New Costa Mesa council majority decides to add 4 aides, including a chief of staff
The Costa Mesa City Council decided Tuesday night to create four new staff positions, which the new council majority said would help handle workload and provide additional analysis.
On a 5-2 vote, with members Sandy Genis and Allan Mansoor dissenting, the council approved a full-time chief of staff and three part-time management aides at an annual cost of $222,000. Budgeting for the positions will come at the expense of a tax auditing specialist, a job that was designed to help bring additional revenue to city coffers but has not been filled.
The vote also approved buying $20,000 worth of City Hall furniture for the new aides.
The staffing additions came at the request of newly elected Mayor Katrina Foley, who argued that residentsâ needs are very high. She pointed to a similar aide structure in Anaheim, Irvine and Long Beach.
âItâs hard to manage it all, to keep the work flowing on behalf of the constituents,â Foley said.
âItâs something new. Itâs a new day. Weâre going to try some new things.â
According to a staff report, Foley originally proposed that the chief of staff report directly to her as mayor, a scenario that many residents, the city attorney and some council members warned would violate municipal code. They pointed to rules saying that no city employees, except the city manager and city attorney, can report directly to the council. Rather, they fall under supervision of the city manager, who in turn reports to the council.
Mansoor said that if the chief of staff is controlled by the mayor, he or she would be like a political appointee who can âbe hired and fired at the whim of the mayor.â
After suggestions from Mayor Pro Tem John Stephens and newly seated Councilwoman Andrea Marr, the council changed the wording to have the chief of staff reporting to the city manager.
Mansoor scoffed at the notion of the aides spending time â and taxpayer money â delivering briefings on issues or going over meeting agendas.
âThat is something we should be doing on our own,â Mansoor said. âIf weâre not doing that on our own, we shouldnât even be up here. I hope all of us have the motivation to read our staff reports.â
Mansoor made a motion to receive and file Foleyâs request â which likely would have nixed it â but only Genis supported it.
At one point, Genis raised her voice to accuse Foley of not letting her raise concerns.
âYou have talked about teamwork and collaboration, yet you clearly have no interest in that, so why say it?â Genis told her.
Foley replied that she had hoped to meet with Genis before the meeting about the proposal but that Genis never replied.
âYou donât have to yell. Iâm going to let you speak,â Foley said. âItâs fine.â
Genis countered that the new staff members will only be there to make the council âlook good.â
âWe have a lot on our plate right now,â Foley said. âWe need to have some support staff right now.â
Marr added that âhaving another body to receive information when Iâm not able to is helpful.â
Ex-Newport city manager to aid transition
The council agreed Tuesday to use the part-time services of former Newport Beach City Manager Dave Kiff at no cost.
Kiff, who left Newport at the end of August, will help Costa Mesa transition from a five-member council to one with a directly elected mayor and six members elected by districts.
He also will help recruit a new city manager following the departure of Tom Hatch in November.
Bradley Zint is a contributor to Times Community News.
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