Council unity will be key to success
- Share via
Jose Paul Corona
Four new City Council members will soon take seats at the dais.
And while some are lock-step in their vision for the city, the
truth is political and ideological differences will most likely need
to be set aside in the coming months and years for some of the
biggest issues to get resolved.
For example, while campaigning, the four listed the city’s
projected budget shortfall as their No. 1 priority.
“I think what is necessary is to get the budget under control,”
Councilman- elect Dave Sullivan said. “Times are going to be really
tough, and that reality needs to set in.”
But fresh off of her election day victory, Cathy Green says that
isn’t her biggest concern now.
“My biggest thing is to work at becoming a team,” she said.
It isn’t something that should be hard to do with the city’s
impending financial crisis, she said -- crisis is something that
tends to bring people together.
While Sullivan and Gil Coerper are expected to butt heads over
employee salaries and benefits -- which they hold opposite views on
-- they will need to agree on a budget next year and ultimately come
to an agreement on that very issue.
“On [the city employees benefit] issue we certainly have
disagreements,” Sullivan said. “[But] you can have differences on
specific issues without being disagreeable, and I think that’s the
way it’s going to be.”
While Sullivan is passionate about labor issues, he’ll have to
work with the rest of the council, said outgoing Councilwoman Shirley
Dettloff.
“Dave is going to have to put forth his beliefs, but at the end of
the day, the entire council will vote,” she said.
While Green knows that she and Sullivan might not agree on all of
the issues, she is confident that they will work well together. While
he was criticizing city staff he was also being very complimentary,
she said.
The above-board campaign was cordial and friendly, Green said. She
believes that the council will work well together.
“I tend to think we’ll work together more than we’ll pull apart,”
she said. “I don’t think people will have any idea of how bad things
are going to get.”
All of the differences of opinion will make for interesting
council meetings, Dettloff feels that the new council will do a fine
job.
“At the end of the day, when you have people that are committed,
you’ll get a council that will work well together,” Dettloff said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.