Steel aims for strength as chair
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Lolita Harper
Property owners and city officials are hoping the new chairman of
the Redevelopment Agency can live up to his name, as it is going to
take a steely disposition to direct the contentious issues on the
group’s docket.
Members of the city’s Redevelopment Agency -- or the Costa Mesa
City Council wearing another hat -- unanimously elected Councilman
Chris Steel to lead the agency in the coming year.
Steel, who serves as mayor pro tem on the City Council, said he
was reluctant to accept the position because of the various
committees he serves on and multiple speaking engagements he has
agreed to. He said he had hoped to devote most of his spare time to
elevating the largely ceremonial mayor pro tem position by
representing the city at more functions than normal.
“I didn’t seek it and was hoping to kind of avoid it, but I’m it,
and you have to step up to the plate sometime,” Steel said.
Steel had initially nominated current chair Councilman Gary
Monahan to resume the leadership position, but Monahan declined the
nomination, saying his time at the helm was spent.
“I have been in that position for two terms and I have
accomplished what I set to do, which was to get the redevelopment
study rolling,” he said Tuesday. “It’s time for someone else to take
over.”
The agency was created in 1972 as a separate public entity that
may exercise its own governmental functions, city officials said. The
City Council serves as the board of directors of the agency and is
charged with revitalizing the physical and economic conditions within
the 195-acre Redevelopment Project Area.
Customarily, the mayor pro tem serves as the Redevelopment Agency
chair in order to practice for the assumed next step of being
appointed mayor. Following that tradition, Steel was voted to lead
the agency.
He has his hands full as the commander of the Redevelopment Agency
as the city cautiously moves closer to a political battle in trying
to revitalize the Westside. Costa Mesa is considering adding
territory to its 1973 redevelopment project, which includes many
industrial, commercial and residential properties on the Westside.
John Hawley, who owns Railmakers Inc. on West 18th Street, said he
doesn’t blame Steel for trying to sidestep the appointment.
“Who could look forward to taking over an agency that is facing a
major political battle with its effort to finance itself through
extended territories and redevelopment,” Hawley said. “It’s going to
be a tremendous fight and it is certainly going to take someone who
is able to expend a lot of time on it and take the heat.”
Steel said he plans to address the Westside in an unconventional
way. He wants to target the “magnets” -- the Job Center, various
charities and other entities that he claims promote the hiring of
illegal residents -- that have put the area in such disrepair in the
first place, Steel said.
Councilman Allan Mansoor, who won his council bid in large part
because he promised to improve the city, was elected as vice chairman
of the Redevelopment Agency.
“Just don’t mess with the Westside property owners,” Hawley
advised.
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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