Jack Green, former mayor, dies at 79
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Jack Green, a former Huntington Beach mayor and champion of the
city’s Central Park and Central Library, died Saturday of congestive
heart failure after a long illness. He was 79.
“Jack was a real forward-looking gentleman,” former Mayor Ralph
Bauer said.
Green was one of the early pioneers of the open-space movement in
Huntington Beach, working with government officials and hundreds of
private landowners to create the large park in north-central
Huntington Beach.
Green was elected to the City Council in 1966 and served for eight
years, including a one-year stint as mayor in 1969. In 1968, Bauer
and others unsuccessfully placed before voters a bond to raise money
to acquire the land needed to build Central Park.
With the help of Green, the initiative was placed on the ballot
again in 1969 and received approval from nearly 72% of city voters,
generating $6 million to match federal and state contributions for
the project. Green later helped allocate $3 million for the
construction of the Central Library.
“He shared Don Shipley’s and my vision to have the library,” said
former mayor Norma Gibbs, who served with Green on the council. “He
was a good visionary -- he wanted the best.”
The most difficult part of building Central Park was finding the
hundreds of property owners who had a stake in the land, Gibbs said.
At the beginning of the century, the Encyclopedia Britannica company
had purchased several undevelopable acres of land in Huntington
Beach, divided the land into 400 small lots, and gave a land deed to
anyone who bought an encyclopedia set.
“We had to track down hundreds of owners,” Gibbs said. Often the
original purchasers had died, Gibbs said, and passed the deeds on to
their children. “A lot of them didn’t know about the land. It was a
terrible job, and it took years.”
Today the park is home to the Shipley Nature Center and two small
restaurants. It is considered the largest municipal park in Southern
California.
Green was born in Altadena, served in the Navy during World War
II, and moved from Temple City to Huntington Beach in 1961. He made a
living as an insurance investigator.
In 1971, Green became executive director of the Regional
Anti-Pollution Authority of Coachella Valley, where he aided desert
valley cities grappling with the consequences of rapid residential
growth. Three years later the City of Los Angeles tapped him to
become the first general manager of the newly formed Department of
Environmental Quality, where he implemented a new state-mandated
environmental review process.
Green also served as president of the California League of Cities,
president of the Southern California Assn. of Governments and as a
member of several state commissions as an appointee of then-Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Marty; daughter Belinda
Gordon and her husband Tim, of Boise, Idaho; sons Michael Green and
his wife Barbara, of Huntington Beach, John Green and his wife
Melanie, of Wabash, Ind., Daryl Green and his wife Kelly, of Costa
Mesa, and James Green of Huntington Beach; and nine grandchildren.
A funeral mass will be held Friday at St. Bonaventure Catholic
Church, 16400 Springdale St., Huntington Beach.
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