Ron Winship: Auditioning for one or more public roles
- Share via
Deirdre Newman
As an actor, Newport Beach resident Ron Winship has played a
variety of roles. This fall, he is auditioning for three -- Newport
Beach City Councilman, Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustee
and Director of the Municipal Water District of Orange County,
Division 5.
Winship, currently an Internet news producer, says his quest for
the trio of positions is based on his belief that no credible leaders
are running for them. If victorious in all the races, he says he has
the time and energy to serve in all three capacities.
Juggling various interests is nothing new to Winship, 60, who
studied an eclectic range of topics at three different colleges --
international relations at USC, newswriting at the University of
Hawaii and philosophy at Orange Coast College.
His professional experience is diverse as well -- he has worked as
a missile repairman for North American Aviation, as an actor and,
these days, operates a new media/Internet news TV company with his
wife, Anna, called Parker-Longbow productions -- named after the last
names of the characters from their favorite movie, “Butch Cassidy and
the Sundance Kid.”
The company is currently involved with five different Web sites
ranging from a news talk show to a comedy show on health care.
Winship considers Anna such a vital part of his election campaigns
that he often refers to himself as “us” in his position papers and in
conversation.
For the City Council position, Winship is running against
incumbent Gary Adams and Greenlight candidate Richard Taylor. He said
he decided to toss his hat into the ring because he felt the other
contenders lacked a clear vision for the city’s future.
“Our vision is that now the city needs a sense of propriety and
veracity in all levels,” Winship said. “We’re coming into tough
financial times so we have to do serious cutbacks and be efficient.”
Winship said the concept of revitalization and redevelopment is
anathema to him and will work toward ensuring that the general plan
amendment protects residents from “overdevelopment and stupidity.”
“If I’m elected, I will put [the council’s] feet to the fire to
make sure [it] is not building giant buildings seven to 10 years
out,” Winship said.
While he says his campaign is entirely self-funded, he jokingly
passes out novelty million-dollar bills with his picture on them for
publicity.
Winship was inspired to run for the school board because he said
he feels incumbent Serene Stokes does not represent the people in her
area.
“Stokes is a stalwart on the school board for teachers, for the
board and for the administration and not for the community and
children and parents,” Winship said. Ed Loyd is also running for
Stokes’ seat.
He says his election would also restore parent confidence in the
system that was eroded when Jim Ferryman was convicted of driving
under the influence and did not voluntarily step down.
“I was totally outraged by Ferryman, mainly that other school
board members did not censure him,” Winship said. “I would have liked
to see him have the common courtesy to resign. You’re not just
serving yourself [on the board], but serving the reputation of the
community and the board.”
Winship said more outreach to parents to ensure teacher
accountability is needed and recommends that parents fill out teacher
evaluations every semester or quarter.
“There needs to be input to the district so there’s a third party
[parents] can go to,” Winship said. “We won’t get the complete story,
but we’ll get more information than we would have had if we did not
ask.”
Winship said he is most closely aligned to current board member
Wendy Leece in terms of possessing an independent attitude.
“I’m willing to ask the tough questions that need to be asked and
not just do the nodding dog in the window thing for the
administration,” Winship said.
The Municipal Water District seat is appealing to Winship because
of the significant water-related challenges confronting the county.
“[The district] needs real strong oversight so people understand
the water supply is safe and that takes a lot of effort,” Winship
said.
One of the critical issues is dealing with the Irvine Water
District, Winship said.
“The Irvine Water District wants to dump reclaimed water down
Santiago Creek,” Winship said. “Between water intrusions being broken
down on both sides and dumping reclaimed water next to wells, [the
district] is not being very cautious or caring.”
He also suggests that all new large commercial developments
provide their own water reclamation facilities and the district could
then offer any available “overages,” when conditions allow, at a
reduced price. For this position, Winship is running against
incumbent Wayne Clark and Reginald Thatcher.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.