Long, narrow forum letters ruffle feathers
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JOSEPH N. BELL
Two lengthy letters appeared on the Forum page of the Pilot recently
relating to the upcoming Costa Mesa City Council election. Both
letters seemed to me to raise about as many questions as they
purported to answer.
Current Councilman Allan Mansoor used the Forum to come out
foursquare for Eric Bever, whom he described as having a pro-family
ethic and “believing in equal rights, not special rights.” He
contrasted these qualities with one of Bever’s principal opponents,
Bruce Garlich, whose self-description as a “fiscal conservative and
social moderate” should make him -- according to Mansoor --
unattractive to “socially conservative Latinos with pro-life and
pro-family beliefs.”
So what do we have here? Is Mansoor suggesting that Garlich is
anti-family? And what exactly does that mean? And is he obliquely
identifying Garlich as pro-choice -- and, if correct, what possible
bearing does that have on business that comes before a Costa Mesa
City Councilman? And could Mansoor be a little more specific about
equal rights vs. special rights. What rights is he talking about, and
how do they apply to the Costa Mesa election issues?
M.H. Millard spent much of his letter trashing the “liberals and
good old boy candidates,” which apparently takes in everyone who
doesn’t agree with Millard. In the process of urging specific policy
changes relating to Costa Mesa’s Westside, he accused the people who
don’t support them of being in the pocket of “out-of-town interests,”
of “being controlled by special interests who want to keep our city
downscale,” of “feathering their personal nests by being surrogates
for Newport Beach interests.”
These sound like serious charges. What “interests” -- specifically
-- is he talking about here? Who and what in Costa Mesa have they
controlled? And how are their nests being “feathered”? Both Mansoor
and Millard are quick to criticize what Mansoor called
“unsubstantiated baloney” when referring to the charges of another
Forum letter writer. So they should be pleased to fill in some of
these blanks.
Meanwhile, it occurred to me that it might be helpful by way of
balance to ask Mike Scheafer -- who was appointed to the Costa Mesa
City Council last year and has decided to seek election to that
office in November -- if he agrees with Millard’s assessment of him
as one of the “liberal” or “good old boy” candidates?
He thought the question over before he said: “I don’t think so.
I’m a registered Republican. Does that have any bearing on governing
this city? Whatever personal beliefs we hold has no bearing on what
is going on in Costa Mesa. My approach to every issue that comes
before us on the City Council is what is best for the overall city --
not for one specific area of Costa Mesa over another. That’s how I
want to be perceived -- as a resident of Costa Mesa and not just of
Mesa Verde, which is where I live. I try to balance what we’re
spending to the needs of the entire community.”
The Forum letters from Mansoor and Millard were at least partly in
response to accusations of a cabal forming to take control of the
City Council on behalf of the Westside. Does Scheafer see that
happening? And is he concerned?
“I don’t see any conspiracies here,” he said. “I do think the
Westside would like to get a majority on the council -- and I don’t
see any other identifiable group with the same agenda -- but that’s
just part of the political process. The voters will decide if that is
going to happen, and it certainly isn’t the case now.
“Look at the voting records on the council. You won’t see any
tight relationships or bloc voting. It’s true that most of our
industries are owned by people who don’t live in Costa Mesa, but are
any of us being controlled by them? I’d have to see some evidence of
that.”
When I suggested he might share those views on the Pilot’s Forum
page, he said: “I haven’t written a letter to the Forum since I’ve
joined the council. I don’t need the editorial page to express my
opinions or offer explanations. It’s not my style. If I did write a
letter to the Forum, it would be to try to change the intolerance
people have for others who disagree with them.”
I asked Scheafer what he had learned in his rookie year of service
on the council that made him decide to run for that office in
November, and he said: “I have a better feeling about government
since being a part of it. I’ve learned how we have to relate to state
and county issues, how we fit into the big picture. I see that local
government deals much more closely with us on a day-to-day basis. I
think it works, and a large part of it is being blessed with the best
city manager I’ve ever seen.
“The biggest surprise in this council job is the amount of time it
takes to prepare properly. As I get older, I look toward retirement,
but exciting things are going to be happening here in the next few
years -- including some Westside visions I’d like to see coming to
fruition. I want to be a part of those solutions.”
Meanwhile, it would be wise for any Costa Mesa residents who are
thinking about running for the City Council to forget it if they are
either anti-family or feathering their nests through outside
interests. They have been warned.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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