Here’s four for the future
Experience and steady hands.
That’s what the Huntington Beach City Council needs in the four of
seven seats that are up for reelection this Tuesday.
That’s why we recommend punching the ballot in favor of Dave
Sullivan, Cathy Green, Keith Bohr and Jill Hardy.
Let’s start with Sullivan.
The former two-term councilman, who also served as mayor, was
alternately one of the most popular and most vilified elected
officials in the city’s history.
Sullivan is popular with citizen groups, which trust him to hold
city leaders accountable when it comes to budgeting and taxpayer’s
dollars. He fought long and hard against the practice of salary
spiking by public employees, a scheme in which vacation pay, auto
allowance and other benefits are lumped into an employee’s final year
as a way to boost retirement pay, at the taxpayer’s expense.
He is also popular with environmentalists, who give him credit for
being a leader on the landmark Measure C initiative that requires any
development of park and beach lands to go before a citywide vote. And
of course, he is most known for his fierce opposition to the
development of the Bolsa Chica.
On the other side of the fence, Sullivan is no darling of the
police officers and firefighters in town. Their main complaint
against him has been his tough stand on salary negotiations.
While we fully support a strong and well-paid police and fire
force, we believe there has to be a balance between rising salary
costs and the city budget. Sullivan is the right person to keep that
balance.
Next is Cathy Green. Her political pedigree as the wife of
longtime councilman Peter Green cannot be ignored.
But her experience in the community she has called home for 32
years goes well beyond that. A registered nurse with a law degree,
she is a founding member of the Amigos de Bolsa Chica, a one-time
Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce Citizen of the Year and a board
member for numerous local organizations. She has a firm grasp of the
biggest issues facing this town and would bring both experience and
even handedness to the council
Keith Bohr offers a different kind of experience. He worked inside
City Hall in the economic development department years ago and knows
how it works.
In some cases, we would worry about a conflict, but Bohr hasn’t
worked for the city in seven years and should be far removed from any
projects or developments he may have worked on.
Instead, we believe he has a firm grasp of the issues Huntington
Beach residents care about: water quality, the acquisition of Bolsa
Chica mesa and the question of cutting down City Council districts.
Bohr is the right man to help guide the city down the next four
years.
Finally we come to Jill Hardy.
At the age of 31, she already has a resume that includes a stint
as a planning commissioner and as a leader of Huntington Beach
Tomorrow and the Bolsa Chica Land Trust. We like her stands on water
quality, districting and purchasing the mesa.
Hardy will be a good fit for the next four years.
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