READERS RESPOND
AT ISSUE: A Daily Pilot editorial sparked debate from readers who say
council members should be free to hire assistants (“It’s a tough job
councilmen, but you need to do it,” Dec. 16).
A major concern in both the editorial and Lucille Kuehn’s letter
(“Mailbag: Council members should do their own jobs, “ Dec. 16) is that
an aide would come between constituent and council member. Kuehn added
the charge that it would be “a dereliction of duty to delegate . . .
responsibility to a non-elected aide” and punctuated her disapproval by
quoting Harry Truman’s “If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the
kitchen.”
The same Harry S. Truman, though, had a sign on his desk with the
promise, “The Buck Stops Here.” Truman, an old Army officer and business
owner, recognized that you can’t delegate responsibility, you can only
delegate the authority to get something done. Locally, we will expect
council members to remain on the hook for everything.
While I am not worried that an aide would lessen my access to council
members, I am concerned about population growth and the pace of life
affecting my access. As Newport Beach and Costa Mesa have grown, our
council members’ attention has become excessively fractionated. Consider
that, at incorporation, Costa Mesa had five council members for a
population of only 17,000. Back in 1953, there was time to gather ‘round
the cracker barrel. In addition, laws and regulations were far fewer.
There was no Brown Act. Mom stayed home with the kids.
We still have the same number of council members, but Costa Mesa’s
population has grown to about 105,000. And we’re on Internet time: We
have cell phones grafted to our ears as we race through red lights to get
to that next appointment we’re late for. If there were any cracker
barrels left, we wouldn’t have time for them. For these reasons alone,
it’s not possible for council members to have the same quality of
connection with constituents that they had 50 years ago. Further, it’s
not realistic to expect the council to serve six times as many residents
as the original council did and still make a living and have a life.
So, shall we have 30 council members to keep the same
constituent-council member ratio? We needn’t do anything so drastic. Five
full-time aides would significantly help our five council members keep in
touch. Aides could perform field representation functions that we are
familiar with from our dealings with legislators at state and federal
levels. They would do only the tasks for which authority could safely be
delegated.
For this to work, an aide’s first loyalty must be to the council
member. Consequently, aides would need to be political appointees of the
elected politicians, not civil service staff members borrowed from City
Hall.
I support the Costa Mesa tradition of council members being in close
touch with their constituents. To make this possible in the light of
modern day realities, though, I believe it’s time for us to pay for a
full-time aide for each council member.
TOM EGAN
Costa Mesa
The Pilot got it wrong in the editorial by criticizing Councilmen Gary
Proctor and John Heffernan for suggesting a needed improvement to the
efficiency of the City Council.
The vast majority of governmental bodies pay for staff for their
legislators. That frees the legislators to concentrate on policy and
major issues.
We need Gary Proctor because of his airport expertise. He should be
working on this very important issue for the major part of the time he
can devote to the city, while letting some assistant handle routine
administration.
We need John Heffernan because he is the only Greenlight candidate
dedicated to Measure S and immediate practical action to preserve
residents’ quality of life. We should free him up from mundane
administration so he can spend all the time he can devoted to the city to
supporting residents’ issues.
Otherwise, council members are so inundated with minutiae that they
must at times blindly accept whatever the city staff recommends. For
example, buried in the consent calendar of the last City Council meeting
was an item to support an extension of [the Orange Freeway]. Dr. Jan
Vander Sloot opposed it in public testimony because it could impact our
water quality and hadn’t been adequately studied. The council members,
who had had insufficient time to study it themselves, then voted for the
needed study.
Why did 63% of the voters vote a low confidence in the previous City
Council by supporting Measure S? Those council members had no staff
assistants, handled their own calls, and yet were still out of touch with
the vast majority of the voters!
This is not to say that councilmen should not maintain close
communications with the public. But let’s permit assistants to sort out
the calls that need their immediate attention and handle routine
administration so that they can devote quality time to public interaction
and thoroughly study major policy issues.
So the present system is not performing adequately, yet the Pilot
wants us to retain it. I say these two public servants are correct and
doing us a service by making efficiency improvement suggestions.
PHILIP ARST
Newport Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Philip Arst is a community activist who is a
co-founder of Greenlight and an officer of the Airport Working Group. He
states that this is his personal opinion and not necessarily that of
these organizations.
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