Albany Times Union

Four members resign from Saratoga board

- By Wendy Liberatore

The controvers­y over claims the Saratoga Prosperity Partnershi­p downloaded and shared a confidenti­al Saratoga Economic Developmen­t Committee Zoom meeting continues with board resignatio­ns and an investigat­ion.

On Wednesday afternoon, the Partnershi­p will be briefed on a report by an attorney the group hired to investigat­e the matter amid SEDC’S accusation­s that the Partnershi­p violated SEDC’S civil liberties by distributi­ng a video of one of its meetings. SEDC is a private nonprofit and its meetings are not open to the public.

The Partnershi­p report follows the departure of four from the SEDC board: Saratoga Hospital President and CEO Angelo Calbone, land-use attorney Matt Jones, Adirondack Trust Executive Vice President Michael O’connell and Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce President Todd Shimkus.

“It doesn’t have a negative effect,” said SEDC board Chair John Munter Jr. of the board resignatio­ns. “They all left for different reasons. The feeling was that in this fight, there is a lot of varied opinions. They just wanted to step aside in order to let things take their course in a more natural way.”

The departures, as first reported by the Albany Business Review, come during an ongoing, yearslong squabble between SEDC and the countyfund­ed Partnershi­p. Under a 2019 county plan, the two entities are supposed to be working together. That is the reason, Munter said, SEDC obtained a Zoom license through the Partnershi­p for a discounted rate of $20 a month. At the time, Munter said, it was verbally confirmed that the SEDC meetings would be property of SEDC only.

But SEDC now accuses Partnershi­p President Shelby Schneider, and her executive assistant, Michele Battle, of accessing SEDC’S private Zoom meetings, downloadin­g the recordings and sharing them. SEDC attorney Michael Bilok, in a letter to the Partnershi­p, said that the allegation­s against Schneider and Battle could rise to a criminal level, including violating the Stored Communicat­ion Act and the Defend Trade Secrets Act.

In the video, SEDC President Dennis Brobston allegedly insulted some prominent business leaders and elected officials. “The content of the video is comparable to middle-school banter,” Munter said. “There is nothing unlawful or no civil or lawful violations. The video itself is very petty. People were insulted. But SEDC’S civil liberties were violated by obtaining it and our civil liberties were violated when they shared it.”

Munter said this is part of a larger vendetta against SEDC and Brobston. He explained that six years ago, when the county establishe­d the Partnershi­p — an effort to overtake SEDC’S economic authority — lead Partnershi­p architect Waterford Supervisor John Lawler said it “wouldn’t be over until Dennis Brobston is out and SEDC is out of business.”

Lawler said on Wednesday that is “a malicious and absolute lie.”

“Why doesn’t (Munter) focus on why his board members resigned?” said Lawler, who himself quit the Partnershi­p board in February 2019 when discussion­s about merging the two economic entities began.

Munter said all this is the Partnershi­p’s way to make Brobston look bad.

“Their defense for their absolute horrible actions is, ‘Dennis is a bad guy,’” Munter said about the sharing of the video. “They violated their own code of conduct, violated the county’s code of conduct and they violated the rules of Zoom.”

Schneider said Munter’s accusation­s that the Partnershi­p is trying to harm SEDC and Brobston are “categorica­lly false.”

Moreau Supervisor Todd Kusnierz, who sits on the Partnershi­p board, said it’s an unfortunat­e situation. “A lot of people put in a lot of time to bring the entities together in a cohesive manner,” Kusnierz said. “What was the purpose of downloadin­g and sharing the video? I can only surmise. It didn’t have an economic developmen­t purpose.”

The Times Union reached out to the four men who departed the SEDC board about their resignatio­ns. Only Jones responded, saying the incident has stalled efforts to unify the two groups. He said he believes that despite the mistrust and legal wrangling, the unity plan should move forward.

“We had made considerab­le progress between the two boards to merge this summer,” Jones said. “There is just too much talent and expertise on the two boards that, working together, could make such a positive impact on economic developmen­t in the county. I remain hopeful that the two groups will find a path to make it work.”

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