Editorial
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Both the Costa Mesa City Council and Planning Commission seem to have
a dilemma -- they’ve forgotten how to run a public meeting. But to us, it
seems easy. It’s all about participatory government and ensuring the
public is kept informed of decisions that affect them.
That noble idea, though, has been lost in a flurry of late-night
meetings and head-scratching decisions being made by these officials.
Case in point, the Planning Commission’s discussion of the Home Ranch
project Sept. 10. The commission limited public comment to those who had
not spoken at a previous meeting.
While it’s great to hear new voices on any matter, that’s not how
things work. During public comment, everyone has the right to speak
during the allotted time period -- and barring previous speakers from
taking part is simply undemocratic.
Chairwoman Katrina Foley said the reason was “late-night meetings
affect our decision-making process the next day.” We couldn’t agree more,
but that’s not the way to handle it.
Furthermore, the way meetings -- especially those of the City Council
-- have been running recently, “the next day” means the wee hours of the
next morning.
At its Monday meeting, the commission approved the Home Ranch project
and recommended the council follow suit. That decision came at 1:30 a.m.
Tuesday.
While that sounds late, that’s nothing compared with the end of the
City Council’s Sept. 18 meeting. You probably missed that one because it
happened about 3 a.m. the next day. But it didn’t happen before the
council could approve an important bit of business -- a police contract
that came with salary hikes for officers.
Earlier in the meeting, the council decided to call an “urgency
action” to discuss the police contract, in which it would discuss the
matter in closed session.
Those sessions typically occur after the last public agenda item
concludes.
The council stated that a need for the “urgency action” existed
because there were concerns over the state of the economy in relation to
the terrorist acts of Sept. 11. That, to us, sounds like a feeble excuse
for an emergency closed session to discuss a police contract that expired
Aug. 31 and was on the consent calendar earlier that same month.
In fact, media law attorneys that we talked to say the council’s
late-night deliberations may have constituted a violation of the Brown
Act, the state’s open meeting law that dictates the public must be
notified in advance if an issue is going to be discussed by a voting bloc
of elected officials.
Whether or not they violated the Brown Act is a matter for the
district attorney’s office to decide, not us. But there’s no doubt that
the council violated the spirit of open government and the aforementioned
goal of ensuring the public participates in or is at least aware of its
decisions.
The council, like the Planning Commission, should not be making
decisions early in the morning, especially not at 3 a.m.
Once again, we urge the council and the commission to begin meetings
earlier. Perhaps start meetings at 4:30 p.m., rather than 6:30 p.m., and
finish at a reasonable hour.
We’re pretty sure that would help everyone sleep a lot easier.
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