Using a well-documented culture of secrecy, the Port of Vancouver commissioners and CEO Todd Coleman repeatedly have failed to live up to the standards expected by the voters and taxpayers who serve as their bosses. Through the frequent flouting of state open-meeting laws and a general disregard for the public, the actions demonstrated by the port’s leadership have amounted to nothing less than an abuse of power.
Because of this, Coleman and Commissioners Nancy Baker, Brian Wolfe, and Jerry Oliver should resign their positions immediately. This is not said flippantly or without due consideration. This is not said with malice. It is, however, stated with regard for the best interests of the public and the best interests of the port.
With any issue surrounding the Port of Vancouver, it is difficult to separate the management process from the commissioners’ controversial 2013 decision to approve an oil terminal at the port. Yet those questions must be separated. Regardless of how one feels about the port’s agreement with Tesoro Corp. and Savage Cos. to build the nation’s largest oil-by-rail terminal, that is an issue to be dealt with at the ballot box when commissioners come up for election. The violation of the public trust, however, is a more pressing matter.
As detailed in a recent three-part series by Columbian reporter Aaron Corvin, “the powerful port often sidesteps full public accountability” through a pattern of “keeping the community in the dark about crucial financial and policy issues before making decisions, and of improper use of closed-door executive sessions to hash out safety, environmental and financial issues, among others, meant to be aired in public.” It is not wishful thinking that these things should be aired in public; it is state law. Toby Nixon, president of the Washington Coalition for Open Government, said: “Whoever has the most information is the one who’s really in charge. If government has secret knowledge that they don’t share with the people, then the people aren’t the sovereigns anymore. The people aren’t the ones in charge of the government.”