What’s a guy to do when he’s stuck outside?
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S.J. CAHN
When I arrived about a half-hour before Tuesday night’s Costa Mesa
City Council meeting, I was surprised to find pretty much the usual
suspects milling about or sitting, haphazardly dispersed, throughout
the council chamber.
Where were all the protesters?
I wasn’t alone in my reaction. There was plenty of talk of the
lack of expected crowds to hear debate about the city’s Job Center.
Three hundred seemed the average number people were expecting.
By about 6:35 p.m. -- or five minutes after the meeting should
have started -- groups of people began appearing in the chambers. As
the meeting got started about 10 minutes late, they all but filled
the seats in the 256-maximum- occupancy room.
Those assembled were treated to one light council moment, though
it came, admittedly, following a solemn one. Karl Ahlf, who was the
youngest council candidate last fall, finished up a moment of silence
to remember the passing of Pope John Paul II by thanking “all the
nice people” who voted for him.
It was only a few minutes later, at 6:49 p.m., when one of the
five police officers at the meeting told me I couldn’t keep standing
in the back of the room (where I’ve always stood in the past, at
times with members of city commissions) and would either have to find
a seat or go outside.
I wisely went outside where there already were about 25 people
milling about, a group that continued to grow past 50 before it
topped out at about 70 people. A couple handfuls or so alternately
paid attention to the television by the doors that broadcast the
meeting.
Depending on how you want to interpret the expectation of 300
people, the total got pretty close. Of course, inside there were
plenty of people who’d come to talk about parking along Walnut Street
near St. Joachim Church, a request by Costa Mesa United for money
from the city or a host of other issues. But, still, some 350 people
showed up, for one reason or another. And easily 100 were there
solely for the Job Center, from all sides of the debate. In the end,
an estimated 60 to 70 spoke.
What they had to say is reported elsewhere in today’s Pilot.
Here’s just a few things not reported that were going on at the
fringes of the meeting:
* Before the meeting (actually at about 6:25 p.m.), I notice an
empty silver carton in the trash right outside the council doors
that, at some point, contained 18 Coors Lights. I don’t know what it
means; it just seemed odd.
* A woman entering the chambers, after she passes an officer,
says, “I wonder why the police are here,” in a tone that makes it
perfectly clear she knows why there’s an unusual number of uniformed
officers.
* Midway through listening to the public-comment portion of the
meeting -- during which, and this is stressed plenty of times at the
meeting, people are supposed to talk only about items not on the
council’s agenda -- I come up with this suggestion for the council:
“Agendize” everything.
If someone comes up and talks about the city’s water supply, make
sure it’s on the next council agenda. If that same person returns and
talks about building a harbor below the Westside bluffs, get it on
the next agenda. And place them all at the end of the meeting. Pretty
soon, there won’t be anything for the council regulars to talk about
and you might get through with your business at hand before bedtime.
The weakness, of course, is that people could just stay to have
their say (not to mention that maybe the council would have to make
decisions on these items, but what is the city paying its new outside
legal counsel for it not to maneuver such waters?). If Chris Steel
were still on the council, I might even encourage his being appointed
to stay until any comments were heard.
* When I see the “Please Keep the Job Center and the heart open”
sign I wonder, briefly, if the council will reverse course on its
decision. I’m still very skeptical, and I, of course, turn out to be
wrong.
* As the council talks about Fairview Park and whether the federal
government might become too much of an entanglement, a circle of Job
Center supporters gather at the bottom of the stairs outside the
Council Chamber.
* I wonder: Are there any more frightening words in the English
language than: “If there’s anyone from the public who wishes to come
forward [to speak], they should do so.” I decide there aren’t.
* S.J. CAHN is the managing editor. He may be reached at (714)
966-4607 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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