Candidate targeted in phone poll
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Lolita Harper
A political phone survey spotlighting Planning Commission
Chairwoman Katrina Foley’s party affiliation and occupation has
raised the ire of her supporters, who call the strategy unscrupulous.
The survey of 300 Costa Mesa voters sponsored by the Rental
Housing Independent, based in Garden Grove, asked people if they were
aware that Foley, who is running for a seat on the City Council, was
a registered Democrat and an attorney. The poll also asked if they
knew she was “against people remodeling their homes.”
Results of the poll were delivered to Councilman Gary Monahan and
Planning Commissioner Bill Perkins, also candidates for the City
Council. Both said they reported the results as “in-kind
contributions” on their latest campaign finance statements, but
stressed they had not commissioned the poll.
Mesa del Mar resident Nadine Andreen, who received the phone call
last week, said the survey appalled her.
“I can’t ever remember this kind of dirty politics,” Andreen said,
adding that city elections are supposed to be about issues, not party
politics.
Foley said she was disappointed by the partisan tactics and
outright lies about her views, but was not going to let it distract
her.
“I find it unfortunate that partisan politics are infecting the
race, but I am glad that they are phone banking on my behalf and
getting my name out there,” Foley said.
Foley organized her own phone bank campaign on Thursday to counter
the “false messages” that are being spread about her -- specifically
the skewed message about her views on home remodeling.
Matt Petteruto, the director of public affairs for Rental Housing
Independent, said the poll was done to gauge Foley’s chances of
winning a seat on the dais.
Foley’s push for a citywide substandard housing program worries
the members of his organization, he said.
Although the details of such a program have not been finalized or
even announced during a public meeting, Petteruto said he
“understood” the proposed program would create unnecessary fees for
Costa Mesa apartment owners.
Members of the Rental Housing Independent also felt slighted that
Foley pushed a substandard housing program without asking for input
from apartment owners, he said.
“Our main concern was that if we weren’t contacted in the initial
stages of this, would our concerns be listened to should this go to
the City Council and should Ms. Foley be elected to it,” Petteruto
said.
Perkins was not a subject of the phone poll because Foley was
considered to be the driving force behind it, Petteruto said.
The poll does not indicate that apartment owners are not in favor
of a program to eradicate substandard housing, he said. The Apartment
Assn. of Orange County, the parent organization of the Rental Housing
Independent, helped create the Santa Ana-based substandard housing
program that the Planning Commission’s proposal is modeled after.
Still, questions from the phone survey did not focus on rental or
substandard housing; instead they concentrated on Foley’s voting
party, her alleged views on home remodeling and her profession.
Petteruto said his organization was trying to gauge whether voters
were aware of who was backing her and where she stood on city issues,
adding that it is important that voters know what organizations a
candidate is aligned with.
Pollster Adam Probolsky, who conducted the phone survey, agreed.
“The reality is that voters look to find people that they agree
with in general terms,” Probolsky said. “Often times in local races
you don’t know where people are on exact issues, so you look to their
party registration as a compass.”
Probolsky added that it was “very healthy” to give voters party
information and that the poll serves as a helpful tool.
The two candidates who inadvertently benefited from that tool,
Monahan and Perkins, received results of the phone survey to use in
their campaigns.
Monahan said he was faxed a letter that claimed the poll was done
on his behalf, along with the results of the survey.
“I had nothing to do with the poll, I was just a recipient of the
information, as was Bill,” Monahan said. “By the time I knew about
it, it had already been done.”
Perkins said he had been unaware of the survey but said voters
should know a candidate’s party affiliation. He argues that local
politicians have more of an immediate affect on their electorate, and
if a party is relevant on a larger scale, it should be relevant on
the smaller scene also.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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