Between 2 candidates and a hard place
Lolita Harper
Rick Brown for City Council is a phrase you will never hear.
The cityâs building department head has no interest in running for
political office and is perfectly content to master his daily
responsibilities regarding the safety and code enforcement of private
structures in Costa Mesa.
But recently he found himself in the middle of a political war in
which two city leaders, both looking to eradicate substandard housing
in city rental units, turned to Brown for ammunition that would
bolster their particular idea.
Councilman Gary Monahan, who is up for reelection, and Planning
Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley, who is fighting for a seat on
the council dais, both developed a plan to help rid the city of
inferior housing. Both have met with Brown for input. And both tout
their solution as the best.
Monahan, with all the advantages of incumbency, was able to get
his idea on the agenda and receive unanimous approval from the
council on Sept. 19 -- before Foley was even able to unveil her
clear-cut vision of the Planning Commissionâs version.
Monahan crafted and passed his housing proposal in a total of two
weeks, whereas Foley and the commission have been working on it for
more than a year as part of their community objectives that Foley
fought to institute at the Planning Commission level.
The councilman said he simply approached Brown, who is charged
with inspecting private buildings, and asked him what would work. The
answer, according to Monahan, was a simple tweak in a city ordinance
that redirected the priorities of code enforcement officers to target
substandard rental housing, which is exactly what the council passed.
CAMPAIGN TIMING
Monahanâs action came immediately after a conference on the
subject with various community activists. It also was perfectly timed
during the peak of the campaign season, at a time when Foley was
touting her community housing program as a key election item.
âWhy would you need another program when this is what the experts
say will work?â Monahan asked.
Brown, who is not anxious to receive acclaim for Monahanâs
proposal, said he simply gave âhonest, accurate informationâ and let
the councilman decide if that would adequately accomplish his goal.
City staffers -- who report to the city manager, who reports directly
to the council -- have no interest in trying to hire their future
bosses, he said. They remain neutral and work through campaign
season, just as if it were any other time of the year.
âWe remain neutral on the policies and let the politics play
themselves out at the appropriate levels,â Brown said.
While council members had not been briefed on the commissionâs
proposal, they voted to approve the Planning Commissionâs goal to
aggressively battle substandard housing and knew of their work in
that area.
The Planning Commissionâs program, which is a work in progress is
more comprehensive than Monahanâs and would require new enforcement
officers to police it.
Foley said Monahanâs proposal may serve as a good starting point,
but she thinks the complex city problem needs a more in-depth answer.
She hopes to gain council support when the commissionâs version is
considered.
FINISHING TOUCHES
In the interim, the immediate implementation of Monahanâs program
could serve as a pilot program for the more complete version yet to
come, she said.
Mayor Linda Dixon, who asked about the differences between
Monahanâs and the commissionâs housing proposals before she cast her
vote, said she didnât believe it was a case of supporting one or the
other.
She tended to agree with Foley, saying Monahanâs idea served as a
âbeginning action.â She called it a positive, first step forward for
the community.
âThere is definitely room for both,â Dixon said.
Planning Commissioner Bruce Garlich agreed.
âWe are not at odds here,â Garlich said. âThese proposals fit
together well.â
He said the commission was looking long term and hoped to present
thorough data that would provide the council with the best
alternatives available. Planning commissioners took their time
delving into the substandard housing issue and get all the ground
work done to hand over a complete program that council members could
get behind, he said.
QUESTIONS ANSWERED
While Brown did not lead the research for the commissionâs
proposal, he was an integral part, as all the implementation would
fall to his department. The commission asked him what was needed to
make the program work and he answered their questions, he said. Brown
was never in a position to interject opinions or offer
recommendations about the program.
âI can give professional input, provided that someone in authority
is going to listen,â Brown said. âI am expected to respond thoroughly
to council or commission membersâ requests.â
In other words, officials donât ask Brown if they should implement
a program; they merely ask him how they can.
Brown said it was not his place to give his personal opinion about
which program he thought would be better suited for the city.
The ultimate objectives of each proposal are not exact, but they
are very similar and that is to âget out there and make sure that we
donât have people living in substandard housing units,â Brown said.
He will gladly combat the problem in whatever way city leaders
direct him to. Although he is not an elected official, Brown has been
around enough to learn how to give a politically correct comment.
âThey have their job to do and their agendas, and we are all
working with them on those toward a common goal for the residents,â
Brown said. âWe give the most reliable, expert input and then look to
our elected officials to make the final determination.â
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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