Committees and commissions
Running a city is complicated. There are so many priorities, so many
points of view and so little money.
What to do when a controversial issue arises and the decision has
potentially long-term affects on many people?
Well, if you’re in Laguna, you’d create a task force, of course.
Or a committee, which will do just as well. Sometimes, there’s even a
committee ready to go when a problem arises.
The first place to turn is the City Council, the Planning
Commission or the Design Review Board.
But subgroups provide even more learned advice. We have the
Traffic and Circulation Committee, the Affordable Housing Committee
and the Recreation Committee. We’ve had a Water Quality Advisory
Board and the Vision Laguna Steering Committee and the Village
Entrance Task Force.
Most recently, we’ve added the Design Review Task Force -- to
review the design review process. Make sense?
And when we don’t get a new task force, we get a new study -- how
many studies have been done on the Village Entrance, Act V and
traffic Downtown?
The Downtown Specific Plan Area Traffic and Parking Study will now
focus on how long it takes to make it through an intersection.
Now, as we’ve seen with the Village Entrance studies, much
inspection and speculation can be completed without much action.
Sometimes it seems these groups are put together to appease
residents, sometimes with genuinely good intentions. But when it
comes time to make the final decision, the same split among residents
that forced the creation of a new committee is in play. And a
decision often is just as lacking.
Fortunately, the task forces and committees are typically made up
of hard-working, intelligent residents and result in suggestions that
are feasible and sometimes adopted. But too often, a few years after
one study has been completed, another is suggested for the same
problem.
It’s not just the issue of the Village Entrance. We have the
example of Aliso Creek restoration and the skateboard park and a
congested Downtown.
If we have to have all these studies and committees, let’s make
sure to use them properly. Studies and committees cost quite a bit of
money, so let’s not create them unless we’re going to be willing to
listen to them and act on what they say. It’s a waste of
participants’ and members’ time, the city’s time and residents’ time
when recommendations are graciously received and then filed away into
the abyss.
Maybe the city can form a committee to address the problem.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.