Sunday, March 16, 2025

Details Matter

 


By Gretchen Garrity

Just a small tidbit—an amuse bouche if you will--of what can happen when administrative staff are given authority by the governing body in a seemingly insignificant sentence of a legal contract. In 2017, when Ken Barthelette, a former president of the Christian County Library Board of Trustees signed off on the new board attorney’s contract, it contained the following sentence:

If Mr. Styron feels that he is being asked to perform services outside the scope of the $500 flat fee, he will promptly notify the Library Director and work with the Director [to] establish a budget for the additional services.”

The board attorney does not represent the library’s executive director, but the board of trustees. They are the client of the board attorney. The board of trustees has the authority on behalf of the taxpayers to incur legal expenses on behalf of the Library District.

 It was the former president of the board of trustees that signed the contract, not the executive director. Another small, but significant instance when an unelected administrative agent was given authority that belonged to the citizens via their publicly appointed representatives.

How did it come about that a previous board agreed to give the executive director the authority to be a primary contact for the board attorney, and to determine additional fees and budgeting? There is nothing to suggest that the board of trustees is included in the consulting and decision-making between the attorney and the executive director. The board of trustees are listed as a party to the contract along with the law firm, however.

The executive director is in charge of day-to-day operations, which is generally defined as “...happening every day as a regular part of your job.” These vary, of course, according to the organization and position.

As the client of the board attorney, the board of trustees is ultimately responsible for consulting with and directing their attorney regarding legal matters, including establishing a budget and being asked to perform services outside the scope of his/her retainer fee.

Missouri statute (182.070) states, “The county library district, as a body corporate, by and through the county library board of trustees, may sue and be sued, complain and defend…”

How did it come about that the former board attorney, without the vote of the “body corporate, by and through the county library board of trustees,” sued his own client?

By whose authority was this done? The latest filing in the lawsuit, “Defendants’ Answer and Affirmative Defenses,” states, Plaintiffs’ Petition is barred, excused, or diminished by the equitable doctrine of unclean hands for numerous reasons including that this action was filed on behalf of the District without a proper meeting and without authority. In addition, Count III was dismissed on behalf of the District without a proper meeting and without authority.”

Trustee Janis Hagen has positioned herself as a private citizen who claims she is suing the three board members as individuals, and not as the “body corporate.” Indeed, she maintains that she is doing so out of a personal disagreement with the other board members that has nothing to do with the library! The final invoice shared by Mr. Styron, who is Hagen’s attorney in the case, noted that Hagen was paying half the amount of the invoice. She is willing for the taxpayer to pay for half the lawsuit that was initiated, while the other “plaintiff,” the Library District, was added without a proper meeting or authority.

Click on image for clarity


According to the attorney’s contract the authority to authorize “services outside the scope of the flat fee” fell to the executive director. Did the former executive director work with the board attorney and trustee Hagen to establish a budget for the lawsuit against the three board members?

Small things matter in big ways sometimes.

Saturday, March 15, 2025

Good questions

 

Protecting Children

 The impact a librarian can have:

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

The rotting of the soul...

 

Monday, March 10, 2025

OverDrive Funding Paused

From: Missouri Independent, Secretary of State Denny Hoskins


By Gretchen Garrity

OverDrive is one of the largest purveyors of online ebooks and magazines. It includes the Libby app, which is available at the Christian County Library.

You can read about it HERE. FTA: "Any Christian County Library cardholder--including children--can download the Libby app. Libby is owned by a company named OverDrive (Steve Potash is the founder and CEO), one of the largest purveyor of ebooks and audiobooks in the business. According to an archived New Yorker article, An App Called Libby and the Surprisingly Big Business of Library E-Books, "It is the company behind the popular app Libby, which, as the Apple App Store puts it, “...lets you log in to your local library to access ebooks, audiobooks, and magazines, all for the reasonable price of free. OverDrive also offers Sora, a program geared toward students and available at participating schools."

Secretary of State Denny Hoskins has paused state funding for OverDrive, according to the Missouri Independent "...until it can prove that it has as safeguards barring children from accessing inappropriate content. The action comes after a Missouri Senate committee heard a bill last week seeking regulation of digital library catalogs, alleging Overdrive-run app Sora allows minors to access explicit sexual material."

This is great news and bodes well for protecting Missouri's minor children from age-inappropriate and sexually explicit materials in public libraries.

The Paper Trail

 

David Rice over at Hick Christian has shared a timeline and paper trail that gives an idea of what has been happening with changes at the Christian County Library. He says:

"This analysis of the board dynamics suggests the possibility of a strategic "setup" designed to generate litigation, potentially creating financial benefit for certain parties while advancing particular policy objectives through judicial rather than democratic means."

Read the whole thing HERE and come to your own conclusion.

Journalism...