A lifelong interest to serve the public
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- With the new year firmly in place, Councilwoman
Connie Boardman says she is looking forward to not just 2001, but her
entire four-year term as a city leader.
Voters chose Boardman for the City Council in November, and she was
sworn in a month later with another successful candidate and a returning
incumbent, beating out 17 other hopefuls in one of the largest elections
some residents have ever seen.
“I’m very proud of her, and it is really nice to see how happy she was
on election night,” said Dick LeGrue, Boardman’s husband. “It made the
whole campaign effort worth it.”
Originally from Lynwood in Los Angeles County, Boardman was raised in
La Mirada, where the political bug bit her as a child.
“When I was 12, I got involved in a local La Mirada election,
campaigning for City Council candidates,” she said. “It was more than
just a fascination with the political process with me, it was an interest
in public service.”
Now 42, Boardman, a nine-year resident of Huntington Beach, said she
wants to represent the city by listening.
“I hope to be a council member who listens to the community and
responds to its concerns,” said Boardman, a Cal State Long Beach graduate
and a biology professor at Cerritos College. “I am also one who is
devoted to cleaning up the environmental problems in the city.”
Boardman’s environmental concerns are well-known.
For the past eight years she has been a member of the Bolsa Chica Land
Trust, working to preserve the Bolsa Chica mesa from development. She
served as president of the organization in 1993 and, until recently, was
also a board member.
Boardman has also been outspoken against the Wal-Mart store planned at
the former Crest View Elementary School on Talbert Avenue, near Beach
Boulevard, which city voters approved in March. She ran for City Council
two years ago but lost by 133 votes to Councilman Peter Green.
“She’s wonderful, knowledgeable, and I’m really thrilled she sits on
the council now,” said resident Eileen Murphy, a founding member of the
Bolsa Chica Land Trust. Boardman “is well-rounded and doesn’t stick to
just one issue in the city.”
There are some, however, who haven’t agreed with the new councilwoman
on issues in the past.
“I just hope she will be a positive force for the city,” said Tracy
Pellman, a trustee with the Ocean View School District who co-chaired the
Save Our Schools, Save Our City group that supported the Wal-Mart plan.
“I feel like she used the Wal-Mart issue to get elected and has a main
focus on Bolsa Chica. That’s important, but you have to stand for more
than just Bolsa Chica, and I hope she’ll be looking at the city’s needs
for infrastructure and money from new businesses.”
Boardman said she learned while campaigning that there are not just
one or two issues on the minds of residents, but many -- ranging from
quality of life and open space concerns to infrastructure maintenance and
repair.
“There is a need in this city for elected officials who are responsive
to people in the community . . . and the best way to represent
[residents] is through communication,” she said.
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