Water battle runs deep
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Dave Brooks
It’s a battle between name recognition in Surf City and three decades
of experience in this year’s race for a spot representing Huntington
Beach and Costa Mesa on the Municipal Water District of Orange
County.
Former Huntington Beach City Councilman Don MacAllister is
challenging incumbent Joan Finnegan for a seat on the 53-year-old
agency that oversees the importation of water to 30 different
municipalities within Orange County. Dan Worthington, a director for
the Costa Mesa Sanitary District is also making a stab at the seat in
the largest of three water elections being put before Huntington
Beach voters.
In terms of policy, the three candidates are nearly identical. All
support increasing the areas general water supply through
desalination and further licensing of Northern California water. All
three candidates have advocated for lower operating costs and
compensation for the water agency’s board of directors.
With few policy differences between them, the candidates are
relying on traditional campaign techniques to win a seat. For
MacAllister, the election is a sheer numbers game.
Data from the Orange County Registrar of Voters make Huntington
Beach the second largest municipality of registered voters in the
county at 122,577, a little under 1,000 short of Anaheim. Costa Mesa,
on the other hand, has a much smaller base of registered voters at
53,232.
If MacAllister can take most of Huntington Beach, he reasons --
where he has name recognition both in local politics and on civic
groups where he has been active including the Chamber of Commerce,
the Boys and Girls Club and the Fourth of July Parade committee -- he
has a good shot of winning the election.
“With my connection to the community and ability, I bring about
awareness that might be difficult for other people,” he said.
Finnegan’s strategy will be to market herself as a veteran water
advocate with decades of experience. She began serving with the
Coastal Municipal Water District in 1985 before it merged with the
current municipal district in 2000, where she served a four-year
term. Before that, she spent 21 years working as staff and management
for Mesa Consolidated Water District.
“I’ve been involved in water issues for a long time and I have the
time and desire to continue my role,” she said.
Finally, Worthington is marketing his endorsements in his quest
for office, pulling in support from Congressman Dana Rohrabacher,
State Senator Ross Johnson and municipal district President Brett
Barbre.
Worthington said he stands out from other candidates because he is
willing to consider nearly any proposal to increase the county’s
acquisition of imported water.
“The board needs to have people looking at every possible avenue
and not closing the door saying ‘that won’t work,” he said.
Besides looking at desalination, which he and the other candidates
see as inevitable, Worthington said he is interested in pursuing
technology to convert underground brackish water that has half the
salinity of seawater, as well as better ways to trap rainwater and
recharge it into underground aquifers.
Nearly half of Orange County’s water is imported from the Colorado
River and the San Francisco-San Joaquin Bay Delta, although federal
regulators have recently reduced Southern California’s allocation.
Huntington Beach also utilizes its own ground water wells that
draw from a basin that stretches from the Prado Dam through Northern
Orange County.
The county’s groundwater is controlled by the Orange County Water
District, which has two seats in Huntington Beach that are up for
election this year.
Most of Surf City will have 13-year incumbent Wes Bannister on its
ballot. Bannister, who serves as a financial director for the
municipal district was also recently appointed as the chairman of the
Metropolitan Water Board of Directors, which imports and wholesales
water to 18 million people in six Southern California counties.
Bannister is running unopposed for his seat on the Orange County
Water District.
Residents living in or near parts of Huntington Harbor might have
three candidates on their ballot. Incumbent Philip Anthony is running
against Otto J. Lacayo, a trustee with the North Orange County
Community College District.
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