Resigning from Traffic and Public Safety Commission

The following was a presentation I prepared for oral communications at the council meeting of Oct 18th.  I was to be the first speaker, but as I was waiting the auditorium started to fill up with dozens of children, some as young as three who were there to have pictures taken with the Mayor.  I could not say the words below, starting with the probable accidental death of a child, in front of these toddlers, a few certain to still be in the audience.  What I ended up saying, which was based on this, is on the oral communication drop down of the meeting video.

One day,  a few years, or maybe even a decade from now -- there will be an article in the Coast News about a child  killed walking on the side of a street of our city,  one without sidewalks like LaCosta Ave heading toward the beach.  Cars buzz by only feet away, and probability of human error dictates one is certain to veer just enough.   

There may be a short clip on the news of the mother tearfully remembering how she repeatedly asked the city to provide a sidewalk for her children, recounting her words to the Traffic & Public Safety Commission, "I'm not asking, I'm begging, do not wait for a child to die before you fix this."  Finally a Commissioner telling her, "look the city doesn't have it in the budget, so you just have to be patient." 

Every solution for traffic or Public Safety dangers depends on availability of funds.      Monday, I submitted a proposal to the  Commission to address this.     Although, the City Manager instructed it not be considered, the Commission overruled him, and allowed it to come to a vote:
 
The motion was originally as follows:

In response to new information on the limits of the Pacific View property for an arts center, and the availability of other city owned locations,  we request a suspension of proceeding with the purchase until an evaluation of all venues is undertaken, with all potential savings being dedicated to public safety.  

Realizing this was too much to ask, I revised the last part to something much less, -- only asking the council to renegotiate clauses of the existing purchase contract for Pacific View that both Bob Bonde, who supports the purchase, and I, happen to agree on. 


The Chairman asked if was a second to this motion that would urge the council to renegotiate.  I glanced over to the two Commissioners who had previously congratulated me for my supporting  a different location for an art center that would save many millions of dollars.    

They both remained silent. 

The gavel fell,  The motion failed.

My resignation on Monday was not for lack of a taste for challenges such as this, as I will sorely miss such interaction.   Rather, It was the realization that this commission,  now under the supervision of the City Manager, will be even less likely to productively engage its broad public safety mandate. 

I could no longer be a  part of a city government that placed "saving a plot of land" above saving the lives of children --- who want nothing more than to frolic on the beach.  This simply because existing officials, and I must say other candidates for office, refuse to seriously engage this subject.

4 comments:

  1. Al: I commend you for doing what you did. I was on the Parks and Recreation Commission for 6 years, and loved it until Mr. Vina decided we needed to do a strategic plan, whatever that was. We really had no idea, as we were always told we took direction from the City Council. That changed under Mr. Vina's and Parks and Recreation Director, Lisa Rudloff. I approached a couple of Council member about this,but they did nothing. So, when I was up for reappointment, I decided it was a waste of time for me to be on a Commission that was not allowed to do anything. We had no say in the Hall Park, we had no say in Moonlight Beach. We had no say in the Holiday Parade, where I had been the one who had begun our own involvement, using my Camero Convertible. Staff took it over and told us what we were going to do in the parade. I am afraid that most Commissions are going to end up in the hands of staff i.e: Mr. Vina. There is no longer a buffer between staff and Council. Was this deliberate? I don't know. I miss my colleagues on Parks and Recreation, but I felt it was no longer a service to the community and I didn't want to be a part of Mr. Vina's agenda. Thank you for speaking out.

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  2. Thanks for your comment.

    The public safety element of this Commission is all that our city has to address the sea change precipitated by the Ferguson killing and more clearly the Staten Island NY choking by police that was clearly an act of homicide. We have no such organized brutality among our policing agency, yet such dynamics should be aired. The Lieutenant from the Sheriff's office valued a long conversation we had after one meeting on such challenges of policing, but those on the commission dared not go beyond boosterism of our uniformed employees.

    Pacific View, given its limitations by zoning that we now are aware of, may become mostly a park, otherwise known as homeless magnet. Such unfortunate people are usually dealt with by the unwritten legal code that the public would rather not know about. If we create a new comfortable space, we should address how the city will deal with the thousands who would love to enjoy our climate. More real issues to be addressed.

    While this use of this plan as an arts center is mostly illusion, the diversion of funds from making streets safer is real, and finding of Probability would confirm that the cost of this expenditure, will be at the least result in one deceased citizen over the course of the purchase.

    I will try to find a way to have some impact in addressing such hidden issues.

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  3. Al, nearly 20 years ago a little Mexican girl was killed walking on north end of the 101. Today the north end of H101 is still a danger to all citizens, walkers, runners, whatnot. The purchase of Pacific View is simply so that council members can have their names on a brass plaque. The death of a child means nothing compared to the eternity of a brass plaque.

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  4. The girl was maybe 2 years old and was waiting at the bus stop just south of Grandview with her mother. A car was sideswiped on Coast Hwy and jumped the curb (one of the few areas with curb and sidewalk) and struck and killed the little girl.

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