Council will appoint next mayor
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Deirdre Newman
The replacement for outgoing Mayor Karen Robinson rests squarely in
the hands of the city’s four remaining council members.
For now, that is.
On Monday, the council decided on a 3-2 vote to appoint Robinson’s
successor through a process it will begin using on April 21. If it
can’t decide on an appointment by May 15, the replacement procedure
automatically goes to a special election, which can’t be held until
November.
Robinson will resign on April 15 to become a Orange County
Superior Court judge.
While the majority favored the appointment method, Robinson
supported Councilwoman Libby Cowan’s suggestion of selecting the
runner-up in the November 2002 election, former Mayor Linda Dixon.
Robinson and Cowan cast the two “no” votes to follow the appointment
process.
Cowan’s proposal won support among residents who called it the
least political.
“I think Cowan’s suggestion is a little more democratic,” resident
Beth Refakus said. “It concerns me about appointments that don’t
involve the electorate where the public is not allowed to have
input.”
The approved process, one of three possibilities offered by City
Manager Allan Roeder, calls for candidates to submit letters of
interest between now and April 14. The letters will then be submitted
to the council for review and posted on the city’s Web site.
At the next council meeting on April 21, the names of the
candidates will be announced and the public will have a chance to
comment on them. Then the nominations will begin and the first one to
receive three or more votes will fill the vacancy.
If no one receives three or more votes at that meeting, the topic
will be continued to the May 5 meeting, where the process will be
repeated.
Former councilman Jay Humphrey, who was on the council in 1991 the
last time the council had to replace a member, issued a caveat to the
council members about being too rigid in their choices.
“Don’t become inflexible and intransigent in wanting someone that
doesn’t reflect a balance,” said Humphrey, who along with his
colleagues chose former Councilman Joe Erickson to fill the vacant
seat.
Councilman Gary Monahan said he supported the appointment process
because it seemed the most logical.
“I felt [it was the] smoothest and best way to take a stab at
this,” Monahan said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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