Orcas woman appointed Friday Harbor’s new town attorney

Friday Harbor’s new town attorney is a former deputy attorney general of the state of Hawaii.

Mayor Carrie Lacher appointed Orcas resident Adina Kobayashi Cunningham town attorney, succeeding Don Eaton, who was appointed to the Superior Court by Gov. Christine Gregoire.

Cunningham becomes town attorney May 1. Contract terms were not available; the contract is being finalized by Town Administrator King Fitch for approval by the Town Council on April 15. Cunningham will charge the town a flat rate for attending council meetings; Eaton attended those meetings pro bono.

“That would be so difficult to replicate,” Lacher said.

Cunningham’s appointment is historic on several levels.

First, Lacher is the first mayor to appoint an attorney since Ralph Rich appointed Eaton in 1982.

Second, Cunningham is believed to be the first female town attorney in Friday Harbor history.

Third, women now hold most of the key elected or appointed positions in Town Hall: mayor (Lacher), clerk (Amy Taylor), treasurer (Wendy Picinich), and attorney (Cunningham). Two of five council members are women, Carrie Brooks and Anna Maria de Freitas, although women have often been the majority on the council.

Fourth, to accommodate Cunningham’s commute, the new town attorney will attend noon meetings rather than evening meetings, as Eaton did. That means most public hearings will be moved to the noon session, Lacher said.

Cunningham is currently the deputy county administrator. She is leaving the county’s employ to open a private law practice with offices in Eastsound and Friday Harbor.

“Ms. Cunningham’s extensive background in working with government entities will ensure a good fit with the needs of the town and its council,” Lacher said in a press release. “In addition, Ms. Cunningham’s eagerness and enthusiasm will bring great energy to the council chambers. I look forward to developing a strong and productive relationship with our new town attorney.”

Cunningham said in the same press release, “I believe in public service. Having worked as a local administrator for the past two years, I have seen things through an administrator’s eyes; as a resident of the county, with family living, working and growing businesses here, I understand the need for good government administration.”

Cunningham has a bachelor’s degree in history from Lewis and Clark College and a law degree from Northwestern School of Law, also at Lewis and Clark. She spent a year as a law clerk for the City of Portland and a year as a judicial law clerk for the Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals. She served as Hawaii’s deputy attorney general, advising the state Department of Health on environmental regulations relating to the management and enforcement of solid and hazardous waste laws, public hearings, and state and federal legislation. Cunningham joined San Juan County as deputy director for administration in 2008.