Failure to reach a compromise is a leadership failure
Noticeably absent from Thursday night’s special Newport Beach City
Council meeting on the St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church expansion was
the continuous shouting and name-calling that might have been
expected from an overflow crowd of 250. The calm and relative
politeness were a great credit to both sides of this long-running
debate -- St. Andrew’s on one side and its neighbors on the other.
That the two sides had to spend the long night at the Council
Chambers -- many people sitting on concrete steps or leaning against
the City Hall flagpole -- was a sad reminder that something was
missing from this controversy.
Each side claims it was willing to compromise and find a solution
all could accept. Each side also claims that the other wasn’t willing
to bend enough to make it happen.
Why did they fail then? Because something was missing from this
controversy.
That something was strong leadership from somewhere within City
Hall.
Planning Commissioner Larry Tucker and City Councilmen Steve
Rosansky and Don Webb tried to bring the two sides together. All
three failed.
This failure, and the bitter feelings that now hang over Cliff
Haven and Newport Heights, is the unfortunate result of the City
Council’s relatively inexperienced makeup. Collectively, four of the
members -- Mayor Don Webb, Councilmen Rosansky and Ed Selich and
Councilwoman Leslie Daigle -- have 63 months in office.
With three members in the past two years leaving office, there
simply has been a drain on experienced, long-serving council members.
Add in that Councilman Dick Nichols continues to be a lone presence
on dais, and there is a leadership void in Newport Beach.
Certainly on Thursday night and into Friday morning, Mayor John
Heffernan showed a strong hand and proper demeanor as he managed the
overflow meeting. Anyone coming before the council with an issue
should hope that his actions last week are a sign that he’s now
stepping up to help fill this void.
Councilman Tod Ridgeway, who is by far the longest serving member
-- he’s twice served as mayor -- perhaps was hamstrung during this
debate by not being in a top seat on the council and in that the
church dispute cut across the districts represented by Rosansky and
Webb. Hindsight now suggests that, baring some more substantive
reason, he should have gotten involved.
What this issue clearly needed was one person intent on seeing a
compromise reached. Leaders on the two sides should have been locked
in a room and not allowed to leave until a deal was reached. Issues
of far greater importance -- whether the birth of the Social Security
system, or the end to wars, or the construction of the Mormon temple
in Newport Beach -- have ended in compromise. The expansion of St.
Andrew’s should have been no different.
The hopeful end to this issue is that there is no reason to think
a lack of leadership will endure. Daigle and Selich have been in
office 10 months total, and Daigle is a politician on the rise. Webb,
who now serves as mayor pro tem, is an obvious candidate to be named
mayor next year, and perhaps he will rise to the occasion as
Heffernan has.
It’s just too bad that none are quite there now.
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