Westerly Town Council Holds ‘Infomercial’ for Embattled Solicitor

William Conley night defended himself against criticism from the public and some council members

Westerly Town Solicitor William Conley has come under fire.
File photo. Westerly Town Solicitor William Conley defended himself at a town council meeting on Sept. 16.
Alex Nunes/The Public’s Radio
Share
Westerly Town Solicitor William Conley has come under fire.
File photo. Westerly Town Solicitor William Conley defended himself at a town council meeting on Sept. 16.
Alex Nunes/The Public’s Radio
Westerly Town Council Holds ‘Infomercial’ for Embattled Solicitor
Copy

Westerly Town Solicitor William Conley defended himself on Sept. 16 against criticism from the public and some members of the Westerly Town Council over his office’s failure to submit legal research and analysis to the federal government before the transfer of the Watch Hill Lighthouse to a private non-profit earlier this year.

Conley also denied accusations from one councilor that the town council was not adequately updated on the status of his research and communications with the General Services Administration. He said he and the attorneys in his office did “what excellent lawyers do.”

Conley’s hourlong presentation and discussion with councilors came after a report published Friday by The Public’s Radio detailing the failure publicly for the first time. The town council had scheduled a special meeting solely to review ongoing legal cases in a “possible” executive session but moved one agenda item on a related public records appeal by The Public’s Radio to open session for what became Conley’s defense of his actions.

Monday night was the third time under the current town council Conley was given meeting time to respond to continued public criticism.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Judge calls the Justice Department’s request a “fishing expedition” for sensitive voter information
The city council approved the Providence Rent Stabilization Act on Thursday, which would have placed a 4% cap on annual rent increases for most Providence apartments
Officials project $38 million a year once tolling resumes, but spending obligations have outpaced revenue by millions
The Providence City Council is still one vote short of a supermajority that could override Mayor Brett Smiley’s expected veto. The policy would cap annual rent increases at 4% with exceptions for owner-occupants.
Mayor Ken Hopkins says a 7.4% tax increase is necessary to maintain city services and close the existing budget gap
Plus: the Rhode Island Black Film Festival, opening day at the drive-in and more