Katrina Foley: Promoting responsible government
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Lolita Harper
Katrina Foley believes city leadership can be summed up with three
Rs: rational, reasonable and responsible.
Foley, who is the chairwoman of the city’s Planning Commission,
said she embodies those traits and will incorporate them to bring
innovative direction and compromise to city government.
“I think that I am the proactive, committed, innovative type of
leader who can bring the consensus that this city needs,” Foley said.
While leading the Planning Commission, Foley has been able to
obtain an overwhelming majority of unanimous votes on a wide variety
of developments, programs and recommendations to the council. That
she is able to find common ground with her fellow commissioners, who
may hold vastly different views in terms of property rights, speaks
highly of her willingness to see all sides of an issue, Foley said.
“We really work hard together,” Foley said of the Planning
Commission. “[A vote of] 5 to 0 sends a strong message that this is a
good development, a good program or not a good idea.”
Foley’s commitment to taking all sides of an issue into account is
invaluable in a city as diverse as Costa Mesa, she said. The city has
an eclectic mix of homeowners, renters, longtime residents, new
families and various ethnicities who, while seemingly different on
the surface, all want the same thing for the city: high quality of
life.
“Everyone wants a city with good education, safe, clean streets
and nice neighborhoods,” Foley said. “We have got to find a way where
we can all talk to each other and figure out ways to find a
compromise to reach those goals.”
Foley said it is incumbent upon city leaders to manage public
resources, such as streets and public safety, in a way that does not
increase divisiveness in the city. Deteriorating streets, lack of
lighting, landscaping and police presence in one area creates an
environment that pits residents against one another, Foley said.
The council’s current trend of promoting improvements in spot
areas, while ignoring other portions of the city, has contributed to
a fragmented community. Costa Mesa is currently suffering from a
failure to establish a comprehensive road map for the entire city,
Foley said.
Costa Mesa is an intricate tapestry, made up of several key
components that are all necessary for its success, she added. It is
impossible to focus on only one piece of the puzzle without figuring
out where it fits in the entire picture.
Foley wants to design and implement a diagram that encompasses
operational and economic development and capital improvements for the
city’s long-term success.
“We have to have a road map, or an outline -- some way for us to
set goals and have a measure of success,” Foley said. “It is time to
stop just planning for today and start thinking about where our city
is headed 20 and 50 years from now.”
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