The decision is made
Danette Goulet
On July 4, 1994 an elderly widow saw a couch burning in front of her
Downtown home. Fearing the fire would claim her house, she went outside
to extinguish the blaze with her garden hose.
While she was dousing the flames the water abruptly stopped. She
turned to find a big burly man with a knife had cut her hose and was
standing between her and her house.
Hearing that widow’s story of fear in a community meeting snapped the
last thread of patience that Huntington Beach Police Chief Ron Lowenberg
had with the antics that rocked the city each Fourth of July.
“I turned to the group and said ‘We can fix this problem. It may be
inconvenient for a few years, but if we work together and you let me take
control of this it can be fixed,”’ Lowenberg said.
Lowenberg last week announced the end of his part in keeping the city
under control, saying he will retire on Oct. 18 after 13 years heading the department.
They have been years of highs -- the reduction in Fourth of July
crime, the city being named among the country’s safest, dropping crime
rates -- and lows, in particular nasty episodes in which city employees,
including police officers, bumped up their final year salary to boost
their retirement and used overtime and benefits to increase salaries
significantly.
Still, through it all, the changes in 1994 may have been the defining
one for the police chief.
He recalls telling the group of people of his plan to barricade
streets, limit access to Downtown on the Fourth and have zero tolerance
for drinking.
They told him to do what he had to do.
“We made 549 arrest the next year,” Lowenberg said. “We did everything
I said we were going to do, and it worked. Since then we have been able
to bring the barricades closer in and loosen up on the zero tolerance.”
Some saw his actions as militant and fostered a deep dislike. But
those who have worked with him for many years are sad to see him go.
“He’s always been a person who looks for the best and fairest decision
to be made for all involved,” said Lt. Chuck Thomas, who has been with
the force for 17 years.
Lowenberg’s bold Fourth of July stance earned him respect from
Downtown residents and many on the force.
“That plan was pretty contrary to American way of life,” Thomas said
of Lowenberg’s Fourth of July enforcement. “It took a great deal of
courage and in the end the result was that we looked good because the
problem went away.”
Those results have often subdued Lowenberg critics.
Longtime police critic, former Mayor Dave Sullivan, feels the
department is far from perfect, but does concede that Huntington Beach’s
police department made positive strides under Lowenberg’s leadership.
“I think he has left the department in better shape than when he came
in,” said Sullivan, who had a volatile relationship with the police over
the years as he exposed the police department benefits scam and brought
about a department audit.
“It’s probably not peculiar to the Huntington Beach department, but
they tend they feel that they need not be as much of a team player as
other departments,” Sullivan said. “They feel they should get whatever
they want and that creates budgetary problems.”
Contrary to image of the police not being team players, Lowenberg
feels his crowning achievement was the birth of community policing.
“The thing I’m most proud of accomplishing in my career is achieving
community policing,” Lowenberg said. “This is a great city and it was
ripe for community policing. Most everyone who lives and works here has a
passion for keeping it safe.”
It is one of the three reasons Lowenberg gives for Huntington being
one of America’s safest cities.
The other two reasons he cites are a great police force with dedicated
individual officers and the technology of the computer dispatch, the
helicopter program and the full-service crime lab.
His advice to whoever the City Council hires to fill his shoes in
October is simply to get involved and continue to promote community
policing.
As for Lowenberg, he said he has no intention of leaving the field of
law enforcement to play golf or fish. He will continue to teach Police
Officer Standards and Training courses, the officer training courses and
others.
“I’ll keep my options open,” he said. “If the opportunity for a
full-time job comes along I’ll probably take it.”
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