Credibility suddenly subject of forum
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Noaki Schwartz
CORONA DEL MAR -- The leaders of dueling initiatives faced off on Monday
but ended up debating the trustworthiness of city officials instead of
the merits of the measures.
Greenlight proponents insisted that city officials cannot be trusted to
make decisions for voters, even hinting at the recent revelations that
Mayor John Noyes was on the run from the law for nearly a decade.
“There’s been all this talk of representative government,” said
Greenlight supporter Phil Arst. “In the words of Mayor Noyes, ‘trust your
elected officials.’ ”
Arst’s statement, expressed at Monday’s Corona del Mar Residents Assn.
forum, was in response to a comment from Noyes, who at a council meeting
earlier this year pleaded with residents to trust their elected officials
to make decisions about the city’s future.
Former councilwoman Lucille Kuhen said Arst’s comment was a “low blow.”
“It was below the belt and an unnecessary comment,” she said.
Upon later reflection, Arst said his comment about Noyes was made in
reference to something else.
The increasingly heated debate revolving around the Greenlight measure --
which proposes to give voters the final say on “major” developments --
has divided the city.
The community activists who drafted the measure say it was born in
response to an increasingly development-happy city council. City
officials countered by saying the Greenlight initiative undermines
representative government.
Greenlight supporters are now going head-to-head with the proponents of a
countermeasure, the Traffic Phasing Ordinance Preservation initiative. It
proposes to strengthen the city’s existing law, which is intended to
provide some relief from traffic. The countermeasure, if it wins over
enough voters, would render the Greenlight initiative ineffective.
The dueling groups have been battling it out at community forums and even
on the streets. Emotions have become so heated that a Greenlight
supporter was recently accused of accosting an advocate of the rival
initiative.
Monday’s forum was no different, with two community activists pitted
against two former city officials. Phil Arst and Susan Caustin
represented Greenlight and former city officials Clarence Turner and Tom
Edwards presented the Traffic Phasing Ordinance measure.
“Things are out of control,” said Caustin. “And that’s why a group of
residents came together and said ‘we need to gain control.’ ”
But countermeasure proponents insist that city officials deserve the
trust of voters.
“Somehow, Greenlight wants you to mistrust your council,” said former
mayor Clarence Turner. “I earned your trust. I worked like the devil to
get this trust. Everybody’s attacking these mythical council people.”
The debate over city officials’ integrity prompted Councilman Dennis
O’Neil -- normally a spectator at these meetings -- to make a statement.
“People in this town do respect and trust elected officials and I’m not
sure that’s totally the major issue here,” he said, adding that council
members don’t get together and “conspire about how they will ruin the
city.”
Far from gaining supporters, the debate appeared to baffle residents more
than anything else.
“I’m more confused now than I was when I came in,” said Sophie Edberg, a
longtime resident and member of the League of Women Voters.
Resident Erwin Fox agreed, adding that he didn’t trust either side.
The comment about Noyes followed a well-publicized May 25 report in the
Los Angeles Times, which detailed the mayor’s past history. Noyes
campaigned for city council on a law and order platform, but had been
wanted on criminal kidnapping charges in Idaho during the late 1970s and
early 1980s. Noyes had snatched his daughters, then 6 and 7, from the
legal custody of his ex-wife.
In an earlier written statement, Noyes said he had no choice but “to
pursue an aggressive course of action in order to protect [his]
children.”
The kidnapping charges, in effect from 1976 to 1985, were formally
dismissed in 1986.
In 1987, Noyes’ ex-wife, Ann Heltsley, sued him in federal court,
claiming that he had destroyed her relationship with her children. He was
found liable by a federal judge and Heltsley was awarded $665,000.
Noyes said in court depositions taken for the civil lawsuit that he
obtained a second Social Security card, driver’s license and bank account
issued under the name North for at least three years.
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