
Are you looking for a job? The scandal-ridden Westlands Water District, considered the Darth Vader of California water politics by Tribes, fishermen, and environmentalists, is hiring a new general counsel.
The announcement came after the Westlands Board of Directors reported stripping Tom Birmingham of his general counsel duties. Birmingham has served as both the district’s general manager and general counsel.
The Westlands Water District Board of Directors decided to separate the role of General Manager and General Counsel in order to improve the District's decision-making processes and provide an additional layer of review for the District, said Don Peracchi, President of the Westlands Board of Directors, in a statement. The Legal Affairs Committee of the Board will immediately begin a search to hire a new General Counsel.
The Board concluded that the complexities involved in securing water supply, groundwater management, and other challenges facing the District require the full attention of the General Manager.
The new General Counsel will have the responsibility of providing legal advice on proposed changes to existing policies, new policies, personnel matters, and any other matters requested by the Board, according to Peracchi.
The Board believes the new organizational structure will promote more transparency and good government practices, and represents the beginning of a process to improve the decision-making and operations of the District, he explained.
Delta advocates expressed dismay that the Westlands Board hadn’t outright dismissed Birmingham, especially in light of the recent financial scandals that have plagued the water district.
Westlands Water District is rearranging chairs on the Titanic, said Barbara Barrigan-Parrilla, Executive Director of Restore the Delta. In a normal functioning public agency such leadership would be dismissed.
Westlands has been embroiled in a number of scandals over the past several months. The Securities and Exchange Commission on March 10 charged Westlands, California’s largest agricultural water district, with misleading investors about its financial condition as it issued a 77 million dollar bond offering.
In addition to charging the district, the SEC also charged Birmingham and former assistant general manager Louie David Ciapponi with misleading investors about its financial condition.
Birmingham jokingly referred to these transactions as a little Enron.