Council should be careful when throwing stones
Gil Ferguson
As one who has been involved in politics, including the hardball
variety, for a very long time, I’d respectfully advise our Newport
Beach city councilmen to let this matter regarding their colleague
Dick Nichols slide. Based on the obvious dislike some of them have
for him and the tough report with which the city attorney (their
employee) will provide them, I’m sure they will be tempted to
politically harpoon Nichols. Don’t. Don’t do anything foolish. That’s
a very politically slippery slope you are about to step out on. And
one of the basic truisms of politics is: What goes around, comes
around.
Most politicians can do the political talk and spin long before
they enter office. Some learn how to talk and say little and how to
be nasty while talking nice only after serving a few years. Some,
like Dick Nichols, can’t seem to ever get the hang of it and never
will. That kind of ineptness seems most often to accompany honest men
who have spent much of their lives, mono y mono, on the field of
sports.
Local zoning laws and the power over land use and development, is
by far the single greatest source of political corruption in America.
Every day of the year, councilmen, planning commissioners and
bureaucrats, subjectively and often illegally, apply laws to people
seeking to build or remodel. Their decisions are often so illogical
and subjective that the average citizen is left to wonder, why? Why
did they decide to do it this way this time and not the way they did
it last time? If the observers are sophisticated in politics, they
know the myriad of reasons, from honest attempts to deal with each
project, to show favoritism based on friendship, politics or rewards
of one kind or another. To an unsophisticated, blunt talking, Dick
Nichols-type of guy, he can only think, there must be some kind of
“pay off” for the inconsistent and unreasonable decisions of a
planning commission; unfortunately he said it out loud.
If the council moves to satisfy their thinly disguised dislike of
Nichols, they will be inviting the media to join in their favorite
blood sport of piling on. They will also be inviting the interest of
the ACLU and Pacific Legal, public interest-type lawsuits. More
likely, new interest will be focused on where exactly did all that
public money go that was given to fight for an airport at El Toro or
why did the city allow Newport Coast Road, which the city demanded be
built free for the public, to be turned into part of the toll road;
once again filling our city with coastal traffic.
The honest and ethical way for them to satisfy their desire to
hurt Nichols is to defeat him in the next election. Meanwhile, they
and the public are going to have to get used to a blunt talking,
rather odd, nonpolitical politician.
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Gil Ferguson is a Newport Beach resident and
former assemblyman.
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