetings, and tell your friends about the blog!! The "Good Ole" network will try their campaign to smear and discredit, but the blog can't have their advertising dollars cut--and Gatton doesn't take prisoners!!Get the word out anyway you can--because when the masses hear how they are getting screwed--Slick Willie won't be smiling. Do you think Boss Hog would let me pick out a piece of jewelry--hell no-- not for free--so why do they get to roll the dice/or mismanage our tax dollars? Perhaps all the folks that went to the tribune parent company and threatened to pull their advertising should go to Gatton's house and "beg" her to stop the truth in Mooresville--the only thing she will take is your resignation for the citizens of Mooresville--Do we really think our commissioner will do anything? They are scared to death-the truth is coming out--and they are afraid of being caught up in it. I hope they turn on Thunberg to save their own _sses and pass strict limitations/powers on the office of the mayor , and look for an attorney that advises and protects vs. recites NCGS to the board. Where was the board in all this? I am sure that in all this time span, someone told a board member about "How much property we're selling at the SICDC." The budget status presented to the TOWN Board from Potter & Co. should have noted the default--why wasn't that brought to their attention--are you reading commissioners and staff--the more you get caught, the worse it will be!!(I think plea deals may be available for those who act quickly--) otherwise, you're just turds in a toilet--and Gatton has her hand on the handle--getting ready to send you to our "new" CH2MHill WasteWater Treatment Plant!!Have a nice swim!!

Anonymous said...

Actually what we need is a Mayor and Town Board with a little more common sense and just a little sensitivity to what the people of Mooresville want rather than what the Mayor or a few of his cronies think. From his attitude you would have thought the Mayor got 90% of the votes in the last election. I guess he hasn't figured out that running as an incumbent and narrowly squeaking out a victory over a virtual non-candidate is a clue that perhaps you should reevaluate what you’re doing and how you're doing it as far as a representing the people.

Anonymous said...

to the last blogger: King Thunberg doesn't "reevaluate", he schemes and plots. He'll "promise the farm" to five different people behind closed doors and then double cross all of them (while he recites scripture from memory) and none of them will know what hit 'em. And if you dare call him on the carpet, well, he just stops talking to you. I know because I've been there. He's a 12 year old walking around in an old man's body, playing "follow the leader".

Anonymous said...

Mayor Bill Thunberg must publicly explain his actions in this serious matter. Perhaps an apology is in order, in which case he must extend one. A proper explanation and/or apology may be all it takes.

In the absence of an explanation or an apology, the time may soon arrive when it will be appropriate to look into the process by which we may recall this mayor.

Anonymous said...

To the last blogger - an apology would be nice....the only way that I know of to "publicly" ask for it is to attend a Town Board Meeting -there is public comment at the beginning of every one. Condiser going and asking that the trust issue be addressed and an apology be extended to the taxpayers. I'd be shocked if there was much of a response, but that's the only way to be "on the record" for your request - and I happen to agree. How many people can speak during public session? This could be fun!