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disqualify, and it’s very clear on that. So they’re kind of creating separate classes there. It doesn’t really make sense to me. I’m just looking for the right to disqualify myself and continue to do both jobs. I’ve actually offered to go a step beyond that and instead of waiting till a moment comes where I’m in a situation to disqualify myself, to disclose any property where I may have to disqualify myself later on, so they don’t have to wait for a moment where I say oh yeah, I must disqualify myself on this property, and then it’s kind of a surprise to them. I can let them know years in advance I would have to disqualify myself on this property in the future if I was asked to take an official action. <br /> <br /> MR. BALSIS: So your question to us – <br /> <br /> MR. DRUTAR: May I disqualify. <br /> <br /> MR. BALSIS: May you disqualify, and that’s what you’re here to ask. <br /> <br /> MR. DRUTAR: Yes. Do I have the right to disqualify and continue to work as a Real Property Tax property appraiser. <br /> <br /> MR. HENRICKS: In other words, you want to do both, and they’re saying you can’t. <br /> <br /> MR. DRUTAR: Yeah, and they’re saying it after they already hired me, knowing I did both. And I’ve been there a year, and I’d accepted the job—I mean, for just speaking in the narrative, I accepted the job knowing that I could do both. I mean, it pays 36,000 a year. You can’t live in West Hawai‘i and do that. And I kind of make no apologies for that. I accepted—if I accepted, it would be with knowledge that I had the ability to make some other income by doing real estate on the side. <br /> <br /> MR. BALSIS: And they were fully aware of that. <br /> <br /> MR. DRUTAR: They were fully aware of it. There is some discrepancy now. There were five people in the room. Two of them say that they told me not to, three of them don’t recall that, and no one wrote it down anywhere. And I’ve asked for documentation on that, and they do not provide any. <br /> <br /> MR. BALSIS: So this was spoken, not only just in the documentation. The petition infers that things were in the application but it wasn’t spoken at the interview. That’s the way I read it. <br /> <br /> MR. DRUTAR: No, I disclosed in the interview that I had a real estate license. <br /> <br /> MR. BALSIS: Okay, that’s— <br /> <br /> MR. DRUTAR: --Yeah. I’ve disclosed it in writing and even in the job—just office gossip and just, you know, chat, you know. Closed a home in Kona last week, you know. Never hid it.