Planning was bad on council appointments
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Mark your calendar. Feb. 3, 2003, is the date the Costa Mesa City
Council resurrected cronyism, redefined political patronage and wrote
it into the city code. They decided to cast aside any pretense of
objectivity in the appointments to the two major city commissions --
parks and recreation and planning -- and voted themselves, as
individuals, the ability to handpick one member of each commission.
These surrogates will be joined at the hip, so to speak, of their
benefactor for life. Life, in this case, is defined as the duration
of the council member’s tenure or until the council person tires of
them, which ever comes first.
By their actions, they have eliminated the opportunity for
applicants to the commissions to present their qualifications. The
process now will consist of “interviews” of potential appointees by
the individual council members. I can just hear those “interviews”
now. “You will vote the way I tell you or you’ll be history, pal!”
And how will these “candidates” be selected? Let’s see now --
politics is an expensive proposition, so maybe a nice, hefty campaign
contribution might insure a place on the Parks and Recreation
Commission. Perhaps a little larger donation will land a person a
slot on the Planning Commission. The term “highest bidder” comes to
mind.
Then, as the next election approaches, the commissioner could be
encouraged to kick in a little more, since the council member can
“fire” the commissioner at will -- no questions asked. Heck, if the
right person is selected, this could be an annuity that would put the
city retirement plan to shame. After all, no one can veto the
appointment and no other council member will “interview” the
candidate before the selection is made. Who knows what other kind of
favors or inducements might be required for one of those nice,
powerful positions.
Might successful council candidates appoint their spouses or
significant others? How about their children or pets? Certainly, we
could expect to see a campaign manager or two. The proposed plan
provides no oversight or veto power, so literally anyone could be
appointed. At a time when some stability is certainly necessary in
our city, it would be possible for a council member to appoint a
person for a week, then swap that one out for another, and another
and another. I can envision a new title -- Planning Commissioner for
a Day.
Quite simply stated, this stinks. Our council conveniently took
the easy way out -- and coincidentally managed to take the way that
will benefit each of them individually by giving them the power of
political life and death over their selectees. If this bogus
methodology is enacted, there is absolutely no reason to think anyone
will get a fair hearing before either of these commissions in the
future. The commissioner’s decisions will have already been made for
them by their benefactor.
There is still time, however, to stop this madness. The council
chartered the city attorney and city manager to come up with a
policy, to be presented and enacted at the next council meeting.
Immediately following that enactment, the new appointees will be
announced.
I suspect that, given sufficient citizen reaction to this
flimflam, the council might be encouraged to reconsider this plan and
take a more appropriate route to selecting future commissioners. The
commissioners should be appointed based on a majority vote of all
council members and should be subject to removal on the same basis --
not at the whim of a vindictive benefactor.
GEOFF WEST
Costa Mesa
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