Candidates square off in forum
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Deirdre Newman
The 12 hopefuls competing for City Council seats this fall learned
the value of one minute Wednesday night -- that was all the time they
had to answer questions on a diverse range of topics, ranging from
the city budget to the CenterLine light rail system.
The forum, sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce, Comcast and the
Daily Pilot, attracted about 70 people to the City Council chambers.
All 12 candidates vying for the three open seats attended:
incumbent Mike Scheafer, who was appointed last year when former
Mayor Karen Robinson left to become an Orange County Superior Court
judge; incumbent Chris Steel; Planning Commission members Bruce
Garlich, Katrina Foley and Eric Bever; former Mayor Linda Dixon;
Parks and Recreation Commissioner Mirna Burciaga; and residents Sam
Clark, Karl Ahlf, Michael Clifford, Richard Carroll and Terry Shaw.
Former Mayor Peter Buffa emceed the event. Daily Pilot Editor Tony
Dodero and Comcast Channel 3 News Producer Valerie Mitchell asked
questions of the candidates.
One question was what the candidates thought the biggest job the
council needed to accomplish in the next year was. Many agreed that
revitalizing the Westside should be the top priority.
Burciaga, who owns a restaurant on the Westside, suggested city
action against slum landlords in the area for not adhering to city
codes, while others recommended building consensus between business
owners and residents.
Garlich said the recommendations to revitalize the Westside laid
out by the Community Redevelopment Action Committee and refined by
the Westside Revitalization Oversight Committee must not be abandoned
like two previous efforts.
“This is the third strike; if we fail, we’re out,” Garlich said.
“I think what we do on the Westside is important to all of Costa
Mesa.”
Many of the candidates also agreed that the joint-use agreement
with the school district, which covers the city’s athletic fields, is
based on sound principles, but needs tweaking.
“Maintenance issues are a problem .... We need to reassess and
reevaluate who should be responsible for maintenance,” Foley said.
CenterLine, the proposed light-rail system that would run from
Santa Ana to John Wayne Airport through a commercial part of Costa
Mesa, divided the candidates.
“CenterLine goes from one place to another, but doesn’t benefit
anyone,” Scheafer said.
Steel pointed out that it won’t cost the city any money to build.
“I don’t see it as a major issue here,” Steel said. “It will be
expanded. Before you overreact, look at it. It hasn’t cost us a
dime.”
The hopefuls had vastly different takes on what changes could be
made to the budget process. Some suggested starting it sooner while
others suggested being more tightfisted with the city’s money.
“One of our biggest expenses is the employees,” Shaw said. “When
we negotiate with them, we have to be careful we don’t give the house
away.”
This was the second candidates’ forum of the electoral season and
for some, enough to winnow down the crowded field to a competitive
number of candidates.
“It was very helpful to get to know them,” Mesa Verde resident
Alan Baer said. “There are so many candidates and so few I actually
know. It’s the second one I’ve been to, and I think I’ve had enough.”
Baer said he was able to eliminate about seven of the candidates
based on their performances at the forum.
Resident Geoff West said the forum didn’t change his opinion of
the candidates.
“There are still four or five people who are clearly better
prepared for the job,” he said.
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