Community has a right to vote
- Share via
Are taxpayers wrong to demand a say in the expenditures made by their
elected representatives? Is it really ballot box planning when voters
seek redress of their council by insisting that voters have a say in
the city’s proposed massive indebtedness program that, frankly, will
encumber them long after the current council has left the dais? Of
course not.
To answer in the affirmative is to deny the very essence of our
representative democratic process.
Proposition 13 is a classic example of the use of the initiative
process by public-spirited people to control excessive government
expenditures. In Newport Beach, a group of concerned residents have
recently filed an initiative that will require all large debt issues
by the city government to be approved by the voters. This will
accomplish a form of needed fiscal control for the city while
providing the flexibility to approve worthy and necessary city
projects.
A Daily Pilot editorial (“Council can do its job,” Sept. 18) has
attacked that residents group, whose goal is to protect residents’
interests regarding the new city hall and other city-incurred
indebtedness that must be repaid by the taxpayers.
The Pilot conveniently overlooked why the initiative is needed.
That is because the city government is currently attempting to evade
the spirit and intent of city charter section 1109, which clearly
states:
“No bonded indebtedness which shall constitute a general
obligation of the City may be created unless authorized by the
affirmative votes of two-third of the electors voting on such
proposition ... “
The city has found a legal way to circumvent this clearly stated
intent of the city charter by incurring debts using certificates of
participation. These are not general obligations of the city and so
evade the spirit and intent of the charter, even though we owe the
same amount of money under either approach. However, they carry a
higher rate of interest and cost more for insurance and
administration fees than the municipal bond debt financing envisioned
by our city fathers when they wrote the city charter. Therefore, it
is clear that the council sees this as an opportunity to circumvent
and evade any voter approval requirement of the city charter. What
could be more undemocratic?
It is the right of the residents to formulate initiatives, as
guaranteed by section 1003 of the city charter. Voter approval of
both the indebtedness and of the purpose of the indebtedness is
crucial for keeping government expenditures affordable and to insure
that expenditures serve the residents and not the oversized
bureaucracy our city government has become.
This is a bureaucracy that, to date, can’t figure out how to
adequately dredge the Back Bay, control John Wayne Airport growth,
find parks and fields for our youth sports teams nor control
unfettered traffic congestion. But they do have the means to build a
Taj Mahal-type city hall to further insulate themselves from the
public they are obligated to serve.
A pro-development majority of the council appointed three out of
the five council votes supporting the new city hall. Appointees have
helped appoint additional appointees. It is insulting to suggest they
are merely carrying out our wishes, when our wishes were not
considered in their appointments.
We in Greenlight have found that initiatives and ballot
propositions we have sponsored or endorsed before the voters on a
single, clearly defined subject have received an average of 63% of
the votes. We have also found that when we endorse candidates for
City Council who represent the residents, that the developer-friendly
portions of the city spend three to four times the amount a resident
can raise to insure their election and maintain developer control of
the City Council.
The initiative is the solution for the problem of a heavily
appointed, nonrepresentative City Council. Like Proposition 13,
residents have to step in when the government is out of control.
For the Daily Pilot to editorialize against those who do nothing
more than insist on a say about how their tax dollars are spent, when
they didn’t even have a say in how a majority of the council was
picked, is disingenuous. But we have seen this type of bias from the
Pilot in the past -- its limited coverage of salient and timely
election issues or its generally universal support of pro-development
council candidates, merely guaranteeing more of the same.
The right to petition leaders and to representative government
make America a shining example to the world. Accordingly, No City
Council, much less a newspaper, the self-proclaimed watchdogs of this
democracy, should ever question these inalienable rights.
* PHILIP ARST is the spokesman for Greenlight. * RICHARD TAYLOR is
a steering committee member of Greenlight.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.