Paul Clinton Outspoken Councilwoman Debbie Cook didn’t...
Paul Clinton
Outspoken Councilwoman Debbie Cook didn’t shy away from
controversy during her year as Surf City’s mayor.
Whether she was spearheading a bid to abolish prayer before
council meetings, pushing county sanitation officials to step up
treatment of their waste to cut down on beach closures or opposing
redevelopment for the southeastern section of the city, Cook took
stances in 2002 that often put her at odds with conventional
thinkers.
“[An effective city leader] certainly is someone who is willing to
go out on a limb,” Cook said. “And you’ve certainly got to be well
versed in regional issues.”
Colleagues praise Cook for her candor, intelligence and commitment
to civic service.
Former Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff, who left the council Dec. 2,
said Cook should be proud of her mayoral tenure.
“She served the city with dignity,” Dettloff said. “Overall, as
mayor, she did a fine job.”
After only a year on the council -- she was elected in November of
2000 -- Cook took over as mayor of Surf City. Her first order of
business: abolish the invocation that led off council sessions.
The move made her a lightning rod, but Cook, whose activism
brought her into the public realm in the early 1990s with the Measure
C campaign, said she saw the invocation as government sanctioning
prayer.
“I was willing to take the heat for it,” Cook said. “How can [an
invocation] possibly be constitutional? What it amounts to is
state-sponsored religion.”
Appropriately, Cook was also in the city’s top post when disgraced
former Mayor Dave Garofalo admitted his guilt in the Orange County
district attorney’s conflict of interest probe.
It was Cook who, in early 2000, filed the complaint that sparked
the investigation into Garofalo’s practices.
“It was fitting, because I worked so hard to bring this to light,”
Cook said. “It was ironic that I was mayor at the time.”
Cook also stirred the pot when she opposed the City Council’s
decision to name Grace Winchell, retired former mayor and
councilwoman, to the dais, opting for perennial city attorney
candidate -- and former Independent columnist -- Ron Davis.
Pro-airport activists who gave a presentation at a City Council
meeting in February got more than they bargained for, too, when Cook
blasted Orange County’s plans for an El Toro Airport.
Calling claims that the airport would be an engine for economic
growth “pie in the sky,” Cook said she preferred a mass-transit
system.
Cook became one of the few North County mayors to oppose an
airport at the former base, breaking ranks with her pro-airport
colleagues in Newport Beach. Oddly enough, Cook grew up in Newport
Beach, under the flight path of John Wayne Airport.
During the summer months, Cook, her council colleagues and a band
of tenacious activists began speaking out against the Orange County
Sanitation District’s sewage treatment practices.
As the activists traveled from city to city putting on
presentations, Cook echoed their views about the need for the
district to step up treatment of the 243-million gallons of waste
released via an outfall pipe each day.
Cook, a member of the district’s board, and other Surf City
leaders maintained the outfall waste was causing the repeated
outbreaks of bacteria in the surf zone.
The issue came to a head July 17 when the district voted to shift
to the higher treatment and drop a controversial federal waiver.
As a result, Cook now enjoys the support of environmental groups
who have been lobbying Sen. John Burton (D-San Francisco) to name her
as Dettloff’s replacement to the California Coastal Commission.
A graduate of Cal State Long Beach, the 48-year-old Cook gave up a
career as an environmental attorney when she ran for council in 2000.
Cook cast one of two City Council votes opposing redevelopment for
southeast Huntington Beach, calling it “a wash” financially, and cast
the sole dissenting vote in the council’s August decision to table an
initiative that would have allowed residents to vote on a
redistricting plan.
Over the past few months, some residents have found fault with
Cook’s approach.
In a Nov. 21 letter to the editor, Kevin Carlin criticized “Cook’s
patronizing, condescending form of governance.” A week later, Elinor
Mattson said the new City Council should address “Debbie Cook’s
supercilious attitude.”
Cook brushes off the criticism, saying she isn’t worried about her
popularity in town.
“I am who I am,” Cook said. “Some people want [elected officials]
to take polls before they vote. ... I’m not pablum. If they want
pablum, I’m sure they didn’t vote for me.”
* PAUL CLINTON is a reporter with Times Community News. He
covers City Hall and education. He may be reached at (714) 965-7173
or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.