Rob Anderson says the public must demand that county officials correct their unlawful actions and work transparently with investigators
Editor’s note: Opinions expressed in this letter to the editor are those of the author alone and may not reflect the editorial position of ClarkCountyToday.com
Clark County residents deserve transparency — yet what we are seeing from our county leadership is the opposite.

For several months, a Skamania County Sheriff’s Office detective attempted to interview four Clark County Councilors — Sue Marshall, Wil Fuentes, Glen Yung, and Matt Little — as well as County Manager Kathleen Otto. All five refused to participate in the investigation. Not one agreed to be interviewed. The only person who cooperated was Councilor Michelle Belkot — the very councilor who was illegally removed from the C-TRAN Board.
According to the detective’s report, “I have not received any further correspondence …” from the County Council’s office after repeated attempts to schedule interviews. That is not transparency. That is stonewalling.
And now we know why.
The investigation concluded that Clark County officials broke the law in multiple ways when they orchestrated the surprise March 12 removal of Councilor Belkot. The findings are stunning:
- They violated the Open Public Meetings Act — which makes the votes null and void.
- They violated the Clark County Home Rule Charter by bypassing the County Manager, who alone has authority over board appointments.
- The detective found evidence of a “secret vote” — indicating the matter was pre-planned outside public view.
- The County Manager may have committed Official Misconduct (RCW 9A.80.010) by failing to perform required duties.
- The detective recommended reinstating Belkot immediately and removing Fuentes from the C-Tran Board.
This wasn’t just a procedural mistake — the report calls it a hasty, unauthorized, and unlawful maneuver. And when law enforcement tried to investigate, these officials simply refused to cooperate.
If any ordinary citizen ignored a request from a law enforcement investigator, they’d face consequences. But these elected officials apparently think they are exempt from accountability.
Even more alarming: these actions directly impacted decisions involving hundreds of millions — even billions — in potential future light rail funding. Residents were denied their right to notice, their right to participate, and their right to transparent governance.
This cannot be allowed to stand.
Clark County residents — regardless of political views — should be united in demanding honesty and accountability from elected leaders. No councilor, no chair, and no county manager should be above the law.
The Skamania investigation makes the path forward clear:
Belkot should be reinstated, and the county must fully cooperate with the ongoing inquiries.
The County Council needs to hear from you. Demand they correct their unlawful actions and work transparently with investigators.
👉 Click here to contact the County Council and demand accountability:
[https://sendfox.com/lp/1w40o6]
Rob Anderson
Ridgefield resident
Also read:
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- Opinion: Washington state is blowing up its no-income-tax advantageLawmakers advanced SB 6346 with an emergency clause, aiming to end Washington’s no-income-tax reputation and prevent voters from seeking a referendum.
- Opinion: Labor to hit householdsHouseholds hiring for childcare or cleaning may soon need formal contracts due to a Washington law extending workplace rules to domestic arrangements.
- POLL: What do you think will happen if Washington’s new income tax becomes law?A new poll asks Clark County Today readers to predict what will happen if Washington’s nearly 10% tax on high incomes becomes law.







