It was a hard day’s night
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S.J. CAHN
My lasting impression from Tuesday night’s Newport Beach City Council
meeting, during which the council chose Planning Commissioner Leslie
Daigle to fill Gary Adams’ vacated seat, isn’t so much the quality
and poise of the applicants or the pointed questions asked of them as
it is the lack of residents in the chambers.
At most, I counted 25 (after those in the audience there to see
Olympic swimmer Aaron Peirsol get a key to city left), a number that
dropped as the evening went on. Perhaps many were watching the events
on television, but even if they were, they would have missed what the
TV doesn’t show -- everything not on camera, not to mention the sense
in the air.
It’s too bad more weren’t there. They missed seeing the councilmen
-- I’m running out of time to use that word -- do a fine job of
staying fair and balanced. All eight applicants present were asked
the same questions, with a few more being asked for obvious reasons:
Councilman John Heffernan asked Chamber of Commerce President Richard
Luehrs about his ability to separate himself from his
business-booster job; Heffernan asked Daigle about the need for the
council to have a female member; Councilman Steve Rosansky asked
Gerald Hegger how he would bring a cost-benefit analysis tactic to
bear on nonfinancial decisions; Heffernan asked Michael Browning
about his references; and several members asked John Blom about
comments he made about “mansionization” and property rights.
Heffernan, you might notice, comes up often in the list of
additional questions. Part of the explanation might be that when he
asked his first question of the night -- a straight-up “yes or no” of
Charles Griffin about the planned hotel at Marinapark -- he was told
by acting City Atty. Robin Clauson that he could not ask such
questions because it would restrict the person’s ability to vote once
in office. (There was some legal mumbo-jumbo; that’s the gist of it.)
The basic questions, for those curious -- and maybe interested in
deciphering what they say about the men who asked them -- were:
* Mayor Tod Ridgeway asked a “broad-brush” question about what
one, two or three issues the applicants thought were most pressing;
* Rosansky asked what the qualities and qualifications for a
council member should be;
* Councilman Steve Bromberg (who switched his vote from Planning
Commissioner Barry Eaton to Daigle and therefore was the deciding
vote) asked, simply, what made each applicant stand out from the
others;
* Councilman Don Webb asked about issues specific to District 4
(the empty seat, of course); and
* Councilman Dick Nichols asked about how the applicants would
handle future, worsening traffic.
Keeping the questions mostly the same struck me as a fair way to
handle the situation, though perhaps a few more questions specific to
each candidate would have helped differentiate them a bit. Everyone
agreed the expansion of John Wayne Airport is the biggest issue
around. Traffic along Jamboree Road and near Corona del Mar High are
problems. I was struck by Daigle’s mentioning how residents of the
newly annexed Santa Ana Heights don’t yet feel a part of the city; by
Parks Commissioner Tim Brown’s mention of the council picking someone
electable; and by Eaton’s addressing concerns that he was too
technical.
I would have liked to see the council tell the applicants: “We
know John Wayne, traffic, development and water quality are all
issues. What’s the next biggest on your list?” (Webb, to his credit,
when he asked about District 4 issues, eliminated John Wayne.)
Getting beyond the obvious would have helped illuminate who really
knows what’s going on in town and has fresh ideas about how to make
the city better.
A final thought. If another vacancy occurs (we’re two years in a
row now, so it seems almost as likely as unlikely), I’d suggest this
to those future applicants: Watch tapes of this meeting and the one
during which Rosansky was appointed. See how Daigle and Rosansky
addressed the council. They must have done something right.
Taj Ma-City Hall
I’ve heard plans for a new Newport Beach City Hall, which could
cost $30 million, derided as wasteful and unnecessary, with the most
pithy attacks making reference to the grand Indian mausoleum.
After another night in the council chambers, I now believe those
opposing the plan never attend council meetings. If they did, they’d
know how uncomfortable the audience seats are in the chambers and be
begging for a plusher place to sit.
If anyone wants to convince me otherwise, I’m open to a
discussion. It just has to take place in those terrible seats, so my
point will be hard and clear.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He may be reached at (949)
574-4233 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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