Few disagreements arise in Costa Mesa candidates forum
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Deepa Bharath
The five candidates vying for two Costa Mesa City Council seats
agreed on most of the questions, from skateboard parks to
revitalizing neighborhoods, they faced at a forum Tuesday night.
At the forum organized by the Mesa Del Mar Homeowners Assn. at the
Davis Elementary School Auditorium, the candidates also tended to
agree on issues such as tighter code enforcement and revitalization
of city neighborhoods.
Mayor Linda Dixon said that, if reelected, she intends to “finish
some of the initiatives I started.”
“I’ve always fought for lower density, voted in favor of four
lanes on 17th Street, supported the group home ordinance and was
responsible for bringing out the Costa Mesa newsletter,” she said.
On her agenda, she said, are revitalization of the Westside,
improving schools and general quality of life and conversion of the
hotels and motels on Harbor Boulevard into affordable or senior
housing.
Bill Perkins, currently a Costa Mesa Planning Commissioner, said
he believes in “keeping Costa Mesa the way it is.”
“We need to keep it exciting,” he said. “We need to keep it a fun
place.”
Councilman Gary Monahan said he will fight bureaucracy and
over-regulation.
“As a council, we need to empower every single citizen to lead the
best life they can lead,” he said.
Allan Mansoor, an Orange County Deputy Sheriff, said he believes
“Costa Mesa is going in the wrong direction.”
“Crime is up, traffic is up,” he said. “We need to start with the
basics of code enforcement in the worst parts of our city.”
Mansoor said the city has wrongly been allocating money for
programs and charities instead of spending money on more immediate
needs such as road repair, clean neighborhoods and better law
enforcement.
Katrina Foley, an attorney and currently the Planning Commission
chairwoman, said her focus will be on “cleaning up and revitalizing
our neighborhoods and parks.”
“We need to work with the business community so we can find a
balance between business and residential use,” she said.
All except Foley agreed that the city should not be in the
business of routinely inspecting rental units in the city. Foley said
the city should target specific properties that are not being
maintained properly.
“I support aggressive code enforcement in targeted areas,” she
said.
Candidates also agreed that there is nothing much the council can
do about group homes that are mushrooming in communities throughout
the city.
Monahan, taking a slightly different stance from the others, said
he supports group homes with six or less residents, especially those
that house the disabled or the elderly.
“I don’t see anything wrong with that,” he said. “Where are these
people supposed to go if not residential neighborhoods?”
All candidates agreed that skateboard parks, wherever they may be,
must be easily accessible, have adequate parking and be set away from
homes. They also believed that the city must work with the Orange
County Fair Board on the proposed amphitheater so that the noise and
traffic can be minimized, if not avoided.
Candidates were also unanimous on the airport issue and said the
city must fight to prevent the expansion of John Wayne Airport and
lobby at the county and state level to find an alternative to the El
Toro airport that was voted down in March.
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