City Council meetings: must-see TV
OK, those of you out there who do not subscribe to Comcast Cable,
drop what you’re doing, pick up the phone and call them right now.
No, not so you can get HBO, although “The Sopranos” and “Deadwood”
are worth the price. You need to get cable so you can pick up channel
24 and watch the best show on TV this summer -- the never-ending
drama of the Costa Mesa City Council Meetings.
Perhaps the best recent example of this soap opera were the
deliberations on the 2004-05 budget last Monday night. This one was
worth the price of a cable connection alone.
Those of us who hung in there until after 11 p.m. were treated to
the first split vote on the adoption of a budget in recent memory,
when Mayor Pro Tem Allan Mansoor and Councilman Chris Steel voted
“no” -- one of the few times that night they agreed on something.
This inexplicable display of pique and disunity was preceded by
Mansoor and Steel having a little running spat on the dais. I
half-expected them to begin throwing spit wads at each other, so
juvenile was the display between them.
What a team.
It’s hard for me to understand -- after all the meetings and study
sessions and with the mountain of data provided by Finance Director
Marc Puckett and his staff -- how this crew could still have so much
difficulty addressing those items before them without resorting to
such junior-high-school behavior.
Of course, it is an election year and it is possible that Steel
might actually try to retain his seat in November. I guess some
sniping is to be expected, particularly since he’s proven to be such
an unpredictable and unreliable ally for Mansoor and his other
Westside pals. The term “loose cannon” comes to mind
One of the few bright moments during this show came near the end,
in the council-member comments section, when Councilman Mike Scheafer
admonished himself and his fellow council members and urged the
council to do a better job avoiding the expenditure of staff time and
energy on frivolous appeals of Planning Commission decisions, using
the appeal Steel had brought forward regarding the St. Joachim
Catholic Church expansion as an example.
While I agree with Scheafer on this issue in general, had it been
followed in the 1901 Newport debacle, we would now be staring at an
even larger and even more inappropriate development at that location
than the one recently approved.
Maybe it’s time to consider requiring two council members to
approve submission of an appeal. Or, maybe it’s time for
consideration of a change in the ordinance governing appeals -- to
raise the fee for an appeal to more fully cover the costs, but
provide for a full or partial refund of the fees charged in the event
it is upheld.
In the meantime, the drama on the dais continues.
So, as homework for you voters out there, I hereby give you the
assignment of watching future City Council, Planning Commission and
Parks and Recreation Commission meetings until November, either in
person or on channel 24, so you can see many of our potential council
candidates in action.
There will be a test this fall. It’s called an election. Besides,
it certainly beats anything else on TV this summer -- except, maybe,
the Olympic Games in August.
GEOFF WEST
Costa Mesa
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