EMMITSBURG, Md. – An ethics complaint against Emmitsburg
Commissioner William B. O’Neil, Jr. by former town planner
has been dismissed.
On
Feb. 1, former Emmitsburg Town Planner Michael Lucas sent
an ethics complaint to Emmitsburg Ethics Commission Chairman
Ted Brennan “outlining how Emmitsburg Town Commissioner
William B. O’Neil Jr. while serving as a Town Commissioner
did violate Section 2.32.030 of the Emmitsburg
Municipal Code (conflicts of interest) in an attempt to
influence public policy that would directly impact him as
a private citizen. Moreover, the complaint demonstrates
how Commissioner O’Neil did violate his oath of office,
by providing deliberate and demonstrably false testimony
before officials of the Town of Emmitsburg.
The
three-page complaint received a two-paragraph response on
Mar. 9 from town ethics commission attorney Harry deMoll
saying, “the complaint does not merit further
proceedings.”
“The
ethics commission looked at the complaint and it did not
raise any issue under the ethics ordinance,” deMoll
said in an interview.
Lucas
said he wasn’t surprised at the outcome and he expects
to take the complaint to the Maryland State Ethics Commission.
“They
(the town commission) did not say the things I outlined
weren’t true,” Lucas said. “They said
they weren’t ethics violations.”
Lucas
said he suspects that “the only way to get to the
truth is to get O’Neil under oath.”
Mayor
Jim Hoover hopes this is the end of case. “Mr. Lucas
should reconsider the validity of the complaint and accept
the commission’s decision,” he said.
O’Neil
said he never understood what the basis for the complaint
was about. He said it referred to a situation concerning
whether the town was taking responsibility for the road
where O’Neil lives. The complaint also dealt with
statements O’Neil made concerning how town staff handled
the situation.
“The
town at the time was asserting they had not accepted the
road and not plowing it,” O’Neil said. “They
can’t say they’re not accepting it and then
ticket. The town attorney agreed with me and my ticket was
refunded.”
O’Neil,
who has faced and is facing similar situations, said he
doesn’t like the way local politics has become about
personal destruction.
“My
father believed in honor and integrity and he gave me his
good name. I also believe in honor and integrity and try
to live that way. This is just dragging that good name through
the mud,” O’Neil said.