Council picks turn up several surprises
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Deirdre Newman
Three incumbents, a Westside improver and an unknown have been
appointed to the next Planning Commission.
On Tuesday, the City Council made its first selections for the
city’s commissions using the new individual appointment process it
chose Feb. 3.
Joel Faris, who ran for City Council in 2000, and Dennis DeMaio, a
lieutenant with the Orange County Sheriff’s Department, will join
incumbents Katrina Foley, Bill Perkins and Bruce Garlich on the new
Planning Commission. Absent from the commission after 22 years is
veteran Walt Davenport.
Other surprises were the appointments of Byron de Arakal and Wendy
Leece to the Parks and Recreation Commission. They will join
incumbents Mark Harris and Kelly Feldman and new commissioner Jim
Fisler, a 30-year Costa Mesa resident and former City Council
candidate.
A NEW PROCESS
Earlier in the evening, the council members reaffirmed their
decision to individually appoint commissioners to serve at their
pleasure and decided to require a four-fifths vote of the council to
remove them.
Mayor Karen Robinson and Councilman Chris Steel dissented.
Robinson preferred a process that would require a three-fifths vote
to approve the appointments and four-fifths vote to remove the
commissioners. Steel, meanwhile, said he believes the process
“sacrifices diversity for the sake of expediency.”
While the majority of the council continued to insist that the
process would maintain a sense of independence on the commissions,
the decision continued to evoke charges of cronyism.
‘I’m disappointed,” former Mayor Sandra Genis said. “I think it’s
sowing the seeds of corruption for the future. I’d like the
commissioners to focus on their area of expertise as opposed to
politics.”
PLANNING COMMISSIONERS
Steel appointed DeMaio sight unseen, based on his resume and a
phone interview, Steel said. DeMaio has extensive experience in law
enforcement, dating back to 1973, and serves the sheriff’s department
as the police chief of Villa Park. He also shares collegiate ties to
Steel, having attended the University of Pittsburgh, which Steel and
his parents attended.
“He’s the most qualified in regards of everything -- his
experience in life, his background, his integrity,” Steel said.
DeMaio, who moved to Costa Mesa 17 years ago from Pittsburgh, said
he looks forward to contributing to his community.
Faris, whom Councilman Allan Mansoor appointed to the Planning
Commission, said he has no plans to run for City Council again at
this time. His goals for the Planning Commission include trying to
prevent what he considers past planning mistakes like putting
industry next to residential areas and “that outside interests do not
run roughshod over Costa Mesa residents.”
PARKS AND RECREATION COMMISSIONERS
Councilman Gary Monahan appointed de Arakal, a former Daily Pilot
columnist now working for the Irvine Co. De Arakal said he was
interested in the Parks and Recreation Commission because his four
school-age children are active in youth sports. He also expressed a
desire to put his imprimatur on some of the major issues the
commission will work on in the next few years, such as the Fairview
Park Master Plan.
“People might think that Parks and Recreation is a marginal
organization that doesn’t do much, but from my perspective, it will
be a commission that will do some very important work in the next few
years,” de Arakal said. “I have a big interest in making sure the
Fairview Park Master Plan stays on track.”
De Arakal, who has known Monahan for about two-and-a-half years,
said he doesn’t feel beholden to the councilman for appointing him.
“I understand the people who had some reservations about the
process,” de Arakal said. “Gary knows me very well and he knows I’m
not beholden to anybody.”
Leece, appointed by Mansoor, served on the Newport-Mesa Unified
School Board for eight years and was often a lightening rod of
criticism for her conservative views.
RESIDENTIAL REACTION
The council decided that the public should comment on the
appointments before they announced them, causing ripples of
incredulity throughout the audience members who remained at 12:30
a.m.
“This is unbelievable,” Doug Sutton bellowed. “Why not at least
explain your reasoning so we can make valid comments?”
Monahan said he didn’t want an occasion that paid tribute to the
new commissioners to devolve into a mudslinging event.
“To give a forum to someone to blast their personal vendetta
against [an appointed commissioner] would have been very
inappropriate,” Monahan said. “Instead of being an honor bestowed, it
would have [been] somebody blasting that particular person as being
unqualified and God knows what else.”
Genis said it was too early to tell if the new process of
individual appointments would make the commissions more of a stepping
stone to get to the City Council than in the past.
“It depends on the council member,” Genis said. “On the one hand,
it could be a chance for someone to groom their successor, because we
do have term limits,” Genis said. “But it could also be the plum you
give someone to keep them from running for council when you don’t
want them to.”
The new commissioners will officially begin March 1, Monahan said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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