Jennifer Pae wrote: As a result of their due diligence process, they have recently decided to have their legal representation, the law director and the law firm of Thompson Hine, to begin negotiating on the City's behalf.
The Mayor cannot independently enter into contracts on behalf of the City. It is City Council's legal responsibility to pass ordinances and resolutions, and these include granting the executive branch / the administration contracting authority.
Jenn,
There go the Mayor's crisis management folks again---sending you out with classic "disinformation"--mixing true information with false information to leave a false impression and to confuse and befuddle the public.
Can you circle back and get authority to answer one simple question with a straight answer:
Will the resolution tonight have the City Council grant the executive branch the administrative contracting authority? Yes or No?Here are a few things that need unspun from your "spinning" post above:
1. The Letter of Intent was an AGREEMENT negotiated by the Mayor as the LEADER of Step 2 whose members Summers CHOSE. An agreement is not a PROPOSAL. Sorry, the LOI is stuck on the Mayor like taffy--you can't separate him from his own deal.
2. It is the Definitive Agreement (DA) that creates the City's rights to the 10 appointees on LHA, not the Lease---Butler claims CCF has no obligations under the Lease so tracking his logic, the Lease can't obligate CCF as the sole member of LHA to grant the City those 10 picks. Indeed, it is the DA that makes CCF the sole member of LHA and creates CCF's duties to serve the City of Lakewood. So the claim that the City has no rights to enforce the Definitive Agreement is but one of several instances in which Butler is dead wrong in his recent website post that the City has no rights in relation to CCF--No worries the rest of his bogus claims will be addressed in another thread.
Please Note: I am told that Butler's posting may violate elections laws by him using his public office in a political campaign. Butler cites no facts or legal authority to support his post on the City's website which is addressed to "Citizens of Lakewood"--several of these citizens are party litigants represented by opposing counsel in pending litigation where he represents an adverse party--we may get to that in future threads too--get your crisis management team working on that issue ASAP.
3. So Butler will be granted the authority to negotiate with CCF when Butler's potentially malfeasant post on oneLakewood.com exposes that he does not even understand the basics of negotiating 101. Why would you choose a negotiator who:
1. believes we have no rights in relation to CCF?
2. has told CCF that he believes we will have not partner without them?
3. thinks that CCF might actually want to leave Lakewood?
Maybe that is why Jenn completely failed to address Dan's question about what Butler will be negotiating?
Dan,
Her answer is: "a bad deal"--they just don't want to tell you that just yet--they'll come out with that later with Thompson Hine saying they did their best.