Residents complain about meeting times
Eron Ben-Yehuda
Huntington Beach is known as a politically active city, but residents and
workers complain that they can’t fully participate because some public
meetings are held at the worst times.
“Most people say, ‘Oh, I can’t go. The heck with it,”’ resident Dave
Carleen said.
A committee aimed at solving Downtown’s many controversies begins at 8
a.m., while the Public Works Commission, which tackles thorny issues such
as parking and traffic, meets at 5 p.m.
“A 5 p.m. meeting is not a public meeting,” Carleen said.
A typical day at the office doesn’t end until at least 5 p.m., he said.
Because he was working, he missed a meeting in which the commission
considered prohibiting parking on his street, he said.
“I think 7 p.m. is the earliest they can expect a majority of people [to
come],” he said.
Deputy City Administrator Rich Barnard recognizes the importance of the
dozens of citizen committees, commissions and boards the city sponsors.
They offer council members key insights into what the public is thinking
about issues of the day, he said. “The more you encourage public
participation, the better off everybody is.”
But while most critical public meetings, such as City Council, are held
after 5 p.m., there simply isn’t enough room at City Hall to hold all of
them at the same time, Barnard said. In addition, there are many other
ways to get a point across, such as making phone calls, writing letters
and sending e-mail, he said.
“Just to say I can’t physically be there and, therefore, the system’s
broken, is a pretty weak argument,” he said.
Moe Kanoudi, who owns Main St. Eyewear, prefers to show up at Downtown
committee meetings. But he had to rush out of 8:30 a.m. meetings to open
his store and, after hearing complaints from him and other business
owners, the city will begin holding the meetings at 8 a.m. starting in
November.
The still doesn’t solve the problem, Downtown resident Terry Carmadella,
46, said, “‘Cause everybody works, and the drunks are sleeping in.”
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