Crescent City Times

ONLY ONE CRESCENT CITY HARBOR COMMISSIONER HAS A VALID PUBLIC OFFICIAL BOND ON RECORD — RAISING SERIOUS LEGAL AND FINANCIAL CONCERNS FOR THE DISTRICT

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Crescent City Times
December 10, 2025 at 03:29 PM
4 months ago
The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views…
The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Crescent City Times.com By Investigative Reporter, Linda Sutter — December 10, 2025 A new compliance issue has emerged within the Crescent City Harbor District following confirmation that Commissioner Annie Nehmer is the only Harbor Commissioner with a public official bond properly filed and approved by the Del Norte County Board of Supervisors, as required under Harbors & Navigation Code § 6056. This revelation raises significant questions about whether the remaining commissioners were fully qualified to assume office at the time they began voting on District matters — including budgets, contracts, ordinances, personnel actions, and decisions involving federal and state grant funds. Bond Requirement Clearly Stated in Harbors & Navigation Code § 6056 Under § 6056, each Harbor Commissioner: “Upon taking the oath of office, and for each term, shall file … a bond conditioned upon the faithful performance of his or her duties.” The statute establishes the bond as a legal requirement tied to assuming office. However, records show: The majority of commissioners took their oath first, Before a bond was filed (if one was filed at all), Resulting in clear non-compliance with state law. California Attorney General: Lack of Bond Does Not Automatically Void the Office — But It Is a Legal Violation Past California Attorney General opinions make clear that failure to file an official bond does not automatically create a vacancy, and does not, by itself, invalidate the official’s title. Officials in this posture become de facto officers, meaning their votes generally stand to protect the public from chaos. However, this does not excuse the statutory violation — nor does it insulate the District from liability. District Exposed to Legal and Financial Risk Because unbonded commissioners are not covered by surety, their participation in governance may expose the Harbor District to: Uninsured financial losses, Increased audit scrutiny, Challenges to decisions made during the unbonded period, Loss of public confidence, And potential violations of state grant or federal funding requirements that assume bonded fiduciary oversight. The District has taken major actions over the past year — including approval of expenditures, amendments to ordinances, personnel decisions, and navigation of multiple state and federal grants — while commissioners lacked legally required bonding protections. Public Transparency and Corrective Action Needed Given the statutory language, and the Attorney General’s consistent view that official bonds are essential public-protection tools, the following corrective steps are warranted immediately: Full disclosure of all commissioner bonds, including effective dates. Identification of any and all District actions taken while commissioners were unbonded. A legal review to determine which actions require ratification by a fully bonded board. Implementation of compliance protocols to ensure Section 6056 is followed for every future term.

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Article Details

Published December 10, 2025 at 03:29 PM
Reading Time 0 min
Category 146