OAKLAND — As his health problems were getting worse, late Alameda County Supervisor Richard Valle was encouraged by his staff to scale back on commitments and appear at certain meetings by Zoom rather than attend in person.
“He would just tell us, ‘Chris, I live for this’ — and he really did,’” recalled the supervisor’s chief of staff, Chris Miley, at a Tuesday meeting, the first held by the county board following Valle’s death last month.
Valle, a former Union City council member, had served as supervisor since 2012 representing Hayward, Newark and Union City, as well as parts of Fremont and Sunol. The 73-year-old’s death followed a battle with prostate cancer.
Valle’s fellow supervisors have about 40 days left to appoint a replacement who’s as dedicated to their work as the late supervisor was remembered for being by his colleagues, staff and fellow local leaders on Tuesday.
After an open application process that ends March 14, the board will publicly interview candidates the week of March 28, hold deliberations at a meeting the following week and select Valle’s successor by April 9.
And although Valle had just been re-elected last November, the county will hold an election next March to determine who serves out his term that ends in 2026.
The upcoming search for a replacement feels like deja vu after another active Alameda County supervisor, the late Wilma Chan, died in November 2021 when a car struck her as she was walking her dog in Alameda.
On Tuesday, a portrait photograph of Valle was displayed on a stand at the back of the supervisors’ chamber, right where a photo of Chan had stood for the past year and a half.
But last time around, the supervisors didn’t hold an open public process to appoint Chan’s successor. Instead, they swiftly tapped David Brown, her chief-of-staff, for the job upon hearing enthusiastic support for Brown from Chan’s family.
The board’s decision triggered a pair of lawsuits by a small but litigious group, the Alameda County Taxpayers’ Association, which sought to remove Brown over the lack of a full public search for other candidates and the fact that he had moved to Chan’s district only four days before his appointment.
The first of those lawsuits, under review by the county court, seeks to invalidate the policy decisions Brown made while in office.
A judge dismissed the other suit after determining that Brown, who was appointed and not elected, should not be held to Alameda County’s requirement that elected supervisors live in their respective districts for at least 100 days before taking office.
That requirement did prevent Brown from running for a proper term in last November’s election, in which Lena Tam was chosen by voters to fill Chan’s seat.
When it comes to Valle’s successor, the county will hold a meeting after the application deadline closes to determine which applications meet the county’s legal requirements for an appointment.
Jason Bezis, the attorney for the taxpayers’ group, said the requirements should be made available to prospective candidates.
“They set a precedent with David Brown that you do not have to live in the county,” Bezis said. “Now they’re not telling the applicants the legal requirements. It’s a game played by secret rules.”
Valle’s colleagues didn’t discuss the requirements at Tuesday’s board meeting, but Supervisor Nate Miley did take a moment to remember the principles — influenced by Buddhism — that the late supervisor embodied: faith, energy, mindfulness, concentration and wisdom.
“All of these principles helped him to have… the sense of calmness and insightfulness that permeated his decisions,” Miley said.
Source: www.mercurynews.com