Mayor Frank Ferry added some rhythm to the gavel banging that signals the start of the meeting. It positively delighted City Manager Ken Pulskamp[2]. But the levity was short-lived, as Councilmember Marsha McLean decided to issue a patriotic challenge—a call to arms, if you will—during her invocation. “I was shocked at the answer when I asked my granddaughter if she recited the pledge…she said her teacher apparently told her there was no time,” McLean explained. She was worried that no time for the pledge of allegiance signaled we may be “in deep trouble as a country”, and asked anyone with children or grandchildren to inquire about their classroom pledging habits.
Awards came next, and Councilmember Laurene Weste was recognized as LA County’s Volunteer of the Year. A representative from Supervisor Mike Antonovich’s office highlighted Weste’s commitment to important political, environmental, social, and historical causes. A tearful Weste gratefully accepted the honor and praised Antonovich for being supportive and always taking her calls.
Public Participation began with words from Steve Petzold. He gave a shout-out to former Claritan and current pledge of allegiance supporter Roger Gitlin. Then he got to his real passion and invited the council to attend a special event at the Valencia Library featuring a film about the dangers of light pollution. Rather than dwelling on the profound notion that to see the light of stars we must pursue darkness, Petzold used the balance of his speaking term to enthuse about a book on sniping and its availability at local libraries[3].
The public had spoken, and now members of the City Council took to the mics for their own causes and updates. Weste talked about the new trailhead over the Santa Clara River. She paid tribute to the recently deceased Reverend Monsignor Renahan, leader and counsel to Claritan Catholics for decades. Marsha McLean was impressed by how well her grandchildren and their classmates sang at a recent performance. Boydston asked to agendize a timeline to switch library board positions from the council to members of the public. He also asked for a delay in the discussion of benefits for councilmembers out of legal caution; Boydston has been inquiring about the disparity between his benefits and those enjoyed by his fellow council members. Boydston said that he received a memo from Mayor Frank Ferry about concerns over “talking to lawyers”, and Boydston said it was no big deal to talk (he clarified that he hadn’t retained a lawyer), saying that Ferry himself has a law degree but Boydston still talks with him. Kellar congratulated Bill Reynolds and Stanley Cockerell for their Bronze Stars after service in the Vietnam War. Kellar hopes to bring the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Moving Wall to Santa Clarita some time next year. Comments concluded when Mayor Ferry spoke about meeting with local school kids about Santa Clarita’s 25th anniversary as a city.
The consent calendar’s biggest item was adoption of the 2012-13 budget
of some $183M and associated plans for capital improvements and employee
compensation. Councilmember Boydston has
requested line item breakdowns of the City’s various contracts and budget items
and thanked staff for providing 18 pages worth of these details. After perusing the line items, his few issues
were quickly resolved. Speaker Alan
Ferdman was pleased to see that Canyon Country was getting some attention in
the budget, but worried about employee benefits.
Boydston was concerned about another item on the consent calendar
pertaining to acceptance of large-scale projects. Currently, the City Council accepts/approves
these projects, but the item would allow the City Manager to act in this
capacity instead. That would shorten the
time it takes for contractors to be paid (they have to wait for project
acceptance), but Boydston worried that the public wouldn’t be able to speak out
against project acceptance as effectively if there were problems. Councilmember McLean challenged him to
produce an example where the public discouraged project acceptance, and Boydston
said a less-than-satisfactory road repair job in Canyon Country led to complaints. That would have been a case where he
would have delayed project approval by the council.
Regardless, McLean and Pulskamp said that they usually hear about problems
with big projects, and the item passed with a vote from everyone save Boydston.
An open space acquisition piqued the interest of speaker Cam
Noltemeyer. She wondered about the
purchase of open space in Agua Dulce using Claritan tax dollars since most of
the area is located miles east of Santa Clarita’s easternmost boundary. She also said that the map of areas to be
purchased was vague as to whether 600 residential units would still
be built or whether the land they were going to be built on was part of the acquisition. Pulskamp would clarify that
the City purchased the land that would have held these units and that it would, indeed, become open space. Thus, with the exception of the item
pertaining to purchasing policy updates (specifically the city manager’s
ability to accept public works projects), the consent calendar passed with
recommended actions.
Discussion of political signs came next. It stretched on for quite a while and
revealed that there are still raw nerves following the most recent election,
with words growing especially contentious between Councilmembers McLean and
Boydston. Not helping matters was a
video that Boydston had put together to describe the history of political sign
policy in Santa Clarita—essentially clips of people talking about signs at past
meetings. Mercifully, Mayor Ferry asked
to stop the video and simply talk 6 minutes in (there is nothing worse than
watching stale council footage nearly two hours into a live council meeting,
and Ferry said the video was half-an-hour long). There was a long debate over the efficacy of
fines, the cost-benefit analysis of printing small signs and putting them in
out of bounds areas, and the ability to control sign placement activates by
volunteers. McLean recalled an instance
of pro-Boydston signs being bolted to live trees. When Mayor Ferry said Boydston wouldn’t do
that himself, McLean snapped back that they really had no idea which person it
was doing the tree damage. She was not pleased with Boydston and what she called his efforts to embarrass her and Laurene Weste on the video.
In a moment that must have been gratifying for TimBen Boydston, Ferry said
“You got screwed,” when it came to sign policiy in the past. He admitted that Boydston had played by the rules and paid for
little signs when bigger signs were not allowed in the policy, but sitting council members
had printed bigger signs knowing they wouldn't face stiff consequences.
Ultimately, the council decided to get rid of fines to reclaim signs
and instead implement a “sign jail” policy.
Any signs placed in the public right-of-way will be seized and held
until after the election, and the city attorney will clarify an appeals process
to be approved at a future meeting.
Everyone was in agreement.
The meeting ended with Ferry’s allotment of committee appointments to
council members. It was all fine and
good until Alan Ferdman asked the council to more carefully consider Laurene
Weste’s service with regard to sanitation distrcits. He implied that she was too closely
associated with parties pushing sanitation policies that will cost Claritans a
lot of money. Boydston decided to push
Ferdman’s suspicions and questioned Weste, who clarified that she had indeed
attended events and associated with many governmental and non-governmental
groups interested in water policy. She
said it was important to build and maintain these contacts, and Ferry defended
her actions.
[1]Here's the agenda.
[2]At leas that’s whose giggle I thought I heard.
[3]The title, apparently, is unavailable at LA County libraries.
2 comments:
Thanks for your coverage I Heart. I always enjoy your recap.
Sterling King
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