Still planning after all these years
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Deirdre Newman
When Perry Valantine and Mike Robinson first started at City Hall,
beans were growing on the north side of Costa Mesa and there was a
Woolworth’s at South Coast Plaza.
Between the two, they have more than 60 years of planning
experience and three general plans under their belts -- all with the
city of Costa Mesa. Valantine started as an intern in 1972 and is now
the assistant development services director. Robinson started in 1973
as an assistant planner and is now the planning and development
manager.
This past year has tested the city’s planning limits as the City
Council approved a downtown condominium project with double the
density allowed in the general plan and considered adding a huge area
to the redevelopment zone. But it’s just par for the course for the
bustling planning department these days, Valantine said.
“If we compare it to 20 years ago, just about any year is unusual
now,” he said. “I remember when we used to have time to sit in the
office and read a planning magazine. [Those days are] long gone.
Probably Mike and I are the only ones who can remember that time.
It’s so busy that you don’t even have time for that now.”
On Feb. 17, the council recognized Valantine and Robinson for
their 30 years of service.
Their dedication to Costa Mesa is a testament to the employment
culture of the time they started working, said Victoria Basolo,
professor of social ecology at UC Irvine.
“If they’ve been in it 30 years, they would have been in a
different period or culture, where you do stay with your city,”
Basolo said. “Nowadays people coming out [into the workforce] ...
they don’t stay long-term. Public, private, state, federal, nonprofit
-- if you’re involved in planning-related work, people change jobs
now more than they used to.”
The two have worked together so often that they have been known to
finish each other’s sentences, Valantine said. Except for the time
they both focused on advanced planning to hash out the city’s first
general plan in the late 1970s, the two are like yin and yang,
Robinson said.
“[Valantine] is stronger at current planning,” Robinson said. “I
think I’m more effective in long-range, advance planning.”
“Mike’s a deep thinker and I do better with lines on paper,”
Valantine concurred.
Both are quick to joke and laugh, a trait that has served them
well over the decades, they say.
“I think we both have the kind of temperament that we can maintain
a sense of humor even though things might not go the way we want it
to go,” Valantine said.
Valantine got his internship straight out of college, after
graduating with a degree in urban studies. He was interested in city
planning and lived in Costa Mesa so it seemed a natural fit, he said.
One of the first projects he worked on was gathering information
for a land-use database, so he went around and counted things like
swimming pools and driveways.
“It was a good way to get to know the city,” he said.
Robinson also studied urban and regional planning and did his
internship in Fullerton before joining Costa Mesa’s planning
department. Ironically, one of the first projects he worked on is one
the city is grappling with now: whether the Westside bluffs should be
converted from industrial to residential.
In the early ‘70s, the area was 75% vacant and contained active
oil fields, Robinson said. And the industrial property owners there
didn’t see any need to change, so nothing happened, he explained.
“It reminds me of a quote from Yogi Berra: ‘When you see a fork in
the road, take it,’” Valantine said. “That didn’t happen.”
“We took the spoon instead,” Robinson joked.
The early to mid-1970s was a booming time for planning departments
throughout the state since the California Environmental Quality Act
had just been passed and applied to private property planning,
Robinson said. In Costa Mesa, there was a surge in interest in
planning issues, like the Westside Community Plan, he added. Also,
development pressures started to exert themselves in the city, as
commercial and larger multi-family residences joined single-family
tracts, Valantine said.
“Then the freeway came to town,” Valantine said.
Planning has gotten more complicated as the city has run out of
raw land to develop, the two agreed. And the development concepts are
getting more advanced, like higher-density residential projects,
mixed-use projects and second-story home additions, Valantine said.
The concept of redevelopment has permeated most parts of the city
as developers look to enhance areas that have already been developed,
Robinson said.
“All the easy things have been done,” he said. Both planners say
they have benefited from professional seminars, conferences and
classes, as well as visiting other cities. Robinson also has a
master’s degree in public administration.
“You start looking at the details of urban fabric,” Robinson said.
“Your vacation pictures end up being of buildings, parks and open
space.”
One of the concepts Valantine has seen in his travels that Costa
Mesa is exploring is mixed-use, where developments are created with
both commercial and residential uses. In addition to helping solve
the problem of lacking land, it also helps ease traffic congestion,
he said.
“In Paris, you almost couldn’t tell it was rush hour because so
many people walk and take the metro,” Valantine said. “When work’s
over, you don’t see a flood of people on streets because people have
other ways of getting around.”
Robinson admires the planning in the Mont St. Michele area of
France, an island with no cars.
“There’s a cathedral and a compact commercial district with
residential above it,” Robinson said. “It’s a fun place to be because
there are so many uses in such a compact area.”
Both react to having been at City Hall for 30-plus years with an
air of nonchalance.
“There’s always a new challenge,” Robinson said. “It’s a big
enough city that you get a lot of diversity and challenge, but not
too much to get overwhelmed.”
The staff members’ expertise has made it easy for Valantine to
stay as a manager, he said.
“All of the planning staff members are so professional, I don’t
have to worry about whether things are running right,” Valantine
said. “When I go on vacation, I don’t leave a forwarding number. I
just enjoy myself and have confidence that everyone knows what
they’re doing.”
Robinson’s office illustrates his passion for race cars. They
adorn his shelves and a poster of a Ferrari at the U.S. Grand Prix
hangs on his wall. He is partial to Beatles ties. Wednesday, he was
wearing one with the faces of the Beatles from the “Meet the Beatles”
album. His favorite Beatles song is “I Will,” which was one of the
featured songs at his wedding, two weeks after he started working for
Costa Mesa. Robinson and his wife, Sue, have a son, Bryan, 27, and a
daughter, Jaclynn, 25.
Valantine’s office features his penchant for the architecture of
Frank Lloyd Wright. On a shelf under the window is a stained-glass
design of Wright’s that is infused with vibrant colors when it
catches the light. Valantine said he enjoys traveling and going to
restaurants and theater in town. He’s married to Pam, has two sons --
Eric, 23 and Kevin, 26 -- and one stepson, Paul, 27.
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