Nice people aren’t always the best leaders
Cindy Penney
I enjoyed reading the Sheran James letter praising the members of the
Design Review Board (“Design Review members work hard,” Coastline
Pilot, Aug. 27).
It was a brave, yet significantly lonely voice extolling the
collective personal attributes of this much-respected and highly
revered administrative body. I found, however, the thrust of the
argument to be somewhat faulty. I am aware of no one who has alleged
the members of design review were paragons of virtue, selflessly
sacrificing themselves on the altar of civic duty, clean living and
kind to their mothers.
These traits, which most will agree provide good candidates for
sainthood, do not necessarily make good candidates for an unelected
municipal board invested with the power to determine the property
rights of residents appearing before them. One may be decent, honest
and kind yet still make arbitrary, subjective and nonanalytical
decisions. This is probably why Jimmy Carter was a one-term
president.
No matter how one wishes to canonize our local icons, we live in a
civil society based on the equal application of laws and
consideration for community values. In this particular community the
values of the property and the environment in which that property
exists are precious concerns and rightly so.
We have a justifiable expectation that when we are required to
state our case before the city bureaucracy that we will receive a
fair, unbiased and objective assessment of the issues in play and
sound reasoning to support the decisions that result. Residents of
this city attending these hearings in good faith and with issues of
concern felt not to be previously nor adequately addressed, ought, at
a minimum, receive an educated response, not a specious and off-point
harangue accusing them of opposing public safety such as was given to
the first item of the agenda on Aug. 26.
Vague generalizations and over-simplification of competing
contentions serve no one and have no place in a participatory
democracy. Much of the antipathy directed toward this board is
probably provoked by he ham-handed attitude with which they apply
some of their questionable judgments. We all live in the same small
an singularly beautiful lifeboat. There are better ways to protect it
than simply beating off a rabbit with a paddle.
* CINDY PENNEY is a Laguna Beach resident.
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