Bernie Svalstad: Ready to serve again
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June Casagrande
One look around Bernie Svalstad’s office and it’s clear this is a
man passionate about government. Svalstad runs his small finance
business at a desk surrounded by photos of himself with notable
conservative leaders. President Gerald Ford, Newt Gingrich, Pat
Robertson and John Wayne are just a few of the dozen of celebrities
and dignitaries whose pictures line his walls.
“I’ve been in government all my life,” said Svalstad, who served
on the Fountain Valley City Council for three terms beginning in
1969, including a stint as mayor.
Now an 18-year resident of Newport Beach, Svalstad said he’s ready
to make a difference here, as well.
“I think the No. 1 issue is probably John Wayne Airport,” he said.
The city’s first line of defense against airport expansion is to
protect the John Wayne Settlement agreement from future legal
challenges, he said.
“I feel that, due to the financial incentive for airports to
expand over time, that there will be a challenge,” he said. “It’s
very important that we stay vigilant and make sure the settlement
agreement stays in place.”
Water quality is also a crucial issue for the city, Svalstad said.
While applauding the far-reaching efforts now underway to keep
coastal and bay waters clean, he said even more must be done to meet
stringent water-quality requirement deadlines that are impending.
“The majority of the problem has to do with runoff from our city
and from other cities,” Svalstad said. “We need to be more stringent
in our measures to protect runoff from our city and from neighboring
cities as well.”
Public education, he said, is key.
Perhaps his biggest issue is his hope to bring a state-of-the-art
traffic-management system to Newport Beach. Svalstad has researched
programs in Anaheim and Fountain Valley and, in them, sees hope for
Newport’s ominous traffic challenges. Such systems use a combination
of cameras at intersections, signal synchronization and other
technologies to tackle traffic problems where and when they occur.
The funding, he said, could come from Measure W money.
Svalstad is also a supporter of a $10-million plan to improve and
expand the Oasis Senior Center.
“Seniors are growing in numbers in Newport Beach and residents
will become more and more in need of this type of service as citizens
grow older.”
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