Steve Ray: City should be better for residents
RACE FOR CITY COUNCIL
Name: Steve Ray
Age: 53
Occupation: Business owner
Family: Wife Shan; daughter Tiffany; son Stephen.
Community Activities: Current member of the Huntington Beach
Citizen Participation Advisory Board; member of the Bolsa Chica Land
Trust; member of the Ocean Outfall Group.
Education: Studied government and classical civilization at the
University of Texas in Austin; degree from Alice Lloyd College.
Favorite leader: Cesar Chavez and Lech Walesa.
Contact information: (714) 848-0333;
steveray4surfcity@hotmail.com.
RAY ON:
* CITY COUNCIL DISTRICTS:
I oppose the districting initiative for five reasons. Less
representation for residents. Currently, we can vote for all seven
council members. Under this plan, we only get to vote for one,
meaning less choice and less representation. Currently, any resident
can approach any of the seven council members and expect to get a
hearing because he can actually vote for or against them. Under this
plan, if a resident can’t get a hearing with the district member, he
will have very little chance of getting one with any other council
member.
It will result in “pork barrel” politics and make it more
difficult to get things done, costing the taxpayers more money.
Council members will start trading favors and votes to bring
something home for their districts. I questions the motives of the
outside special interests who are behind this initiative, who want to
allow for unchecked development of our coastal and environ-
mental resources.
* PROPOSITION 50:
I support Proposition 50. As a longtime supporter of saving all of
the Bolsa Chica, I support the fair-market price acquisition of the
mesa from the private and public owners using Proposition 50 funds. I
also support Proposition 50 because it will protect and enhance
critical water systems and supply clean water for all areas of
California.
* DEVELOPMENT:
Huntington Beach needs to address development and redevelopment
needs. The “development at any cost” (to the taxpayers) strategy of
past City Councils must be abandoned -- permanently. The abuse of
“eminent domain” for commercial redevelopment must end. I propose a
“smart development” approach, with full citizen input, that will
place emphasis on the quality of life of our residents, enhance our
tax base, and provide good paying jobs to enable our residents to
work and live here.
That approach includes: Appointing a Citizens Task Force to draft
a “strategic plan” to define our growth and development objectives
and limitations. Appointing a Business Development Task Force to
identify future growth industries with good paying jobs, to entice
those companies to locate/relocate here, and to streamline the
regularity and permitting the processes for them. Assuring affordable
housing opportunities for seniors and young families who live here.
Finishing the Huntington Center Mall project. Renovating, upgrading,
and/or redeveloping aging strip malls. And fixing and repairing our
aging infrastructure.
* WATER QUALITY:
We have two major water quality problems -- beach and ocean
contamination and and salt water intrusion in the depleted
underground water aquifer. We need to address both.
Pressure the Orange County Sanitation District to go to full
secondary treatment without delay and even proceed to tertiary level.
Repair our infrastructure to reduce possible contamination, work
with inland cities directly and through reginal groups to reduce
urban runoff and address the issues (like development) that create
it.
For the aquifer problem: Propose a regional task force to study
the extent and time frame of salt water intrusion into the aquifer
and its impact, city by city. Require water conservation in the
city’s public works water usage and encourage conservation by
residents. Evaluate proposed desalination plant and other
alternatives to determine best method to insure future water supply
for the city.
* BIGGEST ISSUE FACING HUNTINGTON BEACH:
The biggest issue in Huntington Beach is, “How do we protect and
enhance the quality of life of our residents?” Huntington Beach is a
wonderful place to live. It can and will be even better. We must
change our direction from growth and development to focus on the
people who already live here. Huntington Beach must continue to
provide the best police, fire, emergency and marine safety services
to protect our lives and property. We need to repair the
infrastructure, clean the ocean and beaches, attract quality
businesses with good paying jobs, ensure affordable living for
seniors and others, have safe water, provide for recreation, the arts
and social services, protect the environment, plan for land use and
open spaces, and do it all within the city’s budget constraints,
without any tax increases -- and be sensible about it.
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