Dilks arrest raises more questions
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The arrest of Jerry Dilks, a city public works employee suspected of
billing the city for overtime hours he never worked, has led
authorities to question his calculations, which led to Huntington
Beach’s convictions for failing to fix leaky Downtown sewer lines.
Dilks, a city sewer maintenance manager, was arrested at his home
in Temecula last week for abusing overtime hours and stealing city
equipment. He is suspected of billing the city in excess of $5,000 in
overtime hours and of taking nearly $200 worth of shelving and a
portable generator, said Huntington Beach Police Sgt. Ron Burgess.
“This raises concern as to why the oversight didn’t exist in this
situation,” said Councilman Dave Sullivan.
City officials are examining both public and private records
including bank statements, tax records and other financial documents
seized from his home, Burgess said.
The date for the trial has not been set.
Robin Walters, a secretary who worked in the same unit as Dilks,
is also under investigation and on paid leave. She is suspected of
charging unworked overtime hours and destroying employee time cards.
Burgess said police are looking into whether other city employees
in the Public Works department have also committed overtime abuses.
“We’re only looking at the area where Dilks has been working,”
said Burgess.
It was Dilks’ calculations of massive sewer leaks Downtown, that
led to allegations that the city had failed to properly report the
issue two years ago. Investigators are now trying to determine
whether Dilks overestimated the leaks.
The accusations were damaging to the city, said Sullivan.
It started in 1996 when the City Council voted 4-3 against
revamping the sewer system through the use of taxpayer funds, said
former Councilman Ralph Bauer.
“The Regional Water Quality Control Board was not too happy with
that,” recalled Bauer, who said that it was shortly after that, that
the board reported what he referred to as “an astronomical amount of
leaks.”
Dilks claimed that repairs needed beneath the Downtown and Old
Town areas included 70,000 gallons of raw sewage a day spilling into
the ground.
City officials disputed these numbers and said it was impossible
to determine how much sewage was spilling from the pipes. In 2002
water quality testers found no evidence of sewage in the Downtown
groundwater.
“It made the city look irresponsible,” said Bauer, who called the
accusations and ensuing court case unnecessary. “They wanted to nail
somebody and they nailed us.”
More than $2 million was spent repairing the city’s sewage system.
The insides of the sewers were lined with resin, explained Bauer.
When inflated with air, the resin acts like a thin impermeable lining
in the sewer, making it impervious to liquid going into or out of the
pipes.
“Now we have a good first class water system with internal
storage,” he said.
Dilks is on paid administrative leave.
-- Jenny Marder
Fight over coastal commission continues
The local activist who took on the California Coastal Commission
and won, vowed to continue his fight last week as the state
Legislature works to cure the agency’s ills.
Rodolphe Streichenberger, who founded the Newport Beach-based
Marine Forests Society, blasted the state Senate’s approval two weeks
ago of a bill that supporters say would answer Streichenberger’s
criticism of its constitutionality.
The trenchant French-born activist said that the bill would not
solve what he contends is its illegality.
“That’s a cosmetic fix,” Streichenberger said. “It’s still
unconstitutional.”
It was Streichenberger’s lawsuit, filed in 1997, that ultimately
led to a state superior court judge’s decision four years later that
the institutional state agency violated the state’s constitution.
The appeals court agreed with arguments made by Streichenberger’s
attorney, Ronald Zumbrun.
In the various rulings, judges agreed with Zumbrun’s claim that
the agency violated the state separation of powers clause because
members of various branches could appoint or remove members.
The commission has appealed the Dec. 30 appellate ruling to the
state Supreme Court.
The Senate, also approved a bill on a 25-14 vote that would
establish fixed four-year terms for the commissioners and take away
the Legislature’s ability to remove them.
The Assembly approved a similar measure on Jan. 30 on a 49-24
vote. Both votes held closely to party lines, with Republicans
opposing them.
-- Paul Clinton
Huntington man is OCTA employee of the year
Huntington Beach resident and mechanic Joel Rule was recently
dubbed Maintenance Employee of the Year by the Orange County
Transportation Authority. Rule, who has been in the county
maintenance department for 16 years was honored for his safety
record, attendance and technical skills.
Co-workers say he reflects the county transportation authority’s
values of quality, teamwork, integrity, service and public interest.
Rule specializes in maintenance and repair of electronic systems
on the authority’s bus fleet.
The Orange County Transportation Authority develops, implements
and maintains transportation programs throughout Orange County. These
include highway, street and rail planning and development, operation
of the public bus system and administration of transportation
funding.
-- Jenny Marder
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