Coming in from the outside
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Councilwoman Debbie Cook is hoping to continue
former Councilman Dave Sullivan’s efforts to ensure an open and
accessible government.
Cook is one of two new council members leading the city into the new
year. She also will serve as the city’s vice mayor, under Mayor Pam
Julien Houchen, who was reelected to the council in November.
“I’m thrilled and deeply honored to have been elected,” Cook said
after being sworn in last month, adding that Sullivan has been a mentor
to her. Like him, “I’m coming in as an outsider, and I hope to leave as
an outsider.”Cook, 46, was born in Corpus Christi, Texas, and moved to
Southern California with her family in 1966. She studied earth science at
Cal State Long Beach and earned a law degree from Western State
University in 1994.
A 17-year Surf City resident, Cook and her husband, John Fisher, have
a son, Jody, 24, and a daughter-in-law, Michelle. During her time in the
city, Cook has experienced firsthand the challenge of small-business
owners as president of Cook-Fisher Inc., which specialized in
high-density storage systems for businesses and professionals throughout
California and Nevada. She worked as an attorney, providing legal
services for Huntington Beach Tomorrow, the Surfrider Foundation and the
Sierra Club, and has put her professional life on hold to devote her time
to the council.
Cook has a track record for community involvement in the city, serving
on the Planning Commission and as coauthor of the city charter amendment
Measure C, which requires the city to get approval from a majority of
city voters before proceeding with developments on the city’s beaches and
parkland.
She has also been a member of the city’s General Plan Advisory
Committee, South Beach and Central Park task forces, as well as the Bolsa
Chica Land Trust. As an environmental attorney, she was able to work on
the land trust’s legal team to protect the Bolsa Chica wetlands and other
state coastal resources.
“I think with what she brings to the job, she’s going to be the best
councilperson ever,” Sullivan said. “Her most important quality is
courage, and I think she has that in spades.”
Cook has also been a vocal critic of Councilman Dave Garofalo, who is
being investigated by county and state agencies for allegedly violating
conflict-of-interest laws, but she doesn’t believe it will affect her
time on the council.
“It’s not a personal issue, this is just about a difference in
philosophies,” she said. “I think it’s amazing that people want to make
this Cook versus Garofalo . . . and besides, I can just as easily vote
against my friends, as well as my enemies.”
Garofalo agreed.
“The challenge for me on the City Council is exactly the same as that
for Debbie and other council members,” he said. “It’s about working
together to reach an agenda we all agree on, and getting things done for
the city.”
He added that Cook and Connie Boardman, also a first-time council
member, will achieve much while on the board.
There are a number of issues Cook says should be addressed, both now
and over the next four years. Among them are water quality, commercial
goals for the Huntington Center and a larger focus on the needs of
southeast Huntington Beach.
“That part of the city seems to have been overlooked too long and will
get more attention in the next few years,” she said.
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