ON THE AGENDA Here are some of...
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ON THE AGENDA
Here are some of the items the council will consider tonight.
PLANNING COMMISSION APPOINTMENT
The departures of three members of the city’s five-member Planning
Commission led the group to cancel its Jan. 10 meeting for lack of a
quorum. The council is expected to appoint a new slate of planning
commissioners on Feb. 7, but some time-sensitive decisions will need
to be made before those appointments.
A few options are available to fill out the Planning Commission
roster in time for the commission’s Jan. 24 meeting, but the simplest
is probably to appoint an interim commissioner.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Mayor Allan Mansoor thinks temporarily filling a commission seat
is the most reasonable of the options, and some of other choices look
undesirable. For example, the council could take on Planning
Commission business itself, but that would require squeezing in a
separate meeting, and waiting until next month to act on commission
business would create the risk of certain applications being approved
by default.
But if council members name an interim commissioner, City Manager
Allan Roeder cautioned that picking any of the 21 people who applied
for seats on the commission could appear an unfair advantage when a
new slate of commissioners is chosen.
MAYOR’S TERM
When the council on Jan. 3 tapped Allan Mansoor to serve as mayor
in 2005, Councilman Gary Monahan proposed changing the mayor’s term
to two years. The council shortened it to one year about four years
ago, but Monahan thinks the longer term means a mayor has more time
to get things done after learning the job. The mayor’s main tasks are
to lead the council meetings and represent the city at events and in
dealing with other governments.
The suggested ordinance also would give a two-year term to the
mayor pro tem, an office currently filled by Monahan. The selection
of Monahan as mayor pro tem aggravated Councilwoman Linda Dixon, who
thinks Monahan’s 2 1/2 terms as mayor are sufficient, and someone
else should have a chance at the council’s leadership roles.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Mansoor thinks a two-year mayor’s term will bring more stability
to the city, and Monahan sees it as an opportunity for mayors to be
more effective. It’s unclear whether any other council members will
oppose the measure.
MEASURE M
FUNDING REQUEST
The council will decide whether to apply for more than $20 million
in funding from Measure M, Orange County’s half-cent sales tax, to
pay for road-improvement projects over the next five years. The
city’s public services director has said he doesn’t expect to get
funding for all the proposed work, which includes 25 pavement repair
and overlay projects, coordination of traffic lights on major streets
in Costa Mesa and Santa Ana, and widening Newport Boulevard between
17th and 19th streets.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The funding request is on the consent calendar, which means it’s
likely to be approved without discussion. The Orange County
Transportation Authority, the body that doles out Measure M money,
must receive applications for funding by Jan. 24. This is likely to
be the transportation authority’s last significant round of grants
before the Measure M tax expires in 2011.
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