Exit Freeman, the end of an era
When Councilman Paul Freeman announced he would not seek
reelection this year, it meant more than an end of an era in Laguna
Beach politics. In effect, it meant that a man who had become a
lightning rod for both sides of the political aisle was leaving the
scene.
Freeman, noted for his public affairs acumen, has resume
highlights that include the successful negotiations with the Irvine
Co. that resulted in a major portion of Laguna Canyon being turned
over to the public, a move that brought cheers from the environmental
crowd.
On the other hand, his work to get the controversial Treasure
Island project off the ground made him the darling of the
pro-business forces in town.
Freeman, a native of Virginia, who in 1972 became the youngest
person to ever win a school board seat (a title he says he still
holds), took a few minutes one recent morning at the Hotel Laguna to
talk about his council legacy and his future with Coastline Pilot
Editor Tony Dodero.
What would you say has been your greatest achievement on the
council?
I guess the vision process. I’m very pleased with the effect it
has had. I have to credit other people for laying the foundation for
it. Among them would be Kathleen Blackburn, Fred Droz and Elizabeth
Pearson.
But I feel good about basically jump-starting the full-on
visioning process at the council level. We were, for sometime, like
deer in the headlights. We couldn’t decide even who should be on a
steering committee. Normally we have the whole world apply. And
finally I said, let’s just nominate two people. That broke the log
jam getting out of the gate. The people we appointed all worked well
together. They each brought their own sensibilities and particular
skill sets. Fred, one of my appointees, became the chair. It was a
real collegial collaborative effort and I think the town really got
engaged. This was happily a very serious and impactful process and
has already changed the debate in town about a lot of issues. Issues
like affordable housing, which is near and dear to my heart, weren’t
even on the radar screen before and now are.
Particularly pleasing to me is people are now really urging the
council, “Let’s get to the next stage.”
What unfinished business do you have?
There’s a whole bunch of stuff that I wish was more further down
the line. One of the things is the project along Third Street. The
city cobbled together a bunch of parcels, roughly between the bottom
of the Third Street hill and the water district. We had talked about
having three stand-alone projects that would share underground
parking: a senior center, a community center and a new community
clinic.
I thought this was a great opportunity. There’s a synergy among
those three uses. They are each important for the city. We may have
to revisit just how we are going to do these projects. We may have to
scale back some of our grander plans. But I’m confident there will
still be a community/senior center and some enhancement of the
community clinic facilities. I feel that’s a piece of unfinished
business.
But I’m prepared to walk away. The hard work has been done. I
would like to have done more in the realm of community development
and in the area of affordable housing. The other big issue I would
have liked to work on some more is how to manage the congestion
particular in the summer. To me that’s the No. 1 issue in town.
Do you feel like you’re leaving Laguna in good hands?
I would never cast asparagus on anybody. Yes. I think the city is
in better shape today than it was in 1994 when I got on the council.
There are several measures to that. When I got on the council the
list of lawsuits against the city looked like a bad Russian novel. We
spent an inordinate time in closed sessions trying to make these
things go away.
In fact, it became almost a joke. We would talk about stuff, then
finally we would look at the city manager and city attorney and say,
“Make it go away.” We had a potential $20-million judgment against us
on the Diamond Crestview lawsuit. We have far less exposure legally
and financially. Also we are in better shape on the infrastructure
fund.
People are rightly concerned and wanting to put everyone’s feet to
the fire at City Hall to get to absolutely no sewage spills and
better flood control, but the progress we have made has been
enormous. We very quickly, after ‘94, got to the point where we were
spending per year what councils in the 1970s and 1980s were spending
every decade on sewer upgrades, street paving, drainage. We added
cops, we added infrastructure investment and this city is in much
better shape in terms of its physical plan and at the same time we
continue to be optimistic about open space purchases and new projects
and new public parks like Browns Park.
So I think we are in better shape. We have problems like other
cities, but I think our problems are a good set of problems.
Certainly the big home run has been the Treasure Island project,
which has been so contentious and divisive. The outcome I think is a
first-class public park with first-class public art and a first-class
hotel.
Whom do you see as the top candidates for council this November?
Who do you think will be the heir apparent to Paul Freeman?
I’m not sure anybody would want to present themselves as the heir
apparent. I think the town is very, very lucky that there’s three
seats and four strong candidates. Strong both in terms of their
viability and strong in their capability to make a contribution on
the City Council. They each have different strengths and profiles.
The town isn’t going to fall apart as a function of which three of
those four win. I know three of the four better than I know Melissa
O’Neal. I know that Toni Iseman, Steve Dicterow and Elizabeth Pearson
all have a track record, all have made votes on difficult issues and
all have had to make trade offs. I think for each of those three, I
find reasons to be supportive and, based on their track record, they
would do a great job on the council. Melissa doesn’t have that track
record and consequently doesn’t have the baggage the other three do.
She did a good job facilitating some of the vision discussions and
the waste water advisory committee. But I’m not sure where she stands
on specific issues. The good news is we have four good candidates and
all four are viable.
My hope is instead of the absolutely asinine hit pieces and smear
tactics that have characterized Laguna Beach campaigns for nearly a
decade, I would hope the debate will be on the fine point of policy
and on the basis of experience or how people articulate their vision.
I am weary of the tactics. I would say a pox on all of the houses.
I’m basically an equal-opportunity hater of the organized interests
in our city. I think we’ve got to the point where it just sucks the
life out of you. To look at, to listen to, to read about the
venomous, stupid, baseless charges flying back and forth, I’m sick of
it. I think candidates who engage in that this year or who don’t try
to stop others, they do that at their peril.
This year people want to hear, what are you going to do? I’m very
hopeful that the taxpayers don’t hit Toni Iseman, who is a friend and
who I am supporting. I’m very hopeful that the Village Laguna
Democrats don’t hit Elizabeth Pearson, who is also a friend and I’m
supporting. I think the town would be better off if the town would
just focus on issues and capabilities and lay off all that stupid
negative stuff.
Are there more politics in your future?
I don’t know. When I was younger, I always assumed I would be in
the Senate representing Virginia. When I realized I wasn’t
independently wealthy, when I realized that I valued my personal time
and my pursuit of other interests, when I realized that my views as
basically a bleeding-heart capitalist alienated both sides of the
street pretty much in equal measure. I realized that only by making a
fetish of my own ambition that I could possibly have a chance.
I doubt it. If somehow Boxer or Feinstein got run over by a train
and Gray Davis called me and said would you like to fill out the
term, I’d love that. The best job on the planet is to be a member of
the United States Senate. But will I ever get there? I don’t think
so. I’m just not willing to do what it takes. I love politics. More
than that I love public policy. I’ve been approached to run for
different offices, but I would never run for the county or state
legislature. It’s not of interest to me.
What are you going to do with all of your free time?
I want to spend more time with my daughter. I want to spend more
time growing my consulting business. I have a business, it’s called
First Strategies. I have a great job working for the Segerstrom
family. I have several clients I enjoy working for. I’m helping the
Rancho Santiago Community College District. They have a $300 million
plus bond measure on the November ballot. They do an incredible job.
There’s more full-time students at Santa Ana College than at any UC
or Cal state campus.
I’m doing work for the Pacific Counsel on International Policy in
Los Angeles. So I have an interesting mix of institutional,
corporate, non-profit clients. I do fund-raising, public affairs
marketing. But I really hope to spend more time with my daughter. I
have a writing project. I’m obsessed with the Asian board game of Go.
It’s the oldest game in the world. And I’m a ranked amateur. I’m
really looking forward to having that time.
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