Alicia RobinsonIt took the City Council only...
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Alicia Robinson
It took the City Council only 12 rounds of voting to fill 10 seats on
the planning and parks and recreation commissions Monday -- no small
feat considering that there were 31 applicants, and only three votes
were unanimous.
Council members reappointed Bruce Garlich and Bill Perkins to the
Planning Commission and also gave Eleanor Egan, James Fisler and Donn
Hall seats.
The new Parks and Recreation Commission will include three
previous members, Byron de Arakal, Mark Harris and Wendy Leece, and
new appointees Robert Graham and David Stiller.
After nominating former Planning Commission Chairman Bruce
Garlich, Councilwoman Katrina Foley praised his work as a
commissioner.
“I think that he has served our commission well, and he will bring
an institutional memory to the commission that will be very
valuable,” Foley said.
The makeover to the commission rosters comes after the council in
December opted to pick commissioners by a vote of the full council
rather than direct appointment by council members. The council had
used the direct appointment method for about two years, but some
residents complained it enabled cronyism and made commissioners
beholden to the council member who appointed them.
The commissions often function as workhorses in the day-to-day
grind of city business. If you want the city to remove a dying tree
from your street, ask the Parks and Recreation Commission. If you
want to build an addition on your home, visit the Planning
Commission.
The Planning Commission also helps the council get through the
minutiae of interpreting city codes and visiting the sites of
proposed building projects, Garlich said.
“My view of the Planning Commission’s value to the city and the
council is it offloads the council with a major part of the activity
that they don’t have to take on themselves,” he said before the
meeting Monday.
Serving on a city commission can also lead to bigger things.
Council members Eric Bever and Katrina Foley both served as planning
commissioners before their election to the City Council, and
Councilwoman Linda Dixon also has been on the Planning Commission.
Former Councilman Mike Scheafer was a former parks commissioner.
“I think that you’re at a severe disadvantage [running for City
Council] if you haven’t been on either the parks commission or the
Planning Commission,” Foley said. “Most city decisions deal with land
use, so I think that it is important to gain experience on one of the
land-use bodies.”
The new Planning Commission will hold a meeting Monday, and the
new Parks and Recreation Commission will meet Feb. 23.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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