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Fire commissioners recall efforts grow
By Irene Torres
KP News
Fire District No. 16 Commissioners
James Bosch and Allan Yanity are the subjects of much
public scrutiny these days.

At least four KP organizations (KPBA,
LIC, KPCCA, and the KP Community Council) and several
individuals have formally and publicly invited the two
to mutually resign “for the good of the community.”
Failing that pressure, a citizen group met at the home
of self-described “irate citizen” Mike Salatino in early
May to review their options under state law, RCW
29A.56.110.
“A recall is not an easy thing to
do,” but he is prepared to lead that action, if
necessary, Salatino said. “Conditional letters of
resignation” were prepared by the citizen group,
offering each commissioner the opportunity to resign —
under the condition the other also resigns. The two
commissioners have stated at board meetings they did not
intend to do so, however.
The law allows the recall and
discharge of any elected official deemed to have
committed an act or acts of malfeasance or misfeasance,
or who has violated the oath of office. Ten citizens,
interested in the legal conduct of the business of the
fire district and in maintaining open records as well as
in the safety of the community’s first-responders and
the safety of the community in general, will pursue
recall efforts. Their interest also includes repairing
the community’s reputation, after an arrest following a
physical altercation between these two elected public
officials.
An online Google search netted 647
“hits” for Yanity and Bosch, according to Ed Taylor, one
of the recall organizers who said recent media coverage
of the fisticuffs had been published as far away as
Pennsylvania and Georgia.
Two letters were entered into the
public record at the May 8 meeting of the FD-16 Board of
Commissioners, and two more letters, in addition to oral
public comments at the May 21 board meeting, continued
to press for their resignations. Pending the outcome of
felony assault charges filed against Yanity, and if
public pressure fails to produce both resignations, a
recall petition is being prepared under provisions of
the state Constitution, sections 33 and 34 or Article 1.
A subcommittee was formed to
prepare a charge, reciting that such officer, naming him
or her and giving the title of the office, has committed
an act of malfeasance or misfeasance while in office, or
has violated the oath of office, or has been guilty of
any two or more of the acts specified in the
Constitution as grounds for recall. The charge shall
state the act or acts complained of in concise language,
give a detailed description including the approximate
date, location, and nature of each act, be signed by the
persons making the charge, give their respective post
office addresses, and be verified under oath that the
persons believe the charges to be true and have
knowledge of the alleged facts upon which the stated
grounds for recall are based.
“Misfeasance” or “malfeasance” in
office means any wrongful conduct that affects,
interrupts, or interferes with the performance of
official duty, the performance of a duty in an improper
manner. “Malfeasance” in office means the commission of
an unlawful act. “Violation of the oath of office” means
the neglect or knowing failure by an elective public
officer to perform faithfully a duty imposed by law.
Retired attorney Mike Abernathy, an
attendee at the citizen’s committee meeting, said,
“Violation or loss of the public trust is the definition
of malfeasance of office of a public official. And these
two have lost the public’s trust.”
Short of their voluntary
resignations, a charge of misfeasance will be filed with
the election officer and passed on to the county’s
prosecuting attorney, Salatino said. The charge must be
accurate, and supported by specific documentation. The
charge can then be filed on a ballot title, and
presented to the Superior Court for a decision on its
merit. On approval by the Superior Court, signatures can
be collected on a recall petition, during a specified
timeframe. Those signatures are compared with the voting
registration record, and when certified by the county
auditor, the petition can be placed on “the ballot”
special election set. The subjects of the recall
petition have the right to a response, to be printed in
the voter’s pamphlet.
A recall petition requires a 51
percent Yes votes to be approved.
Should that happen, the Pierce
County Council will appoint another person to join the
single remaining commissioner, Rick Stout, on the FD-16
Board of Commissioners. Those two would pick a third
commissioner. Stout’s term of office ends in 2007, and
it is unknown if he will seek reelection at this time.
Separately, there are plans for a ballot measure to
increase the commission from three to five members.
Should this measure pass, the existing board members
would appoint commissioners to the two new seats.
At the citizens meeting, Taylor
read from Washington state law, “The people of this
state do not yield our sovereignty to the agencies that
serve us. In delegating authority to the government, we
did not give our public servants the right to decide
what is good for us to know... He encouraged public
attendance at all future fire commissioner meetings, to
hold the board accountable.
Meanwhile, a second, informal group
on the south end of the KP has emerged. Known as TOBAY
(Tired of Bosch and Yanity), their goal is to mobilize
the citizens force the two commissioners’ resignations.
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