New low for city politics
When former Huntington Beach Mayor Dave Garofalo resigned from office
and eventually pleaded guilty to 15 misdemeanors and one felony count
involving votes he cast and gifts he received while in office, we
hoped that others who followed him into public service would learn
from his mistakes. People who have pledged to serve the public should
never use their office or their power to serve themselves instead.
Sadly, Garofalo’s was not a lesson former Huntington Beach Mayor
Pam Houchen learned or even tried to heed.
Houchen last week pleaded guilty to eight counts of fraud and
public corruption in connection with her purchase and illegal
conversion of apartments into condominiums. She reportedly sold two
four-unit apartment buildings, netting a tidy $500,000 in the
process. She also unlawfully bought property in a redevelopment zone
while in office.
In total, Houchen and her four partners in crime illegally altered
15 apartment buildings into 45 condominiums, avoiding the permits and
fees required for such work. Their scam to then sell the condos
almost lined their pockets with $11 million.
As difficult as it is to believe, not four years after Garofalo’s
fall from politics, Huntington Beach has reached another low in
political corruption. Houchen’s crimes are far worse, far more
despicable than Garofalo’s, for a single, though not simple, reason:
the victims.
Without a doubt, Garofalo’s conflicts of interest hurt people,
though trying to measure who was injured and how they suffered is
close to impossible. Perhaps a Garofalo vote kept business from going
to the most qualified person. Perhaps one of the advertisers in his
publication profited at the expense of a competitor.
Perhaps Garofalo’s crimes had victims, but we can never know for
sure.
But without a doubt, Houchen’s crimes hurt people. The most
obvious victims are the dozens who bought what they believed to be
condominiums. While their monetary hurt has steadily been reduced as
this story has evolved, those without any insurance still face
$10,000 in fees. And there still are inspections to be done, and all
four homeowners in each building must agree to make any necessary
changes -- an iffy future indeed. And there have been the countless
nights of not knowing what would happen or how much it all would
cost.
Those people were the very ones Houchen swore to serve on the City
Council. She failed them mightily.
Houchen also failed the rest of Huntington Beach’s residents by
her actions. She has brought more shame to City Hall, more reason to
doubt the truthfulness and honesty of city leaders. (Her former
colleagues, who will have to deal with the fallout as they continue
to serve the city, can thank her for that.) She has added a low mark
to Huntington Beach’s sordid political history, one that seems
incapable of turning in a clean, decent and law-abiding direction.
There is one final group of victims, among the smallest of them
all: Houchen’s triplets. Perhaps her desire to give her three girls a
better life was at the heart of her decisions. Instead, they likely
will be without their mom for years.
Her crimes certainly could not have been worth that.
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