What’s up? -- Steve Smith
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In case you missed it, Costa Mesa Councilman Chris Steel was arrested
Wednesday and charged by the district attorney with election fraud, based
on evidence that he allegedly obtained illegal signatures on past
nomination forms.
The form requires the signatures of only 20 registered voters.
That afternoon, as fast as you can say “Who, me?” Steel’s supporters
were declaring their first line of defense.
Sadly, it’s the old absence of criminal intent rationale, the thought
being that since Steel didn’t mean to break the law, he must be innocent.
You know the lines by now: “I’m not responsible for my own actions,”
“Someone made me do it” and the classic “I’m the victim here!” Oh, that’s
so ‘80s.
It’s hard to believe that some Steel supporters have actually trotted
out the lack of criminal intent argument to help get him off the hook. If
we were to apply that standard to our criminals, we’d have to empty the
jails of half the occupants.
Tell that reasoning to a second-grader who got a zero-tolerance
suspension for bringing a butter knife to school to spread his cream and
you’ll get an earful.
Tell that reasoning to Sid Soffer, who sits in voluntary exile in Las
Vegas for alleged building code violations. Soffer probably would claim
only that he’s not the tidiest guy around and certainly did not
intentionally break any laws. Who would argue with Soffer’s slob defense?
But there’s something else that worries me. It has nothing to do with
any laws or ethical or moral violations; it’s just a curiosity. If the
district attorney’s charges are true, why on earth was Steel so desperate
for 20 good signatures that he had to get even one bad one?
Yes, I have heard that his was a last-minute decision and he was in a
hurry, but for Pete’s sake, I think even Soffer could get 20 good names
in about 15 minutes just hanging out at the Bark Park.
Steel may or may not be guilty as charged. I’ll leave that to Judge
Judy or whomever is assigned to his case (I’d nominate Dr. Laura) but it
cannot be denied that absent any criminal wrongdoing, Steel is quite
guilty of extremely bad judgment.
This would not be Steel’s first case of cloudy thought. He has been
pounding on the theme of Costa Mesa’s decline for years, even though
there are qualified people and sufficient statistics to prove him wrong.
During his campaign, Steel told us that property values were
declining, the crime rate was “abnormally high” and that schools were
declining. His supporters were marching to the same tune.
Read the reports, however, and you’ll draw a different conclusion.
Readers of this column know I’ve taken several opportunities to prod the
Newport-Mesa school board into concentrating more of its efforts on the
Westside in an effort to improve both test scores and school conditions.
So it could safely be assumed that I’d be the first one to call the
board on the carpet for failing our kids. But I’d also be the first one
to cheer its successes, which I’ve also done. Test scores are up, and
although we still have a way to go, I’m cheering the direction in which
the scores are headed.
It also has been revealed that crime in Costa Mesa is not “abnormally
high” as Steel has been claiming.
Police Chief David L. Snowden laid that argument to rest in an
outstanding commentary a few weeks ago. At the City Council meeting after
that column, even Steel had to back down, stating in so many words that
crime was not as bad as he’d made it out to be.
And those property values? A recent independent survey of Costa Mesa’s
two ZIP codes, 92626 and 92627, shows that property values are up 19%
over a year ago.
So, just where is the problem? The problem is the psychosomatic
condition of a handful of residents whose tunnel vision, self-centered
proclamations and bad judgment are preventing the city from making real
progress on Westside redevelopment.
My beefs with Steel are not personal, despite attempts by some to
prove otherwise. I just think he’s out of his league.
Anyone who would offer in a City Council meeting to trade funding for
Huscroft House for an elimination of the job center has not and will not
learn what it takes to make realprogress in Costa Mesa.
Guilty or not guilty, whatever, I’d just like to see Steel make a few
more friends before he circulates his next petition.
* 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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