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Political engagement is high Jim Drummond - Political Perspectives Yorba Linda Star - March 30, 2006 - Viewpoints Section Complete Text - Requires Registration Excerpts:This year is
shaping up as one of the most active political times in Yorba Linda's 39-year
history, with only the spirited debates during the 1970 and 1972 elections
rivaling the current citizen concern about future residential and commercial
development.
And again at stake is this city's
identity as a refuge from the higher-density and traffic-generating projects
approved by other City Councils throughout North Orange County.
Forces already are preparing for the two key
political battles remaining this year: the June 6 ballot on the
citizen-sponsored Right-to-Vote on Land-Use Amendments initiative and the Nov. 7
election for two positions on the city's five-member governing body.
City Council members and individuals and
businesses associated with the building and development industries are expected
to fight the initiative - which would give voters the final say on major changes
to city planning documents - with tooth-and-nail ferocity.
Meanwhile, leaders of the grassroots group Yorba
Linda Residents for Responsible Redevelopment hope to raise enough cash in small
and medium-sized donations from citizens to finance several mailers to voters
explaining the initiative's many merits.
Also
underway is a behindthe-scenes struggle to select two credible candidates to run
against incumbents Ken Ryan and Keri Wilson in the November City Council
election.
YLRRR members are expected to endorse
and help finance the campaigns of individuals who meet a list of criteria
currently being developed during the group's public meetings.
Last year, Ryan banked $11,846 for his campaign,
mostly in $250 contributions from outside-the-city individuals and firms
involved in planning, designing and building. Ryan and Wilson need to raise
close to $30,000 each for their re-election efforts.
In 2002, Ryan shared some of his campaign cash
with running-mate Wilson.
The pair also made
joint appearances and hired veteran political consultant Dennis DeSnoo.
The busy DeSnoo also worked for Jim Winder in
2000, Allen Castellano and Mike Duvall in 2004 and former downtown developer
Michael Dieden in 2005 and 2006.
Residents also
vigorously debated development issues before contentious elections in 1970 and
1972, with voters making especially wise, longlasting decisions both years.
The '70 voters turned out three of the city's
original councilmen, replacing them with a slate of low-density candidates who
claimed incumbents weren't listening to residents.
The '72 voters added two new members to form a
unanimous low-density council and approved a historic General Plan that most
succeeding councils used to guide future residential and commercial development
in both Yorba Linda's older and newer areas.
Hopefully, voters will continue their streak of
wise decision-making, as they carefully consider the important issues involved
in the upcoming initiative and council campaigns. FINAL NOTE
Council members admitted they've lost the
trust of too many residents as they grappled with procedures for selecting
members for the ballyhooed "blue ribbon" commission to study ideas for the
future direction of Old Town area redevelopment.
Instead of choosing the members themselves, the
council will ask 23 city organizations each to select a representative to the
body, thus avoiding what council members said would be their "fingerprints" on
the group's membership. Complete Text - Requires Registration |
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