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Commissioners conflict escalates into arrest
By Rodika Tollefson and Danna Webster
KP News
The April 24 meeting of the Fire
District 16 Board of Commissioners came to an abrupt end
when, during a break, Commissioners Al Yanity and Jim
Bosch got into a physical altercation.
Around a dozen witnesses, including
two reporters, a former fire chief, a former fire
commissioner, the fire district attorney and
firefighters watched the scene unravel, as district
personnel tried to break up the two men. At one point,
Bosch, apparently pinned into a corner by Yanity,
requested for 911 to be called, stating that Yanity had
a gun. No weapon was discovered on Yanity when police
arrived, according to Detective Ed Troyer, spokesman for
the Pierce County Sheriff Department.

Pierce County
Sheriff's deputies are escorting a
handcuffed
Al Yanity to a patrol car to be transported
to jail.
Photo by Rodika Tollefson |
“Yanity picked up a coffee mug and
hit Bosch with it,” Troyer said. A broken mug handle and
blood on Bosch’s face were visible when the scuffle
ended, after which Bosch was treated by district
paramedics and later reemerged with a bandage around his
face.
The building was locked down for
two hours after several Pierce County Sheriff’s deputies
responded to the scene around 10:30 a.m. Troyer said
Bosch was taken to a hospital “for stitches and
observation.” Yanity was questioned and eventually
transported, wearing handcuffs, to Pierce County jail.
He was booked for second degree felony assault and later
posted $10,000 bail. He was arraigned on April 25, with
no further court dates available at press time.
While waiting for police to respond
to the April 24 incident, one witness observed, “It had
to happen sooner or later,” to which another person
replied, “It’s… not surprising.” For more than a year,
disagreements and personal attacks between Bosch and
Yanity have turned many of the commissioners meetings
into extensive debates over meeting minutes,
reimbursements, attendance of non-district functions,
and personal disagreements.
At a November 2006 meeting attended
by the KP News, the commissioners spent about two hours
on the consent agenda, including 45 minutes discussing
approval of vouchers that included commissioner
reimbursements on which Yanity and Bosch disagreed. The
meeting was attended by the district’s attorney Joe
Quinn, at the rate of $160 per hour. One audience member
commented: “You’ve wasted more money arguing about it.
Get on with business.” Quinn, whose hourly contract rate
increased to $200 in March, has been present at many of
the meetings in the past year and a half. Following the
April 24 fight, district officials said the presence of
a police officer may be requested for future meetings.
Audience members ranging from
residents to firefighters have commented at the meetings
how dysfunctional the board appeared to be. At the Dec.
21 board meeting, Union Local 3125 President Robert
Bosch said, “These meetings are a circus and have become
an embarrassment to this district.”
Bosch and Yanity have been accusing
each other of various wrongdoings including slander,
intimidation, lies and extortion. Bosch submitted a
formal complaint after a Nov. 28 meeting at which Yanity
threatened administrative manager Christina Bosch, the
district and the board with legal action related to his
access to records. Bosch wrote in the complaint that
“these threats to intimidate and harass District 16
employees violate their statutory rights” and requested
that Yanity be censured; no further action was taken
because commissioners are not subject to the district’s
code of ethics that prohibits harassment of employees.
The conflict between the two,
former longtime friends, escalated recently to criminal
complaints against each other submitted to the Pierce
County Sheriff’s Office. The filing stemmed from a March
27 board meeting, at which Bosch tried to submit a
letter that alleged Yanity sexually harassed a woman who
rented his cabin in Alaska. According to Quinn, the
allegations have “nothing to do with district business”
because the letter, apparently mailed by an Alaska
resident, “has nothing to do with Commissioner Yanity—it’s
about Al Yanity” as an individual. The two commissioners
have accused each other of writing the letter, with
Yanity subsequently accusing Bosch of extortion and
Bosch calling Yanity “a perpetrator.”
Five-member board
Before the fight closed down the
April 24 meeting, the commissioners had passed a motion
to put a measure on the November ballot asking for board
expansion from three commissioners to five. The proposal
was recommended by the district’s Future Planning
Committee, chaired by Bosch. “I lean toward a
five-member board in hopes to get a more positive
atmosphere, but I’m not sure it’s going to happen,”
Bosch said at a committee meeting. Yanity voted against
the motion, although in an interview prior to the
meeting he said he was likely to abstain. “I’m not in
favor or not opposed to it,” he told the KP News. “I
personally think it’s a waste of money. If people think
they want it, they can vote for it.”
Increasing the board to five
members is a move that would cost about $10,000 per new
commissioner per year for per diem and travel
reimbursements, including an expected raise in per diem
from $70 to $90 that was approved by the Legislature and
at press time awaited the governor’s approval.
Commissioner Rick Stout, board
chairman, said in an interview that having five
commissioners would allow the district to have two
commissioners on the same committee and other gatherings
without constituting a quorum. It will also take three
people to pass motions, which Stout feels means better
constituent representation.
At the April 10 meeting, Ben
Thompson questioned whether that move would bring
improvements. Thompson, who lost his bid for the board
to Yanity in 2005, ran on the platform of increasing to
five members. He said in an interview: “The district is
just deadlocked; there is no incentive to discuss the
direction of the fire department… It seems like a poor
method of running the district with a three-person
board.”
Thompson told the board at the
April 10 meeting they should investigate the feasibility
of combining the district with a neighboring one.
Following that comment, Ed Taylor, former fire
commissioner, told the board: “I don’t think there’s
another district that will have you—they’d be
embarrassed.” He suggested the solution is for the two
commissioners to resign, to which Yanity replied, “…I
will not resign for the convenience of Mr. Bosch.”
While neither commissioner would
resign, a move is under way to potentially force them
out of office. Mike Salatino, who referred to himself as
“an irate citizen” during the introductions at the April
10 meeting, said is he is ready to write a recall
petition. He told commissioners the fire district “is an
absolute embarrassment to the community.” Salatino told
the KP News the petition should ask to “recall everyone
culpable and who we feel are responsible for the mess
down there today,” referring to the April 24
altercation. “We need a complete shake-up of the board,”
he said.
Fire District 5 in Gig Harbor has
increased its board from three to five members in the
2005 election. Kevin Entze, chair of FD-5 Board of
Commissioners, said the change has been discussed for a
few years. Although they didn’t have the political
squabbles that are plaguing FD-16, Entze said Fire
District 5 felt a three-person board “makes it tough to
do things because two people make a quorum.” “It’s worth
the expense,” he said. “It’s proved beneficial for the
district and has created a better relationship with the
firefighters and the union—and the community.”
While moving to a bigger board
could improve efficiency, supporters of the idea
acknowledge it may not improve the political climate:
The two new commissioners would be appointed by the
existing board. According to state law, one would serve
until the next “general fire district election after the
appointment, at which two commissioners shall be elected
for six-year terms, and the other appointee to serve
until the second general fire district election after
the appointment, at which two commissioners shall be
elected for six-year terms.” Which means if the public
doesn’t vote until November, it is likely the new
commissioners would not be appointed until 2008, when
the current board’s composition may change even without
a recall: Stout’s term expires this year.
Stout, a retired FD-16 fire
battalion chief whose tie-breaking vote frequently
agrees with Bosch’s, told the KP News, “I haven’t made
up my mind yet” about running for a second term. The
deadline for candidate filings is June 8, and so far no
one has publicly announced candidacy.
Regardless of Stout’s decision
about candidacy, Salatino is moving forward with a
recall committee, which will meet at his home at noon on
May 5. He said the committee may write two petitions;
the second one would be to expand the board now instead
of waiting for November elections. Salatino was
overheard at earlier meetings saying that he didn’t like
the idea that an expanded board would entail two
appointments rather than elections.
Citizen action is a welcome concept
for Detective Troyer. In his opinion, the threats and
blackmail accusations of Yanity and Bosch have required
too much police involvement. “(We) shouldn’t have to be
using police resources for fire commissioners,” Troyer
said. “Since we can’t get it straightened out, maybe the
citizens can.”
Division Chief Chuck West, while
not familiar with the recall discussions, said fire
district members have no control of commissioners. “The
commissioners are elected officials. The public needs to
step forward on this and we are encouraging them to do
so,” he said. West added that despite the recent events,
district firefighters and paramedics continue to do
their duties in serving the public. “My guys are still
doing their jobs. They are affected by this personally,
and their feelings,” he said. “But professionally, these
guys are out on the street still doing a great job.”
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