STEVE SMITH -- What’s Up
As a politician, Costa Mesa Mayor Libby Cowan is supposed to be loud,
obnoxious, stubborn and selfish. During our recent interview, however,
she was gracious, conciliatory and quite calm, considering the chaos that
has occurred since the city’s November elections. Since that time, Costa
Mesa has, among other decisions, canceled a planned skate park, shaken up
the city’s planning commission, questioned the value of the Noguchi
Garden and put us right behind the South Bronx in the public’s perception
of safe neighborhoods.
Since November, Costa Mesa has gone from the city that works to the
city with quirks, a city for which bickering has become the norm instead
of the exception. It is no wonder why the residents of Santa Ana Heights
want us less now than before.
“I have lived here for 22 years and I have always felt that Costa Mesa
has always been the city that does its job, but we’re struggling right
now,” said Cowan. “Unfortunately, right now, I think there are some
things coming up, some people taking hold of some negatives and really
beginning to pound them and you begin to feel -- at least I begin to feel
-- like I don’t know where I live anymore.
“It’s time now to promote our city again. I’m not saying that we’re
perfect or that we don’t have work to do, but when you look at things
like our sales tax base and our revenue base, what we’ve been able to do
has been incredible.”
“This is a community that has accepted everybody for who they were.
You accept the person next door because they’re your neighbor and if you
have issues, you talk to him. This is how it has always been and I don’t
get this.”
The “this” Cowan referred to was the inability of a few loud mouths to
use more discretion in their approach to the few serious problems that
the city faces and the inability of those people to understand that no
one has cornered the market on righteous indignation.
We talked about crime.
“I have always felt very safe in Costa Mesa. I have never felt awkward
walking in any neighborhood [in Costa Mesa] in the evening,” said Cowan.
I agree. The problem of Costa Mesa’s image as a high-crime area would
not be so bad, but this cancer has spread to other communities that now
look upon us as a lawless land, thanks to the irresponsible comments of a
handful of people who can’t wait to drive away new business and force
property values to decline, thus making their predictions a
self-fulfilling prophesy.
The difference in the new City Council is dramatic. “I loved my first
four years,” said Cowan. “I struggled at times but we always communicated
with each other. We talked and we got to know each other. I’m right now
dealing with council members who won’t even come to the dinner session
prior to the council meeting because they don’t think it’s of value. That
tells me they’re not interested in getting to know anyone.”
The dinner session is a meeting held before each City Council meeting,
during which the members talk with each other. Mindful of the Brown Act,
the conversations are designed to form bonds and a spirit of respect and
civility. But, just as we’re seeing in the Middle East, it’s hard to
understand someone’s point of view when they won’t meet you halfway.
In case you missed it, Cowan did something that is going to give her
profession a bad name. In publicly apologizing for the way she ran a
recent City Council meeting, Cowan did not use such cheap political
euphemisms as “It was an error in judgment,” or “I made a mistake.”
Cowan merely said, “I’m sorry.” Why did she apologize when almost any
other course of action would have been more politically expedient? “It
was eating me up,” said Cowan.
I showed Cowan’s apology to my kids and then we discussed it. It was,
as Pilot columnist and former school board member Jim de Boom would say,
a “teachable moment.” I told them that what the mayor did is exactly what
they are to do when they do something wrong.
Even though I disagree with Cowan on several key issues facing the
city, I am glad she is mayor. I’m glad because her Emporia, Kan. roots
will always force her to maintain her integrity, her conscience and her
work ethic. And she’ll say “I am sorry” when she is wrong.
That’s the difference between the new council and the old. Costa Mesa
does not have an “abnormally high crime rate,” but the city bashers who
spew this nonsense and ruin our reputation do not have the courage or
integrity to admit their mistake and say, “I’m sorry.”
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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