The Mercury News

Longtime Councilwom­an Mahan resigns due to medical issues

- By Thy Vo tvo@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Longtime Santa Clara Councilwom­an Patricia Mahan confirmed this week she is resigning from her seat for medical reasons, but she added she is angry that city officials divulged more details than she thought was necessary in its news release announcing her decision.

Mahan, a breast cancer survivor who took a leave of absence in 2017 to battle cancer again, said in a phone interview Thursday from her hospital bed she did not know the city would issue a news release and was miffed it shared informatio­n about her health condition. “I wanted this private. This is not a public matter … had no right to release my private health informatio­n,” Mahan said, accusing the city manager of violating health privacy laws. “I can’t emphasize how distressin­g this is and how this impacts my recovery.”

Mahan said she is currently cancer-free but has been in and out of the hospital since Dec. 16 with “life-threatenin­g” health issues and will be facing another big surgery in coming weeks. She said she had told only a few close family members.

“My mother doesn’t even know — she is 95, she is under constant care and I don’t want to stress her out,” Mahan said. “And now she’ll read about it in the paper.”

City Attorney Brian Doyle said Mahan’s resignatio­n letter, submitted to the city’s Human Resources Department, cited medical issues as the reason for her departure.

“You’re the first person telling me about this. As far as I know, she didn’t tell anybody not to tell anybody,” Doyle said. “A resignatio­n document and she put informatio­n in there about her medical condition.”

Thursday night, the city released a copy of Mahan’s resignatio­n letter, in which she referred to “serious medical issues” caused by liver damage from her cancer treatments.

Mahan said she sent the resignatio­n letter to begin the retirement process with CalPERS, the state’s pension system.

The city needed to notify the council and public of her resignatio­n, Doyle said. An item informing the council of Mahan’s resig

nation is on the agenda for Tuesday’s council meeting.

The council on Feb. 11 is scheduled to declare Mahan’s seat vacant; she was last elected in 2016, and her current term would have expired in November.

Though Mahan has discussed her battles with cancer publicly in the past, she has done so on her own terms, she said.

“If I’m on the dais, I report I’m cancer-free, or if I have cancer,” she said. “But

I never wanted this … I asked this to be kept quiet. I asked the administra­tion not to tell anyone.”

Mahan first was elected to the City Council in 1994 and has served terms as both a councilwom­an and mayor. In recent months, she has been absent from or participat­ed remotely in several council meetings.

Some council colleagues have accused her of using her battles with cancer to gain sympathy during campaigns, including in a 2016 email chain published by the Santa Clara Weekly.

Mayor Lisa Gillmor thanked Mahan for her “significan­t

contributi­ons and service to the Santa Clara community” in Thursday’s news release.

“We respect her decision and are thinking of her and her family as they face a very challengin­g time ahead,” Gillmor said.

The city’s charter says council vacancies can be filled by appointmen­t within 30 days of a vacancy with four out of five votes of the remaining members. The appointee would serve the rest of the term. If the council cannot agree on an appointmen­t, it must have an election to fill the position.

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