By Tim Reid
LOS ANGELES, Feb 22 (Reuters) - The bankrupt city of San
Bernardino has hired a new city manager who, according to court
filings, has twice declared personal bankruptcy and was recently
ousted from the board of a small community's water company after
being sued by shareholders.
The city council voted unanimously on Tuesday night to hire
Allen J. Parker, 71, as its city manager on an annual salary of
almost $222,000. He replaces an interim city manager who
resigned last month because, according to friends, she was
exasperated by the city's internal divisions.
The interim city manager, Andrea Travis-Miller, could not be
reached for comment.
Pat Morris, the mayor of the city in California, praised
Parker's "wealth of city management experience" and expressed
"great confidence" in his ability to oversee the city's affairs.
Parker, who began working in the job on Wednesday, will be
crucial in guiding the city of 210,000 people through municipal
bankruptcy, in a case that could set a national precedent for
Wall Street bondholders and pension funds in future municipal
bankruptcies.
The mayor and council members knew about both of Parker's
personal bankruptcies - the first in 1991 and the second in 2011
- and the litigation surrounding his water board tenure before
they interviewed him, according to the mayor's chief of staff.
They discussed both issues with him when they interviewed Parker
last Friday. They say the issues were no impediment: the council
interviewed two final candidates but voted unanimously to hire
him.
The California newspaper The Press-Enterprise reported on
Thursday that Parker filed in 2011 for personal bankruptcy. In
comments to the paper, Parker said that his bankruptcy and his
ability to handle the city's fiscal problems were "apples and
oranges."
Calls and emails to Parker asking about his bankruptcy
filings and his tenure on the water board went unanswered. An
email to Parker asking if his wife Sara, with whom he jointly
filed for bankruptcy in the 2011 petition, would comment also
did not elicit a response.
The bankruptcy of San Bernardino, a city 65 miles east of
Los Angeles, is a national test case as to whether the pensions
of government workers take precedence over other payments in a
municipal bankruptcy - a high stakes issue for pension plans and
their beneficiaries, and for the Wall Street bondholders who
lend money to governments.
City managers are central to any city's quest to seek
bankruptcy protection, because they have a pivotal role in
answering questions from creditors and the court. The judge
overseeing San Bernardino's case must still rule on whether the
city is eligible for bankruptcy before the case proceeds.
A TINY COMMUNITY
A 2009 lawsuit brought by a shareholder in the Banning
Heights Mutual Water Company, where Parker was a director and
then president of the board between 2004 and 2010, resulted in
Parker being voted off the board in February 2010 after a
court-ordered special election.
Banning Heights is a tiny unincorporated community 85 miles
east of Los Angeles. The water company was formed in 1913 to
provide water and today it serves about 250 residents.
Despite its small size, the water rights and land upon which
the community sits are worth millions of dollars, according to
John McClendon, the water board's general counsel. At one point
under Parker's tenure on the water board, an entity called The
Tahiti Group had placed $7 million in an escrow account to
purchase the company, according to correspondence attached to
court filings.
Court filings in the 2009 lawsuit, and a subsequent separate
lawsuit brought by the water company allege that Parker, along
with others, used their position on the board to try to sell the
water company, against the wishes of shareholders.
Parker and others were also accused of withholding
information from shareholders, according to those court filings.
The shareholder sued in 2009 because he said Parker and others
ignored the results of previous shareholder elections when they
were voted off the board. Parker is not a defendant in the
second lawsuit which is still active.
According to one court filing by the water company dated
Sept. 20, 2010, when shareholders gained access to the water
company's office after Parker and others were voted off the
board, computers were missing, hard drives had been wiped and
bags of shredded documents sat on the floor.
In a deposition dated Nov. 9, 2010 relating to the 2009
lawsuit, Parker said he never shredded documents and did not
believe anyone "during our regime" on the water board shredded
any documents.
After a judge ruled against Parker and others in the 2009
lawsuit and ordered a special shareholder election, they were
voted off the board by shareholders in February 2010.
CITY DID ITS CHECKS
According to his resume, which does not mention Banning
Heights Water Company, Parker has long experience as a local
manager in several other California cities such as East Palo
Alto, Half Moon Bay, Seal Beach, and Compton.
Jim Morris, the son and chief of staff to Pat Morris, San
Bernardino's mayor, said the city had done its own thorough
background check on Parker before he was interviewed by the
council, last Friday. His bankruptcies, and the Banning Heights
Mutual Water Company litigation, were known about by the time
the interview took place, Morris said.
"We talked to the attorneys involved, and pulled the court
filings. These were disputes over election results," Morris
said. He said the Banning Heights litigation did not involve
serious issues, and that such disputes occur on small entities
such as the water board all the time.
Morris said there was no reason why Parker should have
included his tenure on the water board on his resume. "He wasn't
employed by the water board," Morris said. "His resume was an
employment resume. If someone was a member of their local
homeowners' association you wouldn't expect that to be on their
resume."
Parker filed for personal bankruptcy in 1991, in San Mateo,
California, according to court records. No further details were
available. In February 2011, he filed for bankruptcy with his
wife, in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Central District of
California.
According to the 2011 bankruptcy filing, Parker and his wife
listed among their debts two home mortgages with unsecured
balances of $267,500, as well as bank and credit card debt of
$137,252.
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