EDITORIAL
There are a number of pressing, critical issues facing Costa Mesa.
The Home Ranch project, with its proposed 17-acre Ikea store, offices
and 464 homes, leads the list. Already residents are lining up to keep
the Segerstrom lima bean field located next to the San Diego Freeway from
being developed.
There is the defunct Westside plan. The city is going to have to
refocus on this section of town, which already has proven to be a
divisive, emotional task.
And as of last week, the city once again has no plan to build a
skateboard park. The momentum for both those who desperately want a park
and those who just as stridently don’t is too strong for this issue to
quietly roll away.
So it was disheartening Monday to see the council expend valuable
energy on what amounts to nothing more than a useless political squabble
over appointing new commissioners.
The process, led by Mayor Libby Cowan, was frenetic. Council members
lost track of their votes. Substitutes were tossed into nominations.
There were plenty of interruptions.
Afterward, some in the audience said it was a “railroad” job, and they
directed their anger at Cowan for at times refusing to allow Councilman
Chris Steel to nominate a candidate.
Even those intimately involved appeared shocked.
“The process needs a lot of work,” said Councilman Gary Monahan.
The discord was no surprise. When the council in December initially
decided to clear away the planning and parks commissions, emotions wore
thin.
But nearly two months later, it was not too much to hope that the
reappointment process would be smooth and professional. Judging by any
standard, it wasn’t.
And with so many substantive issues to tackle, council members
certainly don’t need to add their inability to get along to the list.
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