PAGE A14, KEIZERTIMES, APRIL 23, 2021 Council pursing 'corrective action' in fallout over Eppley gun shot By ERIC A. HOWALD Of the Keizertimes The Keizer City Council voted unani- mously to consider a memo of corrective action for Councilor Roland Herrera at a meeting Monday, April 19. The memo will be prepared by council- ors Elizabeth Smith and Kyle Juran and presented to the council for consideration at its May 3 meeting. Smith, alongside Mayor Cathy Clark and Councilor Dan Kohler, signed a statement of concern ask- ing that Herrera be investigated for possi- bly mishandling public records, violating the council’s social media policy and con- ducting business out of view of the public. An agenda and meeting packet released on April 14, made it public that some mem- bers of the council wanted Herrera inves- tigated. The statement of concern cited reasons to believe that Herrera had bro- ken attorney-client privilege and violated council policies. Issuing a memo of corrective action could be viewed as a retreat from the cen- sure or letter of concern the statement of concern originally posed as possible penalties. Memos of corrective action are traditionally used to formally notify an employee of (1) an area of management concern, (2) the action(s) required of that employee to resolve the problem, and (3) the consequences should the necessary improvement not be accomplished. Herrera read from a prepared state- ment and admitted to forwarding an email containing the incident report from the The council moved the discussion of former Keizer city manager after he dis- Herrera’s potential censure near the top charged a gun in his city hall offi ce. of the agenda and before public testimony Herrera said he forwards emails to his was taken. Councilor Ross Day took issue personal email account regularly so that he with any dissent from the public before can view them on a larger monitor and the they had a chance to off er it. forwarding of the incident report should be “I never realized that I’d wasted 23 years taken alongside consideration of his need to accommodate physical limitations. “I need to be able to read city documents carefully and I forwarded it [the email] as part of serving the city,” Herrera said. “I am honored to serve and will continue to do so with pride, spirit and optimism.” Later in the meeting, Mayor Cathy Clark asked why he had not informed city staff or fel- SEE RELATED STORY, PAGE A17 low councilors of the need for additional accommodations. Herrera replied that a laptop provided by the city stopped working during the pandemic and of my life as an attorney because someone he reverted to personal computers, but that read something on social media and are he was trying to keep his health struggles now experts,” Day said. “Those screaming private. for due process are the same ones who City staff did send an employee to wanted us to fi re Chris Eppley without due Herrera’s home to assist with connec- process.” tivity issues shortly after the COVID-19 He also lambasted whoever might have pandemic forced virtual meetings, but the had a part in making Eppley’s incident problems persisted. Herrera mentioned report public. the struggle on a few occasions as more to “Whoever did that, I hope you crawl virtual meetings were held. back under the rock you came from. You BUSINESS Residents tell council to move on AND Services denied a good man due process and what kind of message does it send to the rest of Keizer’s awesome employees,” Day was nearly shouting by the time he fi nished the statement. The specifi c allegation in regard to mis- handling public records involves an email Herrera forward to a private email account. A Keizertimes public record request regarding a gun discharged in Eppley’s offi ce on early March 4 included a copy of an email Herrera forwarded the email to his account on March 5. By forwarding the letter, Clark, Smith and Kohler allege Herrera violated attorney-client privilege. The letter claims Herrera was one of only 11 people with access to the report, and the only one who said he had been contacted by media organizations. In response, Herrera asked that the city staff produce records show- ing that forwarding emails to his per- sonal account is something he does regularly. If he did so, the letter states, he did so “knowing council rules require councilors to use the city email in order to comply with Oregon Public Records Law.” Lastly, the letter accuses Herrera of violating open meetings policy. The let- ter states he posted to a Facebook page during a council meeting on March 15 while the council was listening to pub- lic testimony from residents regarding the Eppley’s discharge of a gun. Herrera made the post a few minutes after public testimony had ended. D I R E C T O R Y 2ND GENERATION OWNERSHIP The same dependable family, working hard to get your money back! IN LOVING MEMORY OF ROB ROBERTSON C ASCADE C OLLECTIONS, INC. 1375 13TH ST SE – SALEM (503) 364- 0455 cascadecollections.com