Voters have spoken, now the work begins
- Share via
In Costa Mesa, voters tossed two incumbents off the City Council and
elected three new members, including one who had served before. In
Newport Beach, voters returned all three incumbents, including one
who ran unopposed. So, which city most needs a shot of political
healing?
It turns out it’s not Costa Mesa, where Planning Commissioners
Eric Bever and Katrina Foley, along with former Mayor Linda Dixon,
will take seats on the council next month. It’s Newport Beach, where
Councilmen Steve Bromberg, John Heffernan and Steve Rosansky return
to the dais.
The reason, of course, is the vitriol still hanging in the air
following the vote on Measure L. Voters thoroughly turned it down,
nearly 2 to 1, signaling in the narrowest sense that they do not want
the strip of land on the Balboa Peninsula known as Marinapark --
where the American Legion, a Girl Scout house and a mobile-home park
sit -- rezoned to allow for a hotel. More generally, the debate
turned on personal attacks on the man who proposed the development
and on the City Council’s handling of the proposal. That debate
illustrates two political truths in Newport Beach, one far more
serious than the other.
The less pressing is that there is a small, vocal group of
residents -- which, fairly or not, can be classified as members of
the slow-growth Greenlight movement and the anti-Measure L Protect
Our Parks -- who have deep disagreements with how city leaders are
running Newport Beach. Their objections begin with questions of
development, but widen out to issues of how council meetings are run,
how the city’s budget is spent and whether residents are getting the
treatment and service they deserve.
The more pressing truth is that there is an obvious majority in
Newport that has concerns about how the city is handling development.
Those concerns weren’t great enough for them to vote anyone out of
City Hall, but there remains an obvious chasm -- between city and
business leadership on one side and residents on the other.
That gulf is one city leaders need to bridge. As elected
representatives of the people, their mandate is to serve the
interests of the community, and they must now see that there are many
people who don’t agree with the direction the city is headed, the
trio of reelections not withstanding.
Their goal, though, does not have to be reconciling with
Greenlight or Protect Our Parks. City leaders need to focus on the
apparently wide -- but not deep -- discontent in the community. They
need to reach out to residents and ensure that they are leading the
city in the right direction.
Costa Mesa’s elected leaders, to be sure, are not without their
obstacles either. All three “new” council members are seasoned in the
ways of City Hall, which fortunately will smooth the transition.
The issues they face are not new ones: redevelopment of the
Westside, use of playing fields, managing the budget and planning the
changing nature development. And there is the expected council
divisions, with Councilmen Allan Mansoor and Bever forming an
aggressive bloc calling for limited government and controversial
Westside renovation. Will Foley and Dixon amount to a competing
twosome? How will Mayor Gary Monahan fit into the mix?
Such questions will begin to be answered in the coming months. For
now, we should trust the will of voters in both cities and hope they
indeed picked the best people for the jobs.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.