Los Angeles Times

COASTAL CHIEF’S HIRING UPSET BROWN

The governor denies a role in firing Charles Lester, but he had concerns about his appointmen­t in 2011.

- By Dan Weikel

Gov. Jerry Brown has insisted that he played no role in the California Coastal Commission’s decision in February to fire Executive Director Charles Lester.

“This was a personnel matter involving an independen­t commission that was initiated and decided without any involvemen­t from our office,” Brown spokeswoma­n Deborah Hoffman said a few days after Lester’s dismissal.

Almost five years ago, however, Brown’s office did express concerns about Lester’s hiring. Immediatel­y after the commission voted unanimousl­y to promote Lester to the top job, Brown’s administra­tion told commission members about its unhappines­s, sources familiar with matter told The Times.

Members of the governor’s appointmen­ts staff, as well as representa­tives of then-state Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento), met with then-commission Chairwoman Mary Shallenber­ger about a week after the pro-

“They made it clear they were very angry about the selection process and the fact that they were not conferred with before we hired Charles Lester,” Shallenber­ger recalled when asked about the meeting.

Lester, now 53, was hired in September 2011 to replace the late Peter Douglas, the agency’s longtime executive director, who retired because of illness. During two closed sessions, commission­ers discussed and rejected a national search for prospects before appointing Lester.

Lester “was an outstandin­g candidate for the position,” William A. Burke, a coastal commission­er from 2002 to 2012, recalled in an interview. “If you were to go and do a national search, where would you find someone with his knowledge of the California Coastal Act and two decades of experience with the commission? I trusted him.”

Brown spokesman Evan Westrup, asked recently about the governor’s concerns about Lester’s appointmen­t, said the commission had been wrong to not contact the administra­tion about his hiring.

Asked whether the administra­tion’s concerns over the hiring played a role in his firing, Westrup said in an email: “Generally, basic communicat­ion between and amongst entities makes government run better. However, that doesn’t mean we’re making decisions for independen­t boards and commission­s.”

The governor and the leaders of the Assembly and Senate have the power to appoint four coastal commission­ers each but no authority to pick the executive disey, rector, who presides over an agency created four decades ago to approve land uses, provide access and protect the environmen­t along California’s 1,100-mile coastline.

Lester served as executive director until the commission meeting in Morro Bay on Feb 10. The panel voted 7 to 5 to fire him despite overwhelmi­ng support from hundreds of members of the public, environmen­tal groups, 35 former coastal commission­ers and state legislator­s.

Some of his supporters contended that the true motive for the firing was to force agency staff to be friendlier to coastal developmen­t.

The four commission­ers who serve at the pleasure of Brown approved the ouster, prompting demands from Lester’s supporters for an explanatio­n from the governor. The commission­ers denied that the decision was made to allow for more coastal developmen­t.

Neither Steinberg, who is running for mayor of Sacramento, nor former members of his Senate staff who met with Shallenber­ger could be reached for comment despite repeated efforts.

One of the governor’s appointees on the panel is Wendy Mitchell, a government affairs consultant who voted to hire Lester.

According to a former commission staff member, who spoke on condition of anonymity, two years after Lester was hired, Mitchell repeated the concerns Brown and Steinberg had voiced.

Last month, Mitchell told The Times that she had been concerned, even upset, about the lack of a national search five years ago and the commission’s failure to confer with the governor’s office. But she said those issues played no role in her decision to fire Lester.

The reason was his performanc­e, she said.

She also said Brown has never contacted her about any commission matter.

However, during a commission meeting on Dec. 10, Mitchell said from the dais that the governor had asked her about the status of a well-known, highly controvers­ial project: the 10-year effort by David “The Edge” Evans, guitarist for the rock band U2, to build five homes in the Santa Monica Mountains. The commission approved the project that day.

Asked whether those public comments were consistent with her statement about her lack of contact with the governor, Mitchell said Brown had asked her about the Santa Monica Mountains proposal after he approached her at a social function in mid-2011. She didn’t consider that a formal discussion.

In addition to Mitchell, Brown appointees Erik Howell, Martha McClure and Effie Turnbull-Sanders along with Roberto Uranga, Mark Vargas and alternate Olga Diaz voted to fire Lester.

Voting no were Shallenber­ger, Chairman Steve Kinsey. Vice Chairwoman Dayna Bochco, Carole Groom and Mary Luevano.

Howell said he had not heard about the concerns over Lester expressed by Brown and Steinberg five years ago. But even if he had, they were not relevant, he said.

“That’s ancient history,” he said. “It has nothing to do with where we are today. We need to look forward to the future with a new executive director.”

Mitchell and other commission­ers have said Lester lacked leadership, did not communicat­e well with the commission, was not accountabl­e to them or the public, and failed to hire enough ethnic minorities.

They have offered few specifics, saying the dismissal was a confidenti­al matter, although the agency’s attorney said they were free to speak about many aspects of his performanc­e.

Mitchell said she was unhappy that her telephone calls were not being returned by Lester but that the Surfrider Foundation and other environmen­tal groups had a scheduled monthly conference call with the executive director.

She also mentioned that for five years the commission has lacked a computeriz­ed docketing system that would let the public check on the status of projects awaiting coastal developmen­t permits. Installati­on of the system began during Lester’s term and has yet to be completed.

In Lester’s defense, he has said some commission­ers began to intrude more and more into what were traditiona­lly staff-managed affairs, including new hires, agendas, budgets and meeting locations. They also wanted agency employees to be more responsive to them than in the past.

Lester’s record includes a program to address sea level rise, increased recruiting of minorities, streamline­d procedures to reduce a backlog of permit applicatio­ns for coastal developmen­t and securing about $8 million in additional funding for planning and for hiring more staff.

A commission report says that minorities make up 29% of the staff, more than that of some other state agencies, and that up to 38% of new hires in late 2015 were nonwhite.

“The real diversity issue does not lie with the staff,” said Burke, who is African American. “There were no minorities submitting applicatio­ns for building projects on the coast during my years on the commission. There were zero applicatio­ns by blacks, zero applicatio­ns by Latinos and zero applicatio­ns by Asians.”

Like other current and former commission­ers, Burke said he had no problem with Lester.

“If I was still on the commission,” he said, “I would not have fired him.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? CHARLES LESTER was fired despite overwhelmi­ng public support.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times CHARLES LESTER was fired despite overwhelmi­ng public support.

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