Women’s council control over
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Dave Brooks
The reign of women on the Huntington Beach City Council will soon
come to an end.
All of the challengers seeking one of the three spots, all
currently held by females, are men ending a two-year rule that gave
women on the council a super majority to their male counterparts.
Currently five women and two men make up the board, but that ratio
will change with a resignation and term limits.
In July, Councilwoman Connie Boardman announced that she would not
run for reelection, and Councilwoman Pam Julien Houchen will be
termed out in November after eight years on the council.
Councilwoman Debbie Cook’s position is also up for grabs, but she
has filed her candidate information and plans to run again. In the
unlikely event that she loses, the council would switch to a super
majority of men with only Councilwomen Cathy Green and Jill Hardy
remaining, since all 15 challengers are males. If Cook wins, the
council make-up will be four men and three women.
Not that the alliances particularly matter.
“The council always changes every two years, whether men or women
come on board, and the dynamics doesn’t seem to be linked to anyone’s
sex,” said Cook. “Besides, I grew up with four brothers, so I really
don’t think it matters.”
The super majority of women was created in 2002 when Green and
Hardy were elected and began to serve with Cook, Houchen and
Boardman, creating the first ever majority of women on the council.
Norma Brandel Gibbs was the first woman elected to the council in
1970, and later went on to be the city’s first female mayor.
While the five current female members share a cordial
relationship, council minutes show there has never been a 5-2 vote
split down gender lines. On about a half-dozen occasions, Hardy,
Green, Boardman and Houchen have acted as a voting block, but with
dozens of issues being voted on each month, the four-woman alliance
is rather insignificant compared with all the votes taken by the
council.
That doesn’t convince former Public Works Commissioner Dean
Albright, who was removed from his position by Boardman after he sent
out an e-mail accusing women council members of colluding to protect
Houchen. The FBI and U.S. attorney’s office are currently looking
into whether Houchen converted several apartments in condominiums
without the proper permits.
Boardman was insulted by Albright’s accusation, but on Friday,
Albright said he stood by the statements. He said he believed a
majority of men on the council “would have a little more focus on
city business than other social issues that women address” because
“that’s their thing.”
Hardy disagreed, saying gender does not play into things.
“I’ve never voted in terms of what I thought a girl would want or
what I thought a man would want,” she said. “In the end, I just hope
there will be seven good people on the council.”
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