REBUTTAL
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Ironically, your article (“Wood passed over for library position,” June
14) appeared the morning I was cleaning out my library trustee files.
As a result, documents--which have been shared with the Daily Pilot--were
again readily available to me. In reviewing them, I can’t help believing
the Newport Beach Public Library Foundation and I have been routinely
subjected to careless journalism and sensational reporting.
This latest article refers to my “accusing the foundation of using nearly
70% of funds raised on operating costs, an allegation later disproved by
an audit.”
But that’s not what happened.
The 70% figure came from the foundation’s proposed budget for fiscal year
1999-00. In turn, the foundation’s audit covered a different fiscal year,
1998-99. Thus, they had no bearing on one another. That’s careless
journalism.
Also note the foundation never adopted its proposed 1999-00 budget; as a
result, the foundation board generously donated $126,672 to the library
Feb. 4. So there’s a happy ending to that chapter.
The article also mentions a “fight over how to pay [TV news anchorman]
Tom Brokaw for speaking” at the Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series.
In reality, there was no issue over payment. In my file is a fax received
from the foundation’s executive administrator three days after Brokaw’s
appearance. It reads: “Please forward an invoice from Mr. Brokaw’s office
and payment will be made immediately.”
I did that and, despite an inappropriate public display by one committee
member, the invoice was promptly paid.
The positive aspect of this chapter is that Brokaw not only donated half
of his honorarium back to the Newport Beach Public Library, but never
charged the series for his hotel or travel costs as speakers normally do.
The article also states that I “was instrumental in turning some library
events into high-profile happenings.”
I appreciate the compliment. But my files (and my pride) indicate a
possibly more meaningful legacy.
Over the last four years, I am proud of any role I played in securing
6,000 new volumes in three special library collections, in formulating a
communitywide master plan of library growth, in developing a marketing
and advocacy plan, in establishing the Distinguished Speakers and Panel
Discussion Series, and finally (and this is one of my largest files) in
assisting to enact the memorandum of cooperation which now guides library
trustees and the foundation in an efficient and productive partnership.
In conclusion, when I embarked on four years of service to the local
library, the thought of gaining public recognition never crossed my mind.
But neither did I imagine that after those years of involvement, my
reputation, and those of others, would be impugned by careless and
basically negative writings.
Trust me, this is not a way for a community-minded newspaper to encourage
broad-based participation in, and support for, civic concerns.
JIM WOOD
Newport Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Daily Pilot stands by its coverage of the library.
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