Editorial
Debbie Cook as the mayor of Huntington Beach? Who would have thunk it?
But here we are in 2001 and Cook, the longtime nemesis of city
officials, the watchdog of developers and political corruption is now the
No. 1 politico in town.
How things change.
It was Cook, along with former Councilman Dave Sullivan and the forces
of Huntington Beach Tomorrow, who mounted a referendum campaign in the
early 1990s to preserve beach land and views that were increasingly being
threatened by development.
Cook and her team pounded the pavement and Measure C was born. It
passed by a landslide and now any development that takes place on beach
or park land must first get a majority approval in a citywide vote.
Their efforts managed to squash what would have been a monstrous
restaurant and retail development hooked to the pier and the parking lot
that would have wiped out public vistas and hindered access.
Thanks to them, now the pier has a more modest development that
includes the amphitheater and Duke’s and Chimayo.
This early precursor to the wildfire-like spread of slow-growth
measures today is a sound and reasonable policy that protects the lands
that are near and dear to the public.
Cook’s credentials are much more than that, though. She’s a fierce
critic of wasteful spending, of rubber-stamped development and government
abuse.
And through the years, while others have moderated their stance, Cook
has continued to beat the same strident drum.
At times, we’ve worried out loud that she is too strident and too
critical, but what’s never been in doubt, at least to us, is that she,
much like her council predecessor Sullivan, fights hard for what she
believes is the best interests of the people.
So for that, the residents of Huntington Beach should be grateful.
There’s someone with their interest at heart minding the store.
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