Q&A; with Mayor Linda Dixon -- Taking over the city’s reins
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After serving the last year as Costa Mesa’s vice mayor, longtime
resident Linda Dixon made the progression to becoming the mayor this
month with a unanimous vote from her City Council colleagues.
On Tuesday morning, Dixon sat down with Assistant City Editor James
Meier to discuss her goals as mayor, her 2002 reelection campaign,
community volunteerism, the Home Ranch project and pet projects such as
the Huscroft House and Noguchi’s California Scenario.
Q: What are your goals in your one-year term as mayor?
A: My goals are rather simple: to encourage productive interaction
among the council members and to foster positive communications between
the council and the community.
Q: Is working with the council difficult these days?
A: I think that we each have our own opinions, and we’re certainly not
shy about sharing them. And I think with two new council people who
hadn’t served in public office before, everything just takes time. This
is a very caring council. I think they really, truly care about the Costa
Mesa community. And my intention is for us to work together to make Costa
Mesa the best that it can be.
Q: In your acceptance speech as mayor, you mentioned wanting to
promote volunteerism. How do you propose doing that?
A: Obviously, when you list my community activities, you’ll see that
volunteerism is an important part of my life. There’s a tremendously
satisfying feeling from helping others and, as a volunteer, I have raised
funds for soccer teams, baked cookies, worked on cleaning up the Back
Bay, planting trees, reading to children, and that’s just to name a few.
I believe it’s everyone’s civic duty to give back to their community.
And I hope to encourage residents to be involved in city activities,
committees and commissions. Additionally, I’ve read that people who
volunteer are happier people and they have a tendency to live longer. And
I intend to live longer.
Q: What are your proudest accomplishments in your first term as a
councilwoman?
A: Well, I don’t have a particular proud moment. I’d rather refer to
some actions that I think have benefited the community.
The group home ordinance. I attended a meeting in San Jose a while
back and spoke with the San Jose attorney and learned about their group
home ordinance, which had much more teeth than ours did. And as an
outcome of a lengthy discussion with that attorney, I was able to connect
our attorney with San Jose and, as a result, Costa Mesa has one of the
most comprehensive ordinances in the state. People in our community have
to remember that local government has very little to say about group
homes in their neighborhood since they’re controlled by state and federal
laws.
Another point I’d like to recognize is changing the city’s motto to
“city of the arts.” We are the city of the arts, and we should claim that
title. I’m proud to be home to the Orange County Performing Arts Center,
South Coast Repertory Theater, the Pacific Symphony Orchestra and a host
of other theater groups, such as the Drama Lab at OCC and Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, and the new Trilogy Theater. And my hope is that Costa
Mesa will have a greater presence in the visual arts someday soon --
while I’m around anyway.
Another area is 17th Street. I helped eliminate the possibility of
widening 17th Street. It’s a shopping area, and it needs to be
pedestrian-friendly. And I hope to work with the business and homeowners
as part of this Eastside traffic study to make the streets easy to walk
down to get to other stores. There’s a lot of remodeling going on. It’s
looking great. I would like to see landscaping, benches, a fountain or
two.
And I would like to look at the possibility of shared parking among
the businesses so that people can park at one location and feel free to
walk to other stores along the street and not feel the need to get back
in their car and have to drive back down 17th Street.
Another very proud moment for me is the Noguchi gardens. I believe
they are a treasure. It’s an educational park, and it’s a unique art
landscape that was created by a world-renowned artist. And Noguchi
continues to be recognized by more and more people internationally, which
means more and more people will be coming to Costa Mesa to see this
treasure right here in our city.
Another one of my accomplishments is helping to reduce the number of
homes in the Standard Pacific project at Mesa Verde and Adams from, I
believe it was over 100, down to 62, and encouraging the developer to
increase the open space, the number of trees on the site and to put in a
bus stop so we didn’t stop traffic along Adams Street.
I like the Huscroft House, obviously. I think it’s an important piece
of Costa Mesa history. I realize it was moved here from Santa Ana in
1954, but that’s 47 years ago, and that’s a long time considering we’re a
city that’s only 48 years old. I think the Huscroft House is a fine
example of Craftsman-style architecture. It is made of redwood, and it
has a beautiful mantle inside; it has claw-foot tub; it has stained
glass. And I think by renovating the house, we can give our young people
a chance to step back in time when they visit the place.
I think our historical preservation committee came up with some
wonderful ideas on how the house could benefit the community. I held a
meeting to get community input, and I was very pleased and surprised to
find that about 40 people took time to attend the meeting and, of course,
not all of them left with enthusiasm about the house, but many left
thinking that this would be a great community project and it would pull
the community together. I think what’s important to me is to be a
well-rounded community, we need activities and places with a wide range
of interest. We need to fix the potholes, but we also need things for our
spirit as well.
I think it could be a museum for children to visit. I think it could
be a meeting place. I think it could be both of those things. I think it
could be an interpretive center. I think it has many, many possibilities.
And I hate to see a piece of our past, since we have so little,
bulldozed.
Q: What are some of the issues you’ll highlight in your reelection
campaign next year?
A: That Costa Mesa is a great place to live, shop and own a business.
I think we have the best of all worlds. We have challenges, but we’re not
alone. Other cities have challenges too. I’m in strong support of changes
on our Westside. I’m one of those people who never did understand how an
industrial area could be so close to the ocean, and that was one of the
things that I inquired about when I first moved to Costa Mesa and when I
first started serving on the Planning or the Transportation commission. I
was amazed by that.
I want all the residents to take pride in this city, so I hope to
encourage residents and business owners to clean up and beautify their
properties. I think strong communities need residents and businesses that
work together for the common good of everyone. And I want our
neighborhoods to be safe and attractive. And I think they complement
attractive and well-run businesses.
And I think it’s important that I was elected by the voters throughout
the city to represent all of Costa Mesa, and I want people to know that
all of Costa Mesa is important to me. I get upset when individuals throw
cheap shots and say, “You don’t live on my side of town so you really
don’t care,” because nothing could be farther from the truth. I do care.
That’s why I’m trying so hard to be accessible to the community. I want
to hear their concerns, and I want to work to make things better.
Q: Did the Home Ranch project turn out to your liking?
A: Home Ranch is a quality project that will be good for Costa Mesa. I
believe that the negative aspects have been mitigated. I would not
support residential land next to the L.A. Times building. After spending
considerable time at the L.A. Times and learning about the operation and
the 24-7 schedule, I firmly believe the land next to that building should
be zoned industrial, not residential.
Q: Being a College Park resident, do you think you lost any supporters
with your Home Ranch approval?
A: I’m certain that I’ve won some supporters and lost some supporters.
Long-term, I think people realize when I vote, I weigh what I think is
best for the community and reflect the community consensus, and I vote to
make changes that will help make Costa Mesa a better place to live.
Q: Any final thoughts?
A: I’m proud to live in Costa Mesa and to be elected mayor of the
city. The people are friendly, caring and good. We have great shopping,
great parks, youth athletics and a variety of community programs. We have
the South Coast Repertory Theater, the Orange County Performing Arts
Center, Orange Coast College and the fairgrounds. We’re close to the
beach. We have excellent freeway access, corporate business headquarters.
We’re soon to have our second community garden. And we’re eclectic enough
to have a little something for everyone’s tastes.
I’d like to say that I think the Westside of Costa Mesa is an
important, beautiful area, and it deserves revitalization and attention,
and I will work to help lead the process that will accomplish a positive
change. I hope we can create a master plan for our Westside and we can
prioritize the problems and create a timeline for each proposed
renovation area. My goal would be to create an effective, interactive
partnership between residents, businesses and City Hall.
BIO
* Years in Costa Mesa: More than 25 years
* Family: Husband of 26 years, Mike; children Andrew, Adam and Cara;
boxers Greta and Sammy; cats Augie and Lulu; and desert tortoises Barney,
Elvira and Tex
* Education: Morton College in Chicago, Chicago Academy of Fine Art,
School of the Art Institute of Chicago and UC Irvine
* Community involvement: Council liaison to the historical
preservation committee, cultural arts committee, senior center, Costa
Mesa Tourism Council, Eastside Traffic Study Group, Reading for Costa
Mesa and anything else requested of her
* Hobbies: Gardens and garage sales
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