Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Happenings: City Council sans Conflict

Tonight's City Council meeting was a delightful departure from those in past months. There were no hordes of angry speakers, minimal citizen outrage, and the whole thing wrapped up by about ten minutes after seven. The most entertaining part of the evening was hearing a girl named "Mary Jane" talk about the problem of drug use, causing my irony-meter to beep uncontrollably.

The evening began, though, with Councilmember Laurene Weste giving a rather nice spiel about Memorial Day. Several members of Council touched on yesterday's observation and events in the City that honored those who died in service.

Then it was time to hear about a program called STAR that teaches 6th graders about drugs, violence, crime and all the other things that make life worth living. Some of the top students were invited to talk about "What the STAR Program means to me." What the speeches lacked in eloquence and clarity they made up for in wisdom. One girl, for example, said guns were bad because “In a public place, one simple act from a gun can create chaos.” We also learned that one can also say no to drugs with the handy excuse "I have to go make my bed" or by "pretend[ing] like you didn't hear them."

After Mary Jane and the others concluded, we had a very brief public participation section followed immediately by City and Newhall Redevelopment business. Nary a speaker showed up to say anything about the resolution to spend about $1.2M to acquire a property on Spruce Street. The space will be used for retail/offices with a side of library. The resolution was adopted, meaning that the City will buy out and serve as temporary landlord to current business owners on the property, all of whom will have to relocate.

Other notable business this evening was an appeal for public support of Representative Buck McKeon's CEMEX bill--I'll be posting more about this later. Mike Murphy discussed a trip to D.C. to work on getting the bill passed and the CEMEX issue resolved once and for all (theoretically).

Before the meeting closed, though, Mayor Bob Kellar suggested a "Team Building Day" for the City Council members. I will pay good money for a photo of Ferry and Weste climbing a rope course together or McLean walking through a forest blind-folded, guided only by the spoken directions of Laurie Ender. I know, that's probably not the kind of team-building activities they're talking about, but allow a blogger his fantasy.

2 comments:

Citizens first said...

Umm, I guess Pulskamp's preference to Jay Rogers letter stating that the Avenue project was suspended isn't important? It was significant piece of information given the hoards of people who have been speaking about it. Not to mention L. Ender was asked to apologize to those who exercised their right to participate in democracy by petitioning their elected representatives, to be told that they don't matter because 175,000 people weren't there. Stating that the perception of the people must be that things are going just fine since 175,000 people were not in the council chambers. That a handful of people don't mater to her.

I have extremely enjoyed the "I Heart SCV" blog over the last 2 years and will continue to do so. However, I felt it important to mention these pieces of info because they were the only thing stated that had significant reference to things dealing with thousands of Claritans (Avenue suspension) and Lorie's insulting behavior to every Claritan. These were both worthy of reporting.

Otherwise it was a pleasant meeting for a change. Thank you IHSCV

A Santa Claritan said...

Hi C.F.

As embarrassing as this is to say, I was watching the C.C. meeting at home and ran to the bathroom at the juncture where I've learned Ken Pulskamp announced the suspension of the Avenues project.

I was planning to post on the topic later tonight, but I think your summary will do. Congrats to y'all, and good luck when Mr. Rogers comes back with the predictable "scaled down" version.