News
September 4, 2008
Addresses at center of Huntington appeal
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By Lawrence Messina The Associated Press

CHARLESTON, W.Va -- A judge who struck down Huntington's requirement that firefighters and police officers live within the city limits or face "immediate" firing wrongly interpreted the ordinance, the city's lawyer told the state Supreme Court on Wednesday.

Attorney Scott McClure said the city never meant to deny employees their right to due process with the 2002 residency ordinance.

"It doesn't say, without liberty of a hearing," McClure told the justices. "Such language does not appear in the ordinance anywhere."

But a lawyer for firefighter Jason Eastham and police officer Josh Coffey, who are challenging the requirement, argued that Judge John L. Cummings correctly concluded that "immediate" meant just that.

Bert Ketchum cited a November 2006 letter from Mayor David Felinton that ordered all workers the law covered to deliver proof of residency to City Hall by the following month or be "dismissed immediately for cause."

The letter underscored the city's intent, Ketchum said. The ordinance governs all employees hired after July 1, 2002. The legal challenge is about the right to due process under the state and U.S. constitutions. Civil service employees, including police and firefighters, are also protected by rules that allow them to appeal firings.

"[The ordinance] clearly and unambiguously calls for termination without delay, and without due process," Ketchum said.

McClure countered that Cummings could have erased the word "immediate" from the ordinance to remedy confusion over the meaning, but he didn't.

"They've construed it for the express purpose of declaring it unconstitutional," McClure said.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule by the end of the year. Justice Joseph Albright listened in on the hearing as he continues to recover from surgery on his esophagus.

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