Past offers lesson for council
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Deirdre Newman
In 1991, when the City Council tried to appoint a replacement for
Councilman Edward Glasgow, the first seven attempts, over the course
of two meetings, failed.
Finally, the council succeeded in appointing Joe Erickson, who
ended up serving the city for nearly 10 years.
Twelve years later, the council has chosen to appoint Mayor Karen
Robinson’s successor. Robinson is resigning April 15 to become an
Orange County Superior Court judge.
The lesson from 1991?
Shelve personal politics and focus on the greater good of the
community, those who participated in the earlier appointment process
say.
“Sometimes you have to put your own political philosophy aside for
the good of the broader community,” said Mary Hornbuckle, who was
mayor at the time.
Glasgow resigned citing health reasons after it was revealed that
he and a Costa Mesa Police Department lieutenant had monitored
private computer communications between City Manager Allan Roeder and
Police Chief Dave Snowden for six months in 1989.
After the 1991 council chose the appointment process, each member
nominated two people, and only those who received a second vote of
support were considered. Then Hornbuckle recommended that each member
rank the nominees by preference. Straw votes were taken on the four
with the best rankings, but the votes failed to carry.
Later in that meeting, council members started making motions to
appoint their choices. Four failed, and the attempt to appoint was
continued until the next meeting.
On July 15, Erickson received a majority vote only after three
other candidates did not. Twenty minutes later, the clerk
administered the oath of office to Erickson, and he assumed his seat
on the dais.
Sandra Genis, who also was on the council at the time, said the
process evolved from a selfish attitude to a more thoughtful
approach.
“When we each started out, we each had our own ideas and thought
we would do what would enhance our own position on the council, and
then [we] realized that was dumb,” Genis said.
The council instead focused on who could best complement the
members, Genis said.
“We didn’t have a council member on the Eastside,” Genis said. “We
also looked at, ‘Is this someone who has a long-term commitment to
fixing up the city?’ Joe was on the Planning Commission and had a
long-term commitment.”
Erickson said when he was first appointed, it was asked that he
pledge to run for another term, which he did. He said he only served
two full terms because he believes in term limits.
As the beneficiary of the 1991 appointment process, Erickson said
he recommends the current council look for a team player.
“I urge them to have open minds, and what I think they need to
look for is someone that has the best interest of the entire city at
heart,” Erickson said. “We’re one city, and one area shouldn’t be
emphasized more than another. The four [remaining council members]
are good people, and I think they’ll make the best decision.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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