More advertisers pose conflicts for Garofalo
- Share via
Theresa Moreau
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The circle of advertisers that Mayor Dave Garofalo
is advised against voting on has been widened with the inclusion of any
business that placed ads in the 1999-2000 Huntington Beach Chamber of
Commerce Business Directory.
The chamber directory, like the Huntington Beach Conference &
Visitor’s Bureau visitors guide, is published through a contract with
David P. Garofalo & Associates, which makes its money through the sale of
advertising.
Advertisers include:
* Rainbow Disposal Co. Inc., which has an exclusive contract with the
city for trash collecting;
* New Urban West Inc., a developer that is building 53 homes adjacent
to the Bolsa Chica wetlands;
* Huntington Beach Community Clinic, which gets funding from the city;
* Pacific Liberty Bank, in which Garofalo is an investor;
* Time Warner Communications, which has the city’s exclusive cable
franchise.
A number of advertisers, such as the Waterfront Hilton and Hearthside
Homes, have ads in both the visitors guide and the chamber directory.
Though City Atty. Gail Hutton did not mention the directory by name in
her June 19 memo advising Garofalo to abstain from voting on advertisers,
she did say he could not vote on any advertiser connected with his
publishing business.
In her July 5 memo, she advised Garofalo to abstain from specific
items on the July 5 City Council agenda because they “may have a material
financial effect on an advertiser in the visitors guide or Chamber of
Commerce Directory.”
At that meeting, Garofalo abstained on five of the 24 votes, City
Clerk Connie Brockway said. It is not known how many votes, if any, he
will need to abstain from at Monday’s City Council meeting.
The current ownership of the business directory franchise is as murky
as the ownership of the visitors guide contract. Chamber President Joyce
Riddell has said there is some confusion over the topic.
Garofalo first signed a three-year contract for the business directory
in 1996, Riddell said. Garofalo had been on the City Council for at least
a year, having started his first term in 1995.
Riddell said the contract has been renewed by verbal agreement for the
2000 edition because the chamber has been happy with the results.
However, Riddell said she did not have a clear understanding of who
now owns the rights to publish the directory.
After Garofalo announced at a City Council meeting last month that he
would divest himself of all publishing properties, Riddell said Garofalo
told her he had sold the contract for the directory to Coatings Resource
Co., which is owned by Ed Laird.
But in the same interview, Riddell also said she thought the contract
had been sold to Air Quality Consultants Co., which is owned by Jeff
Laird, Ed Laird’s son.
“It’s confusing,” Riddell said, looking at the 1999-2000 directory’s
masthead, which lists David P. Garofalo & Associates as publisher, but
also says it’s an AQC Co., with Ed Laird as president. The Local News is
also listed, with “offices” at the mayor’s home address.
Riddell said the chamber, a private nonprofit organization, does not
pay Garofalo to publish the directory. The mayor pays for the rights and
keeps any profits generated by the advertising revenue. Only chamber
members can bid for the directory.
“He sells all the ads,” Riddell said. “He’s responsible for producing
the whole book.”
The directory has two pullout parts -- one is a community overview,
which the city buys copies of from the chamber, and the other is a
pullout with the chamber’s annual report and a program detailing its
plans for the coming year. The extra copies of the overview are printed.
Riddell said she provides the editorial copy and black and white
photos for the directory, and Garofalo provides “maybe 7,000 copies” of
the directory to the chamber.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.