Commission lacks strength in numbers
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Alicia Robinson
Two members do not a Planning Commission make. Costa Mesa officials
figured that out recently, when they had to cancel the commission’s
Monday meeting because the group had shrunk from three commissioners
to two -- a number too small to allow meetings.
The November election pared down the normally five-member Planning
Commission, which lost Commissioners Eric Bever and Katrina Foley to
the City Council.
Before they were replaced, the council voted to change the way it
appoints commissioners. The new procedure goes into effect Feb. 7.
One of the three remaining planning commissioners, Dennis DeMaio,
had to bow out early to have back surgery, which left the commission
with two members and no quorum for its meeting this week. The
commission could just let its business sit until it gets a new slate
of members next month, but that would mean some matters might be
approved by default, Planning Commission Chairman Bruce Garlich said.
A state law, designed to move planning issues along in a timely
manner, dictates that some requests -- such as subdivision maps and
conditional-use permits -- will be automatically approved if no
action is taken within a month or two of when they’re submitted. The
City Council will figure out how to handle the commission problem
Tuesday.
There are five options, but the simplest is probably to appoint an
interim planning commissioner so the group can deal with commission
business on Jan. 24, City Manager Allan Roeder said.
The council also could adopt an ordinance to take on Planning
Commission business itself, which would put a lot on council members’
plates, or it could do nothing and risk default approvals of planning
issues.
Another option is making the new method of appointing
commissioners effective immediately, but that would require four
council votes. Finally, the council could rescind its new method of
picking commissioners by a majority vote of the council and go back
to direct appointments by each council member.
Whatever happens, the Planning Commission will face a full agenda
next time it meets. It’s an unusual situation, but Garlich is taking
the positive view.
“It’s been a little turbulent, yeah, but it could have been
worse,” he said. “If I’d have gotten elected [to the council] instead
of Linda Dixon, we wouldn’t have had a Planning Commission in
December.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626.
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