Gary Monahan: Fighting for the live-and-let-live attitude
Lolita Harper
Gary Monahan never gets a break from his involvement with the
city.
As a local business owner, he deals with City Hall for various
licenses and regulations. As a homeowner and father of a growing
family, he will soon be going through the laborious process of
remodeling his home.
And every other Monday the incumbent councilman is on the dais at
City Hall making the decisions that affect his fellow entrepreneurs,
homeowners and neighbors.
“I deal with bureaucracy at every level possible, so it is really
personal to me to make sure that we treat people with respect and
work for them, not against them,” Monahan said.
Early in the campaign season, Monahan considered hanging up his
political hat but decided against it because of his desire to return
Costa Mesa to the friendly, live-and let-live environment it is known
for.
The city has gotten away from what makes it Costa Mesa, thanks to
the large push from a vocal minority that wants to turn it into a
planned community, Monahan said.
“Pretty planning documents don’t fit Costa Mesa, and they squeeze
too many of our longtime citizens and new families right out of the
ability to live here,” he said.
City Hall needs to recognize that, aside from unparalleled
retailers such as South Coast Plaza, small business and industrial
companies are the backbone of the city, Monahan said. The council
needs to work with local entrepreneurs to help them solve their
problems and accomplish their goals instead of regulating them right
out of business, he said.
“We need to have an attitude that supports growth, not one that
places 75 conditions on every small chain,” he said. “We need to use
common sense.”
City leaders have gotten into the bad habit of micro-managing
instead of looking at the whole picture, Monahan said, noting that
every decision that local officials make touches a very personal
aspect of someone’s life.
It has become much too easy to deny something, to place added
conditions on a project or to make a political statement that results
in a huge financial burden to the applicant, he said.
Monahan says voters can trust him to be straightforward and
consistent in his beliefs. If he believes in something he will not
waffle in the face of adverse public opinion or an editorial, he
said. Although he is committed to his views, Monahan does not lose
the ability to reason and compromise. He can keep his position on an
issue while working with the other side to accomplish a common goal,
he said.
“I understand the whole picture and where to go to get answers and
how to treat both sides of an issue with respect,” Monahan said.
“Instead of telling people, ‘you can’t, you can’t,’ we should be
working with them to find a way that they can.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.