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  • A Little Advice

    A LITTLE ADVICE
    By Andre Coleman and Margaret McAustin

    Pasadena Weekly, CA
    Feb 8 2007

    Outgoing councilman offers some opinions on what candidates in the
    race for his District 2 seat should be talking about

    Before attending a forum tonight, candidates for the District 2
    City Council seat being vacated by three-term Councilman Paul Little
    should listen to what Little has to say, which, essentially, boils
    down to this: Know the people and get some distance from the opinions
    of your opponents.

    "I worked really hard and had a really good core group of people
    devoted to the campaign and there were a couple of issues where I was
    the only one to take a position," Little said recently. "That seemed
    to resonate with a lot of the voters."

    Unfortunately the opposite seems to be happening as the three
    candidates - Margaret McAustin, Stacy Lewis and Jim Lomako - all
    seem to be taking similar stands on major issues such as development,
    traffic and education.

    "The biggest challenge is getting growth under control in the city as
    a whole," said the 59-year-old Lomako, a longtime legal investigator
    who is not a lawyer but served as a former president of the Pasadena
    chapter of the ACLU, and served as a member of both the city's
    Community Development Committee and the Design Commission.

    "I think the most serious problem is we have been building at a rate
    that exceeds what the General Plan allows. I'm making it an issue
    because other candidates have not been talking about it," he said.

    But they are talking about it, and sometimes they sound almost
    like Lomako.

    "I think we're nearing the limits of the growth allowed in the
    district according to the 1994 General Plan," said McAustin, 53,
    a member of the city's Planning Commission who helped start two
    neighborhood associations, serving as president of the Pasadena
    Highlands Neighborhood Association.

    "I think we need to evaluate the growth in terms of the number of
    people the Pasadena infrastructure can support. We need a comprehensive
    approach to growth that evaluates the totality of all growth. Not just
    a project by project approach," said McAustin, an executive with the
    Esteve Group, an International Commodities firm based in Dallas.

    Last year, McAustin worked as a neighborhood outreach consultant
    for the Ambassador West Project, a planned community of more than
    200 senior citizen condos on the former Ambassador College campus,
    where she dealt with three neighborhood associations in areas close
    to the project, including the highly anti-development West Pasadena
    Residents Association, WPRA.

    McAustin said she was appointed to the Planning Commission after taking
    the Ambassador job, and said she never participated in any commission
    discussions regarding the Ambassador West Project, which was approved
    by the commission and is scheduled for City Council consideration on
    Feb. 26.

    "I am proud of the work I did. I even got the WPRA to support the
    project," she said.

    Although Little praised all the candidates overall, he observed that
    there are some things that are also important but aren't being talked
    about much by any of them.

    For starters, District 2 boasts a strong Latino community and a
    burgeoning Armenian-American population. Much of the district includes
    central and eastern portions of the city, with District 2 covering much
    of the city's central core, including East Colorado Boulevard between
    Wilson and Oak avenues, an area buzzing with residential development.

    In the neighborhoods north of Colorado, the district contains two
    historic landmark districts, and could gain one more, with both
    representing more than 1,000 homes. Over the past few years, the
    district has become a prime target for developers.

    "Preserving open space and development issues are important, but we
    have more important issues in Pasadena. There are too many people
    who are poor and homeless and too few resources dealing with those
    problems. We get sidetracked spending significant amounts of money on
    other things, and they are worthwhile, but we have to look at other
    issues like violence in the minority community, and the underlying
    issues that cause these problems," Little said.

    Last year, 93 of the 124 arr-ests made by Pasadena police for suspicion
    of prostitution-related crimes were made in District 2.

    When it comes to homeless people, it's hard to quantify those
    numbers on a district-by-district basis. However, as the city's
    population climbs, so too does its homeless community seem to grow,
    with an estimated 1,500 homeless people now calling Pasadena home on
    a given night.

    But along with that, District 2 wrestles with its own issues of ethnic
    diversity and cultural identity. Newly immigrated Armenian-American
    kids, for instance, enter schools, pick up the fashions, the fads
    and all the trappings, "and that creates some tensions," Little noted.

    Several years ago, these types of tensions between Armenian-American
    and African-American children turned into violence at Marshall
    Fundamental School, located in the heart of District 2 on Allen Avenue,
    forcing campus security to lock down the campus and the now-defunct
    Pasadena Unified School District Police Force to book and cite nine
    students.

    Only Lewis, a 43-year-old telecommunications executive, mentioned the
    cultural issues associated with those incidents in his interview with
    the Weekly.

    "There have been some cultural problems which I think can be addressed
    by reaching across cultural barriers," said Lewis. "It's something I am
    engaged in doing right now. I have had discussions with the principals
    at Marshall and Webster [Elementary School] and have spoken to other
    residents about the problem."

    Refuting claims that he sounds much like his opponents on some issues,
    Lewis has his own take on what some view as runaway development.

    "I'm not worried about sounding like everyone else," Lewis said. "I
    have a different understanding of development and growth. There is
    nothing wrong with development. It is how it is done in Pasadena. The
    question is how growth is achieved. Is the community aware of what
    is being planned is there transparency in that process? People are
    adverse to change. If there is change, everyone should feel like a
    stakeholder in it so that there are no surprises.

    "It's not a matter of should we grow," said Lewis, who served as
    president of the Brigden Ranch Neighborhood Association. "It's a
    matter of effective growth."

    The race generated some controversy last week when a letter to
    the editor from a person named "Miriam Brandstedt" appeared in the
    Pasadena Star-News, accusing Lomako of being a "dangerous candidate"
    who bullied residents to sign a petition supporting a neighborhoods
    petition for landmark district status.

    According to the city planner, no one named "Miriam Brandstedt" signed
    the petition and the address on the letter does not exist. The daily
    paper has since apologized.

    Little, who has been on the council for 12 years, is resigning
    to devote more attention to his son, Cameron who will be attending
    college in New York in the fall, and his daughter, Courtney, who is
    currently in high school.

    "Twelve years is a long time and you get a little bit jaundiced about
    how you view things," Little said. "I think if I spent four more
    years arguing about the merits of cell phone towers in a remote part
    of the city I would go berserk. I have enjoyed working with people,
    but I notice that my patience is shorter. I don't know if I would do
    as good a job. It's time somebody else stepped up."
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