Drawing new battle lines
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Jenny Marder
Former Assemblyman Scott Baugh practices government law in one of the
nation’s largest firms, serves as finance chair for Rep. Dana
Rohrabacher’s election campaign, and is actively involved in
California’s Republican party. He has a wife and a 16-month-old son and travels frequently to Sacramento for work.
What spare time he has left he devotes to improving his own city,
Huntington Beach.
Below a painting of George Washington and beside one of his son’s
brightly colored toys sits a redrawn map of Huntington Beach sits on
Baugh’s office desk.
The document, which shows a map of the city carved into five
sections with clean, bold lines, has proven a source of great
controversy over the past year.
Baugh brought to the March 2004 ballot the Fair District
Initiative, a measure that could drastically change the structure of
government in Surf City. Since the idea reared its head in 2002, it
has split the city and inspired many heated debates on the City
Council dais.
Baugh’s plan calls for the city to be divided into five districts,
each with one council member elected from within that community to
represent that community. The plan would also reduce the number of
City Council members by two and impose term limits.
Baugh, a bulky man with an easy smile and friendly disposition,
looks younger than his 41 years.
His Boardwalk Huntington Beach home is large and lavishly
decorated. A natural swimming pool, complete with waterslide and
straw umbrella shading nooks, wends through his yard, which has
served as a hot spot for various political gatherings.
Colleagues praise Baugh for his strong convictions, sharp
intelligence and high level of professionalism.
“He presents a very attractive package of being affable as well as
being professional,” Rohrabacher said. “He has a solid conservative
philosophy that he really believes, but he is flexible enough to be
practical in achieving those goals.”
Baugh believes that, under the districting plan, council members
would develop an intimate knowledge of their section of the city and
be more accessible to their constituents.
“At least you’ll have someone to go to and lodge your complaints
and then hold them accountable to action,” Baugh said.
The initiative would create a sense of balance that he said is
lacking in the current system.
“Every neighborhood deserves to be represented,” Baugh said. “Vast
portions have either never had representation or haven’t been
represented for many years.”
Much of the city’s infrastructure is also in need of repair, he
said.
“If you travel around communities surrounding Brookhurst [Street]
and Adams [Avenue,] you’ll see miles of sidewalks that are in
significant disrepair,” Baugh said. “They’ve been uprooted by trees,
some haven’t been addressed at all, and some have been patched over
to the point in which it almost looks like a skateboard ramp.”
Baugh represented the 67th District of the California State
Assembly from 1995 to 2000. He took office in a 1995 recall election,
unseating the late Doris Allen, who angered party officials by making
a deal with Democrats to become speaker of the Assembly.
After a rocky beginning in which Baugh was accused of using
illegal election tactics during his own campaign -- he was eventually
cleared -- he went on to serve as Republican leader from 1999 to
2000.
While a member of the Assembly, he pushed for bills on tax
cutting, prison reform, transportation projects, smog check programs
and fought to secure healthcare for small business employees.
This summer, he joined the Los Angeles office of International Law
Firm Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP, where he practices business and
government law.
Critics of the districting initiative contend that residents will
have less representation under the plan, since they will have only
one council member to bring concerns to. They argue that five
representatives are not enough for a city of 200,000 and fear the
plan would pit council members against one another as they fight for
special projects in their area.
“Right now, you have seven people accountable instead of just one,
and that one may or may not represent your interests,” said Ed
Kerins, president of the activist group Huntington Beach Tomorrow.
“Under districting, you’d have one representative only instead of
seven.”
Kerins is a spokesman for a newly formed residents’ group that has
taken a stand against districts.
Dubbed the Huntington Beach Voter’s Coalition, the group plans to
mount a widespread campaign against the initiative. Members have
already been collecting signatures, handing out fliers and speaking
out against the plan at council meetings. About 1,000 yard signs have
been made and will soon begin sprouting up all over town, said Dean
Albright, a member of the opposition group.
“People should know that they’re going to be losing their voting
power,” Kerins said. “They’re going to have one vote only for one
council member instead of seven votes over the course of four years,
and that that one vote is only for the say on 20% of the city.”
In March, 2002, Baugh and supporters collected 22,000 signatures,
more than the required 16,000 needed to get the initiative on the
ballot.
A proposal to put a competing seven-district initiative on the
ballot was voted down by the City Council in November.
Voters in Huntington Beach have elected seven council members at
large since 1968. Before that, only five council members held seats.
Of Orange County’s 34 cities, Seal Beach is the only city in which
council members are elected by districts.
In neighboring Newport Beach, which has seven districts, council
members must live in the district they represent but seek votes
citywide.
Baugh has plans to garner even more support for the measure as
voting day draws near.
“We’ll run a widespread campaign,” Baugh said. “We’ll have maps to
hand out and literature to hand out. ... I’m extremely confident we
will prevail.”
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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