Costa Mesa wonât pursue options to cityâs adopted voting districts
Costa Mesa residents wonât face the question of whether to draw new voting district boundaries to replace the ones they approved two years ago.
A majority of City Council members Tuesday night voted against Mayor Sandy Genisâ suggestion to pursue a districting do-over.
On a 3-1 vote, with Genis opposed, the council decided not to take additional steps toward changing the cityâs election system.
Councilman Jim Righeimer left Tuesdayâs meeting just before the item came up.
The system approved in 2016 both by a 3-2 council vote and 65% of city voters carved Costa Mesa into six districts, with a council member to be elected by voters in each one. The mayor, who until now has been chosen by fellow council members, will be elected by residents throughout the city. As a result, the council will expand from five members to seven with this yearâs election.
Councilman John Stephens said Tuesday that he didnât think the council has any basis to say the new configuration âis not going to work out, because, quite simply, we havenât tried it. And I think we should try it.â
When the current district plan went before voters as Measure EE, it was the only option presented. Genis said she feels voters deserve the chance to consider an alternative. She said the vast majority of feedback the city received during community meetings about a new election method favored establishing five voting districts, without a directly elected mayor.
âThe community at large, at least the people who attended the meetings, were largely behind the five-district option,â she said. âThere were a few who supported the seven-district option, and there really was no interest in the âsix plus one.â It was sort of thrown in later in the process.â
Genis motioned to put the five-district option on the ballot in November, but the motion died for lack of a second.
Genis voted against the six-district plan in 2016 and noted Tuesday that Councilwoman Katrina Foley had joined her in opposing it. Foley voted Tuesday against pursuing other options.
But Foley pointed out that âthe voters overwhelmingly supported this measure, and they could have voted no.â
âI donât think itâs right ... before weâve even implemented what the voters elected, for us to try to, with three votes, undo it,â Foley said. âI wonât support undoing the vote of the electorate.â
Costa Mesaâs shift to district-based elections came as part of an agreement to ward off the threat of a lawsuit by a Malibu-based law firm that alleged the cityâs previous voting method â in which all council members were elected by voters citywide â violated the California Voting Rights Act of 2001 by diluting the ability of Latino residents to elect their preferred candidates.
Commission appointments
The process of filling vacant seats on three city commissions started simply enough Tuesday.
On a unanimous vote, the council appointed Richard Cohen to join the Senior Commission, which provides counsel about the Costa Mesa Senior Center and local senior programs and services. Cohen was the only person who applied for the seat.
But filling seats on the parks and recreation and planning commissions was a bit more hectic.
After a flurry of unsuccessful nominations, the council eventually named Jonathan Zich to the Planning Commission, which reviews and acts on certain permit applications and proposed projects and advises the council on issues related to development and long-term growth.
It also named Jim Erickson to the Parks and Recreation Commission, which advises the council on and reviews issues pertaining to those topics.
Both appointments were approved 3-2. Genis and Righeimer voted against Zich, and Righeimer and Mayor Pro Tem Allan Mansoor opposed Erickson.
Twitter @LukeMMoney
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