City divided over districts
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Bryce Alderton
Former assemblyman and mayor of Huntington Beach Scott Baugh’s
proposal to divide Surf City into five districts is meeting with
opposition from City Council members and skepticism from residents.
Council members Shirley Dettloff and Ralph Bauer vehemently oppose the
initiative, which Baugh submitted to the City Clerk’s office last
Thursday. It will appear on the November ballot if he is able to collect
16,000 signatures.
The practice of filling council seats with residents from different
districts, or areas within the city, is a divisive one, Dettloff said.
“Each council member begins fighting for projects in their area and
that has always disturbed me,” she said.
Baugh claims dividing the city into five districts would allow for
diverse representation on the City Council, which he said would allow
each neighborhood to find and recruit its own candidates.
“Right now it’s difficult for voters to know all 20 candidates,” Baugh
said. “There’s better competition for ideas, more accountability and more
access from neighborhoods from someone that represents. It’s not about
this council, it’s about the structure of the councils over 20 to 30
years.”
Under Baugh’s proposal, the council also would shrink from seven to
five members, a move that angers some now seated on the dais.
Reducing the number of council members would mean less representation,
Bauer said.
“If you have two fewer members, there’s less discussion at council
meetings when good government is discussion,” Dettloff agreed.
But Baugh claims the city’s current government needs repair.
“Councils have neglected the sewer system infrastructure for 20
years,” Baugh said. “It’s why we have leaky sewers and potholes in
Huntington Beach and sidewalks uprooted by trees. It’s time to change the
structure.”
Baugh claims that neighboring Fountain Valley does not have the same
problems as Huntington.
“There’s visible and appreciable differences in the streets of
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley,” he said. “In Fountain Valley,
roads are smooth and you cross the border and there are potholes and
uneven pavement. It’s an issue of priorities. This new structure will
provide a better means for council to focus on infrastructure needs.”
Dettloff argues that the city has taken the lead in addressing its
infrastructure needs with the ballot initiative approved by voters last
month that sets aside 15% of the city’s general fund revenue to be put
into an infrastructure fund, and the sewer fee, which the city has been
collecting from residents and businesses since October.
“We’re one of the only cities that has addressed the issue and are
looking at what our infrastructure needs are,” Dettloff said.
Residents appear to be divided on the issue.
“Those with the most affluence would dominate politics in their
particular district,” said J.M. Lopez, a 48-year-old Huntington Beach
resident.
Others see a potential benefit.
“Maybe the districts will increase participation in the election
process,” said Curt Jones, a 45-year Huntington Beach resident and former
Huntington Beach Union High School District trustee.
“Is it going to change a thing? I don’t think so,” Jones said. “People
with money are going to give money to people who like to run.”
Fears of greater development prompted Bauer to oppose the initiative.
“I don’t want the city to go back to the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s where
developers controlled the council,” he said. “The issue is building on
Bolsa Chica, more traffic, taking away ball fields from youth sports. I’m
outraged by the whole business.”
Neighboring Newport Beach currently is separated into seven council
districts, with the entire city electing one representative from each
district.
A benefit of districts, said Newport Beach City Manager Homer Bludau,
is that council members each know their own area intimately.
“In your neighborhood, where you go to church and where you shop, you
know the issues better than across town,” Bludau said. “District
representation would allow for thorough knowledge from the community in
theory. But different cities do it different ways. There isn’t any one
perfect way to do local government. It works quite well here. The whole
community elects council members.”
* BRYCE ALDERTON is the news assistant. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected]
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