Tom Egan -- COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
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When I got home from observing the recent Costa Mesa City Council
retreat, I reflected on the presentation the mayor of Laguna Beach and
the leaders of Vision Laguna had made about their experience in planning
for Laguna’s future. I started to get a long face. This was caused by
three realizations.
The first was that I don’t know how Costa Mesans could join together
enthusiastically, as Laguna Beach has, to support a conscious effort to
take charge of our future -- taking into account how geographically,
economically and politically fractionated the town is, and how reluctant
the voters are to spend money. It may be possible, but I just don’t know
how Costa Mesa can pull itself together into a shared community of
interest.
The second thing I realized was that, because of this lack of
community, the straightforward approach used by Laguna Beach -- envision
the desired future, plan how to get there, then act to get there --
probably wouldn’t work in Costa Mesa. This was disappointing because I
had expected that Costa Mesa could save a lot of time and money by just
piggybacking on Laguna’s experience. I had expected our process would
only take a year, maybe two.
The third thing was that if any change occurs in Costa Mesa, it
probably won’t be by any orderly “ready, aim, fire” kind of process. This
is unfortunate, because from my experience as a systems engineer working
on large, complex aerospace systems, I know that the more systematic you
can be, the lower the cost will be and the better the quality will be of
the final product. I weep for my pocketbook and those of my fellow Costa
Mesans. I also weep for the lost opportunity to achieve a high-quality
city.
Resident comments at the subsequent Feb. 5 council meeting did nothing
to lift my gloomy spirits. Several demanded improvements -- fix it right
now! -- in the hot spots we know so well: slums, crime, traffic and
schools.
Unfortunately, they did not look at the bigger picture and also demand
improvement in systemic problems that will bite us in coming years and
perhaps stymie any fixing of hot spots.
For example, untaxed Internet sales will take precious sales away from
Costa Mesa’s auto dealers (5% of car sales are projected to be completed
via the Internet within five years) and retailers such as South Coast
Plaza. (Fess up, you’re buying more than ever from out of town through
catalogs and the Internet, aren’t you?)
How much can that hurt? Suppose the loss of sales tax revenue is just
10%. This year, the estimated city revenue from sales tax alone is $32.69
million. If we lose 10% of that, we have $3.269 million less to pay city
bills with. That’s real money that might have gone to fix slums, traffic
and schools (not to mention potholes, parks and police).
Then there’s the threat of the state to take some of our sales tax
revenue and ship it out to cities that don’t have such a good retail
base. Maybe they won’t do it. But in case they do, shouldn’t we be
planning how to change our retail-dependent economy to protect ourselves?
Or do we want to just tighten our belts some more as millions more fly
out the door?
I believe it is in our best interests to be armed against future
threats. I believe we should systematically take charge of our future.
Otherwise, someone else will pick a future for us.
TOM EGAN
Costa Mesa
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