Former Mayor Suza Francina, four others in the race for two council seatsBy Daryl KelleyThe race is on for two seats on the Ojai City Council, and voters will have a varied choice this fall.
Joining veteran Council-women Rae Hanstad and Sue Horgan on the November municipal ballot are former Mayor Suza Francina, small business owner Betsy Clapp, and federal government investigator Michael Lenehan.
Community activist Dennis Leary opted out of the council race, citing the “welcome choice” voters now have among the five candidates.
While the candidates said they were all running separate and independent races, incumbents Hanstad and Horgan each signed the other’s nomination papers, and challengers Francina and Clapp did the same for one another.
For his part, Lenehan, a coach and recreation commission member, said he thinks the current City Council is doing a good job and that he probably would not have run if the incumbents had not first bowed out of the race, then re-entered over the last month.
Both incumbents said initially that they would not run for a third full term, but eventually changed their minds, citing unfinished city business, such as construction of a new skate park and a decision on how to meet a state mandate that Ojai provide more affordable housing.
Most direct in her challenge to the incumbents is Clapp.
“We need a change,” Clapp said this week.
“We need to start implementing some programs to make us a model sustainable community,” she said. “And we need to mend the rift between the citizens and the city. Citizens feel very shut out by the current council, because they feel the council does not respond to them.”
Clapp, 56, and Francina, a 59-year-old author and yoga teacher, said they were running on platforms that include policies embraced by the fast-growing Ojai Valley Green Coalition.
“The Ojai Valley Green Coalition is advocating things I’ve supported since 1974,” said Francina, who served on the council from 1996 to 2000, and was derisively dubbed “Mayor Moonbeam” during her mayoral term in 2000.
“I smile when I remember that I used to be called ‘that bicycle lady’ and ‘Mayor Moonbeam’ by those who did not understand the issues I was raising,” Francina said in her official candidate statement.
“Now conservation is the watchword of every government and business around the world,” she added. “It’s time for the City Council to follow through in creating a truly sustainable Ojai.”
In fact, the City Council did endorse those principles in May, when it pledged to embrace an array of new strategies to make the Ojai Valley a “green” community that laces economic, social and ecological needs into the fabric of everyday life.
The sustainability concept is that a society should plan its activities so they meet its needs while preserving the natural way of life, and to maintain this balance indefinitely.
Hanstad and Horgan specifically said then that it was time to make such concepts part of government and community life. And they thanked the Green Coalition for its efforts.
“Ojai’s natural setting and magnificent environment must be protected,” Horgan, 53, said in her candidate statement. “Ojai’s small-town character and sense of community must be preserved.”
Hanstad, 56, stated similar views in her statement, saying her goals were to preserve Ojai’s “hometown character” while balancing its three primary assets: “a natural environment; a diverse character; and a healthy economy.”
Hanstad said she strongly backs “programs to support The Road Map to a Sustainable Ojai.”
Francina said she is running not so much as a challenge to the present council, with which she said she could work effectively, but because of the momentum that seems to be building to enact policies to foster a sustainable community.
“I’ve been watching the council, and it began to feel like this was a really wonderful time to be on the council,” she said.
Indeed, Francina cited as her main accomplishment from her first council term leadership in enacting the city’s bicycle-pedestrian master plan, which could be a key component of a larger plan for a sustainable community. But she said not much has been done to implement it.
As for her relationship with Clapp during the race, Francina said they support each other.
“Betsy understands the issues, the policies,” Francina said.
But both Francina and Clapp said they were not running as a team.
“We’re not running in tandem,” Clapp said. “These are independent campaigns. Some of our ideas are very similar, yes.”
One past issue on which Francina and Clapp agreed was the Los Arboles condominium project adjacent to Libbey Park on Montgomery Street. Both opposed it as too large in scale for Ojai.
“I don’t feel like I was heard about the Los Arboles project,” Clapp said. “It was overly huge.”
Hanstad and Horgan voted for the upscale project, calling it a welcome addition to the downtown area.
Meanwhile, Lenehan, 47, said the focus of his campaign will be improving youth recreational programs.
“If I had known that Rae and Sue had intended to run up-front, I might not have chosen to pursue it,” he said.
Lenehan, a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserve, said he will be stationed in South Korea for the rest of August, but will campaign during the fall.
Locally, Lenehan has coached youth soccer, T-ball and hockey teams on which his five children have participated. He has also been an assistant varsity football coach at Villanova Preparatory School.
“I thought being involved in so many sports and having so many kids, I might as well contribute where I can.”
Leary, a frequent critic of the council, had taken out papers to run. But in an e-mail to the city he withdrew: “The recent change in candidates gives Ojai a welcome choice. I no longer feel the need to seek office.”
Also on the fall ballot will be seats for the board of directors for the Ojai Unified School District, the Casitas Municipal Water District, the Ojai Valley Sanitary District, the Meiners Oaks County Water District and the Ojai Valley Municipal Advisory Committee.
Ojai City Clerk Carlon Strobel will be unchallenged on the ballot, as will City Treasurer Alan Rains.
There are competitive races for two Casitas water board seats. In the first district, representing Ventura, incumbent Jim Word is challenged by retail salesperson David Norrdin and, in the third district, incumbent Pete Kaiser is challenged by fire crew worker Jeff Ketelsen.
For the Ojai Valley Sanitary District, two seats are contested: incumbent William Stone is challenged by state license contractor George Galgas in Division 1; incumbent Kaiser is challenged by Ketelsen and Frank McNerney in Division 3.
On the Ojai Valley MAC, incumbent Alan Saltzman is challenged by Gerald Kaplan in Division 7.
For the Meiners Oaks Water Board, incumbents James Barrett and Karol Ballentine are challenged by retired business owner Norm Davis.