Natural Perspectives -- Vic Leipzig and Lou Murray
Ruth Finley, a great friend of the environment, former council member
and past mayor, passed away last week. We attended her memorial service
in Central Park on Sunday. We noted many staunch defenders of the
environment among the gathering of Finley’s family and friends, many of
them past mayors and other prominent community leaders.
Finley made her successful bid for council back in the days when women
were just beginning to run for office. In its nearly 100-year history,
Huntington Beach has had only 10 women serve on city council, all
relatively recently. Those 10 women, many of them pioneers in the women’s
movement, were Norma Gibbs, Harriett Wieder, Ruth Bailey, Ruth Finley,
Grace Winchell, Linda Moulton-Patterson, Shirley Dettloff, Pam Julien
Houchen, Connie Boardman and Debbie Cook. You’ll note that of those 10
women, four are currently serving on the council, a sign that times have
changed and that the tide of political power has turned.
Finley’s good friend and fellow former mayor, Ruth Bailey, related the
story of how Finley came to run for council. They were both active in the
League of Women Voters during the 1970s and 1980s. Both women expected to
be tapped for grand jury service. They agreed that whoever didn’t get on
the grand jury would run for council. Finley was selected for jury duty,
so Bailey ran for council first. Finley ran next. Both women racked up
strong records for integrity, independence and defense of the natural
environment.
As we listened to the service in the amphitheater, we looked around
and marveled at how Central Park has grown in value as wildlife habitat
since its inception in the mid-1960s. Monarch butterflies flitted about
in the eucalyptus around us. A pair of mourning cloak butterflies went
through their courtship ritual overhead as warblers plied the trees in
their never-ending search for insects. After the service, several of us
debated whether the hawk that had flown through the trees during the
service was a Coopers hawk, an immature redtail or a redshouldered hawk.
We are grateful to the environmental visionaries such as Finley who left
much of Central Park in a native state so that all of us can now enjoy
its many natural wonders.
Finally, we thought about the balance of nature, and remarked that it
is like politics, a delicate thing that is easily altered. For example,
four seats on the council will be up for grabs in November, leaving only
Houchen, Boardman and Cook as the seasoned veterans, but Boardman and
Cook will have had only two years experience by then. With newborn
triplets to care for, Houchen may often be absent. The balance of power
will shift strongly in the fall and such a shortfall of experience on the
council may be a dangerous thing. The recent resignation of Dave Garofalo
will also affect the city. His successor will soon be appointed by the
City Council.
As we listened to her friends and family celebrate the life of Ruth
Finley, we thought about the balance of nature and the upcoming shift in
balance of power on the council. We also thought about Finley’s former
appointee to the planning commission, Tom Livengood, who was in
attendance. Like Finley, he is a person of quality and integrity. He
still sits on the planning commission. Livengood has served the city well
and long and, like Finley, is a staunch defender of the environment as
well as a pragmatist with business experience and an appreciation of the
importance of a healthy local economy. Livengood brings the perspective
of nearly two decades of experience in city government to the commission.
As a businessman, he understands finance and the needs of the business
community. Most importantly to us, he also has strong credentials as an
environmentalist. As past president of the Amigos de Bolsa Chica, he led
the community effort that successfully culminated in the state’s purchase
of 800 acres of the Bolsa Chica wetlands in 1997.
The council is currently searching for a replacement for Garofalo.
With Livengood’s long service to the community in city government, his
record of strong defense of the environment, and his considerable acumen
in business management, we think Livengood makes the best and most
logical choice to fill the empty seat. It would be good to see Finley’s
planning commissioner finally gain a seat on the council, a seat he has
earned and deserves.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at o7 [email protected] .
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