WHAT HAPPENED: By a narrow margin, the...
WHAT HAPPENED:
By a narrow margin, the City Council voted to lower the value of
gifts that elected or appointed officials can accept from any single
source in the course of a year from $340 to $150.
WHAT IT MEANS:
At a June 2 meeting, the City Council asked the city attorney to
prepare documents to make the city’s code of ethics consistent with
state law, which prohibits the acceptance of gifts exceeding $340.
At last night’s meeting, council members Dave Sullivan, Jill
Hardy, Debbie Cook and Pam Julien Houchen said they felt $340 was too
high.
In was like an auction in the council chambers, with members
tossing seemingly arbitrary numbers back and forth.
Houchen supported $250, Cook supported $50, and Sullivan supported
$100. In the end, a limit of $150 was approved by a narrow margin,
with Cook, Green and Houchen opposed.
Council members and any other elected or appointed officials are
now forbidden by law to accept gifts exceeding $150 in value from a
single source in the course of a year.
WHAT HAPPENED:
City Administrator Ray Silver appointed Duane Olson to the
position of fire chief, and the council unanimously approved him for
the job.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Acting fire chief since January, Duane Olson officially takes the
top spot in the department.
He began his career in Huntington Beach in 1970 as a lifeguard in
the city’s marine safety division. In 1974, he started working as a
firefighter. Since, he has served as a fire fighter paramedic, fire
protection specialist, fire captain, deputy fire marshal, battalion
chief and division chief.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The City Council denied a resident’s request for a variance to
city codes that would allow him to add a third story to his
Huntington Harbour home.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Neighbors were pitted against neighbors in a debate on whether
Huntington resident Allen Todd should be allowed to build a third
story in an area that is zoned as low density. The coastal
development permit for the project was approved by the Planning
Commission on May 13, which recommended the City Council approve the
request arguing that the addition would be compatible with the
surrounding neighborhood.
A handful of Huntington Harbour residents asked that the council
help preserve their low-density neighborhoods and argued that
granting Todd a variance to exceed the code limits would be giving
him special privilege denied to other property owners.
Variances are only given under strict circumstances, Councilwoman
Debbie Cook said, and Todd’s conditions do not warrant a variance.
The council voted 6 to 1 to deny the coastal development permit.
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