Committee members appointed
Andrew Edwards
City Council appointments to city committees returned several
incumbents to their posts and added a few new faces to the advisory
bodies.
Only one incumbent was not reappointed. As a result of the
council’s vote on Feb. 10, three-term member Jay Laessi will not
return to his post with the Parking, Traffic and Circulation
Committee.
Applicants vied for two-year terms by submitting personal
statements and resumes to the council. At the meeting, candidates
gave short presentations on their qualifications before city leaders.
The council appointed Carolyn Wood to another term on the body,
and named attorney Tim Dillon, consultant Dennis Meyers and engineer
Neil Katz to the committee. Dillon and Meyers are newcomers, and Katz
served an abbreviated term from October 2002 through February 2003.
After the vote, Katz said he wants to represent all Lagunans’
traffic concerns.
“[My] plan is to accept the input from the totality of the
people,” he said.
The Open Space Committee will receive two new members as a result
of the council’s decision. Landscape architect Bob Borthwick and
Robert Masterson, a retired consulting geologist were voted to join
the committee. Masterson’s application was approved after a
tiebreaker vote between him and retired real estate broker Michael
Hoag.
Masterson is a relative newcomer to Laguna Beach, having moved to
the city 15 months ago. In his application for the position, he wrote
that he would try to preserve the city’s image, and at the same time
take a pragmatic approach to development and improvements.
The council also decided to retain committee members Catharine
Cooper and Leslie LeBon.
The Telecommunications Committee was the only other board to which
the council appointed someone who was not an incumbent. Former member
Diane Leemon was named to a one-year term to fill a vacancy left by
Arlene Shevitski, who resigned from the committee.
Current members Ryan Caenn, Warren Finley, Paul Manfrini and Alan
Ring were returned to their posts. All applicants for the
Telecommunications Committee were given a slot on the board.
For the Heritage Committee, the council kept Tamara Campbell,
Steve Fairbanks, Anne Frank and Jon Madison in their old jobs.
In his presentation to the council, Fairbanks said the committee
members worked well together.
“This past year our committee really clicked, we’ve really been in
sync,” he said.
Though the council turned away challenger Charles Williams’
candidacy, the incumbents did not run away with the contest.
“It was close,” City Clerk Verna Rollinger said after counting the
council’s votes.
After the appointments, two committees had vacancies. The Housing
and Human Affairs Committee has one opening, and two open spaces
remain on the Recreation Committee.
The council reappointed current members to both of these groups.
Colin Henderson and Jerry Nielson were approved to remain with the
housing committee and JoAnn Moothart is slated to serve another two
years with the Recreation Committee.
After the appointments, Mayor Cheryl Kinsman suggested that
candidates whose applicants had not been accepted Tuesday apply to
fill the vacancies.
“Those of you who were not appointed to the committee of your
first choice, we encourage you to reapply,” she said.
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