The Selectmen deserve our thanks for making the right decision, thus doing what's best for the town.

Gilford Selectmen terminate Town Administrator
As the fallout from the termination of Town Administrator Juris' employment continues, you should keep several things in mind...
The Town Administrator does, in fact work FOR the Selectmen, not the other way around. The official job description states that the Town Administrator
Serves, at the pleasure of the Board of Selectmen, as the chief administrative officer of the town. Responsible for carrying out the duties and responsibilities assigned by the Board of Selectmen.
It continues to provide that the Administrator
Establishes effective working relationships with all town boards, commissions, committees, and departments.
Last Friday, Town Administrator Juris, in a letter on official town stationary sent to the BOS and released to the media, declared
"a hostile work environment, along with discriminatory and threatening behavior by Selectman Gus Benavides."
After laying out a list of grievances, many of which appear to be rather petty and of the nature of what reasonable people would think "go with the territory," the Town Administrator's letter thus closed:
In the event that the Board wants to resolve the matter, please let me know so that I can attend the meeting with counsel.
Translation: "Have your lawyers contact mine." As one can see, this type of situation completely flies in the face of the job duties listed above, and represents a fatal flaw in the relationship between the Administrator and the BOS. When two parties communicate via lawyers, there is no "effective working relationship."
Beyond that, the official job description states the Town Administrator
Coordinates and administers all Town legal matters. Assists Town Counsel with the collection and review of material for preparation in legal matters. Recommends, with the advice and consent of Town Counsel, legal strategies for approval by the Board of Selectmen.
As you can see, because the legal matter exists between the Administrator and the Board, the conflicts of interest are impossible to resolve. This effectively prevents the Administrator from fulfilling his duties to the Selectmen here, too, creating yet another fatal flaw in the relationship.
In this instance, the Board of Selectmen exercised the only option that made any sense when considering what was best for the town, which is their duty. Nobody could possibly claim that in the existing situation, fatally flawed as it was, anything positive could get accomplished. As a citizen and taxpayer, I don't want to see a situation like we had brewing fester and drag on. I pay taxes and expect them to be used to fulfill the duties required of the municipality by law. A nasty and poisoned relationship between our elected representatives and the person charged with operating the town in no way satisfies that mandate.
Section 15 of the Employment Agreement Between the Town of Gilford, NH and the Town Administrator holds
The Town shall defend, save harmless and indemnify the Town Administrator against any tort, professional liability claims, or demands or other legal action, whether groundless or otherwise, arising out of performance of the duties as Town Administrator. The Town will compromise and settle any such claims or suit and pay the amount of any settlement or judgement...
In other words, we, the taxpayers of Gilford, are on the hook to pay the legal expenses of BOTH sides in this matter. How is that beneficial to Gilford?
I openly and publicly wish to thank Selectman Connie Grant for demonstrating clear and strong leadership for a quick resolution in this matter. Together with fellow Selectman Gus Benavides, she showed courage and a sense of responsibility that is rare in today's times. For that, all citizens of Gilford should be both grateful and proud...

Comments
Just want to remind Evans and Alice not to let the door hit them in the rear end..
Posted by: Mike | March 13, 2008 04:16 PM
Be careful what you wish for.....
According to the Sun, Evans Juris is entitled to 3 months severence pay
plus the 1 month while on administrative leave.
At his current salary of about 90,000 a year that means the town
will be paying about 30,000 to someone who won't be working.
I am not sure how that is saving the town any money.
Plus I am pretty sure Evans Juris will probably file
a wrongful termination law suit, so the town will probably
be paying a lawyer in this case anyway. And if Juris should
prevail, the town will be paying a lot of lawyer fees.
Maybe cooler heads should have prevailed.
Posted by: mark | March 13, 2008 10:28 PM
If Mr. Evans worked at any other place someone would have the authority over him, and have the ability to fire him. The fact remains that if he felt he was being abused then he should have been specific since in his letter he is not stating facts. The process that the Selectman took was the correct approach and is designed to protect the entire Town. EVANS is under contract if he violated his job duty then he should be fired. I am sorry for Mr Juris but perhaps he should have thought about working this situation out before he called his lawyer and before he wrote his letter. I also wish he would not have wasted the town's stationary.
Posted by: pricilla | March 14, 2008 10:00 AM