Candidates running under the radar
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Alicia Robinson
They are the elected offices people don’t usually pay much attention
to -- that is, until funny-tasting water comes out of the faucet, or
the toilet won’t flush.
In November, 15 people will seek directors’ seats on boards that
control how the water tastes and where the waste goes. You might not
know who the board members are, but you probably know their work.
“If we’re doing a good job, we’re off the radar screen,” said John
Withers, who has served on the Irvine Ranch Water District Board for
15 years and is seeking another term in November. “We are still
nonetheless involved in a very important and fundamental area.”
The boards are made up of elected members who control the budgets
and are served by staff members of their respective agencies.
How the water agencies work can be confusing to the casual
observer. If they were placed on an organizational chart, at the top
would be the Orange County Water District, which maintains the
county’s aquifer, and the Municipal Water District of Orange County,
which provides residents with any drinking water that doesn’t come
from the aquifer.
Those agencies provide water to some Newport-Mesa residents as
well as other water agencies, including the Irvine Ranch Water
District and the Mesa Consolidated Water District. The Irvine Ranch
and Mesa Consolidated agencies handle water services to many
Newport-Mesa residents.
There’s little campaigning done for seats on the governing boards
of such agencies unless they’re in some kind of crisis, but people
should care because the boards are often in charge of a whole lot of
money, UC Irvine political science professor Mark Petracca said.
The Irvine Ranch Water District, for example, has an annual budget
of about $74 million.
“These boards in some cases have taxation or taxation-equivalent
powers,” Petracca said. “They also control absolutely consequential
public services. The water just doesn’t come out of your tap on its
own.”
The board seats are attractive to candidates for a number of
reasons. For one thing, Petracca said, board members get a nice
supplemental paycheck from serving on the board, and it gives them
the opportunity to do professional networking.
While it’s easy to assume those less-than-altruistic motives, he
added, “people might actually want to serve.”
For some, being a board member is a matter of civic concern.
“I’ve been studying the water needs for well over a year and just
became more and more interested, because there is no more water,”
said Dan Worthington, a 10-year member of the Costa Mesa Sanitary
District Board, who is running for a spot on the Municipal Water
District of Orange County. “We need to figure out how to [make] do
with what we have.”
There’s apparently more interest in serving on special district
boards than one might expect. Withers said 22 people applied to fill
a vacancy on the Irvine Ranch Water District Board.
Incumbents usually have the best chance at board seats unless
people have complaints about their service, but you never know who
might apply. The Costa Mesa Sanitary District Board is the sole board
of its kind on the ballot, yet one open seat attracted three
candidates.
Among them is Martin E. Millard, whose father, Martin Millard, is
an outspoken critic of various services and officials in Costa Mesa,
who recently said the sanitary district needed more oversight from
the City Council.
The district provides residential trash collection, recycling and
liquid waste services to Costa Mesa and parts of Newport Beach and
the unincorporated county.
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