Costa Mesa mayor found her swan song in Huscroft House
Doug Sutton
Costa Mesa Mayor Linda Dixon might have been successful in
convincing the city to buy the Huscroft House, but she sure wasn’t
able to convince the community to support it. Her vision was to make
the Santa Ana home the cultural cornerstone of a restored Fairview
Park.
Although I didn’t agree with her house selection, I thought her
idea was a good one. Last week she gave it up, recommending the City
Council kill the project, which it did.
But then, after the vote, Dixon stopped the council meeting to pat
herself on the back and lash out at the very same council that voted
to tack on $200,000 to Segerstrom’s Home Ranch development fees to
kick start her pet project.
“It saddens me,†she said, “that the Huscroft House will not be
moved to Fairview Park. It would have made a great addition to the
community, but a lot of community members lost interest because there
was no support from the council.â€
The Huscroft House was Dixon’s dream from the start, not the
council’s, and certainly not the community’s. Because it was her
dream, it was her responsibility to educate the community about its
value and to find a resident to lead the effort from the community
side. For three years, she touted the project as a volunteer-based,
community-unifying effort, but never advanced the project beyond
rhetoric.
Did she expect the city to foot the entire bill? And if so, how
would that have acted to “unify†the community? This project failed
solely because it was leaderless. Does anyone have an idea how much
money (including staff time) the city spent on this leaderless,
failed effort? In chastising the council, she didn’t say.
The important issue here is not the city funds spent. Anyone who
follows the poor job the council has done overseeing our $100-million
budget knows this project waste is manageable. My concern is why
Dixon went out of her way to blame her cohorts for her failure.
Does she think so little of her constituents that she can
reconstruct any argument and we won’t be the wiser? Does she believe
she deserves a blank city check to prioritize and spend as she sees
fit? Or does she just believe anyone who challenges her is personally
out to get her?
I voted for Dixon the first time around because she’d put in years
of service on the Planning Commission, earning her council seat
against a field of lesser qualifieds. Her council tenure has been
disappointing; she takes credit where little is due and denies
responsibility for what is due.
Personally, I feel she’s focused too much on the pomp and ceremony
of the job and not enough on the opportunity we gave her to make her
dream a reality for all of us. I’m glad she had her chance, but I’m
sorry she didn’t do more with it.
Now it’s time to give Katrina Foley a chance. She’s earned it.
* DOUG SUTTON is a Costa Mesa resident.
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