Conlosh removed from the City Council
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Torus Tammer
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -- A close to four-year run as a councilman came to
an end for Chuck Conlosh on Tuesday as he failed to appear for yet
another City Council meeting.
The absence meant that Conlosh, who had not attended council meetings
since Dec. 19, had exceeded the 60-day absentee limit permitted by state
law.
Under California code, a City Council member cannot be absent without
permission from all regular council meetings for 60 consecutive days from
the last regular meeting he attended. Failing to do this requires that
member be removed and filled just like any other vacancy.
Fountain Valley City Atty. Alan Burns said that official council
action on Conlosh’s replacement has not yet been taken but expects that
it will happen soon.
“At a future council meeting, the council will have to address how to
fill the vacancy,” Burns said.
Conlosh could not be reached for comment but his attorney Bradley Gage
says the former councilman plans to fight his removal from office.
Michael Gold, deputy director of the Orange County division of the
League of California Cities, said that since employed with the league, he
does not recall this particular code being enforced. Nevertheless, he
said, the language speaks for itself.
“The law is self-explanatory,” Gold said. “We do not advise cities.
This law is a self-activating law, and the council will proceed from
there.”
Conlosh was first elected to the City Council in 1996 and was
reelected in November contrary to negative publicity over his insistence
that he keep his loaded police-issued revolver with him at council
meetings.
He also created controversy in October for not filing campaign-finance
statements for 1997 and 1998. Conlosh said at the time the stories were
leaked to the news media in an attempt to influence the election.
In January, Conlosh resigned after 13 years with the Huntington Beach
Police Department and checked himself into College Hospital in Costa Mesa
for treatment.
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