Council to directly choose planners
Deirdre Newman
The chaos that ensued when City Council members tried appointing
planning commissioners two years ago has resulted in a new process
that gives council members more power over their appointees, and has
opponents screaming cronyism.
On Monday, the council voted 4-1 to allow each council member to
appoint one person to each commission who will then serve at the
“pleasure” of that member. Councilman Chris Steel dissented.
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, who introduced the idea, said the
process simplifies what can be a complicated endeavor from the dais.
But some residents call a method with no oversight or veto authority
a blatant power grab.
“What that means is instead of having 15 people with independent
minds, you wind up with five three-headed beasts -- a councilperson
who can control absolutely what one planning commissioner and one
parks commissioner says, because if they don’t do it, they can turn
them loose,” resident Geoff West said. “They don’t need a reason.”
The council wanted to change the process because of the fiasco two
years ago when there were three new council members. Confusion
resulted as everyone made motions at the same time.
After determining the new process, council members instructed City
Manager Alan Roeder and City Atty. Tom Wood to draft the policy so
they can use it to select new commissioners at the Feb. 18 meeting.
Steel said he thinks the process smacks of favoritism.
“The person put on [the commission] is going to vote the way [the
council member] wants him or her to vote and I don’t think it should
be that way,” Steel said. There are 17 candidates for the Planning
Commission, including all five incumbents, and six applicants for the
Parks and Recreation Commission, including three incumbents.
Planning Commissioner Bill Perkins said the process could have
negative repercussions.
“It’s not a bad idea per se, but the implementation and
implications are pretty scary,” Perkins said. “It causes a lot of
hard feelings and makes it very political.”
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