Proctor, Bromberg, Heffernan ahead in Newport
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- With all but one of the City Council races too close
to call late Tuesday night, the District 7 race mirrored the tight
presidential race while the biggest fund-raisers led the polls in the
other two districts.
Businessman and attorney Gary L. Proctor, 55, is likely to succeed
Councilwoman Jan Debay as the council member for District 2. Steve
Bromberg, a 56-year-old mediator, will probably replace Mayor John Noyes
in the District 5 seat and businessman and attorney John Heffernan seems
to have taken the District 7 seat from incumbent Tom Thomson.
At press time, Proctor had 65.3% of the vote, Bromberg 44.4% and
Heffernan 38.2%.
Proctor, who had made the El Toro airport his No. 1 issue, said
energizing the residents to combat the threat of a possible expansion of
John Wayne Airport would be his first objective as a councilman.
“This is just the beginning,” Proctor said, adding that he hoped the
victorious Measure S supporters would direct their efforts to fight for
an extension of flight caps beyond 2005, when the current restrictions
end.
“It’s pretty clear that [voters] don’t want traffic,” Proctor said.
“We’ve got to face the next traffic issue, which is the airport.”
Computer sales consultant Dennis Lahey, 58, as well as real estate
broker Steven Rosansky, 40, trailed Proctor by a wide margin.
While Lahey raised $2,449 and Rosansky less than $1,000, Proctor
collected $47,180. An independent committee raised another $32,000 to
support his election.
Just before 11 p.m., with 15 out of 76 precincts counted, Bromberg
said that it was too early to tell whether he’d won the election.
“We’re just going to wait it out,” said Bromberg, who had raised
$57,878. “It’s a close race. We’re still having fun with it.”
Patricia M. Beek, 52, a retired retail manager, closely trailed her
opponent late Tuesday night with 41.3% of the vote. She had raised
$21,997 during the campaign. Robert Schoonmaker, 68, a retired engineer
and the third candidate for the District 5 seat, remained far behind the
others with just 14.3%. He had spent less than $1,000 of his own money in
the campaign.
In District 7, Heffernan, 50, a businessman and attorney, had a tight
lead over opponent former City Manager Bob Wynn, 69, who had collected
36.4%. While Wynn had spent $62,222, Heffernan, 50, a businessman and
attorney had put up $10,500 of his own money to run.
Incumbent Tom Thomson was staying behind his opponents in the vote
count late Tuesday with 25%. The 55-year-old real estate broker had
collected $43,577 for his reelection campaign.
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