O’Neal takes bigger political splash
Barbara Diamond
As a member of the city’s Wastewater Advisory Committee, Melissa
O’Neal said she is ready to take the plunge into citywide politics,
announcing that she is going to run for one of three open council seats
this November.
O’Neal got her toes wet as a VISION Laguna volunteer.
“My aspirations for a council seat aren’t such a quantum leap,” O’Neal
said. “In the time I served on VISION Laguna and the Wastewater Advisory
Committee, my commitment to our town has been strengthened.”
O’Neal and incumbent Councilwoman Toni Iseman are the only declared
candidates for the three council seats that will be up for election in
November.
The terms of councilmen Paul Freeman and Steven Dicterow also end in
December. Freeman will not run again and Dicterow has not declared his
intention either way.
“It is with a sincere passion of purpose that I seek to serve on our
City Council with the desire to motivate our community to reinvest in the
core mission of municipal government: preserving and protecting the
safety and health of our residents, businesses and natural environment,”
O’Neal said.
Her preliminary platform includes the restoration and proper
maintenance of the city’s infrastructure and facilities and ensuring that
the goals of the city are in line with the vision of the residents.
Her motto will be “VISION -- with a purpose.”
O’Neal was encouraged to run by folks that got to know her in the
visioning process, through her interest in water pollution or as a
neighbor.
“I was really influenced by former council members Kathleen Blackburn
and Wayne Peterson,” O’Neal said.
Peterson first encountered O’Neal at a VISION Laguna meeting one
Saturday morning at Laguna Beach High School.
“She impressed me,” Peterson said. “Melissa had made a presentation on
water problems and how to fund solutions. I asked her if she had read the
budget and she immediately said, ‘How do I get one?”’
After studying the budget, O’Neal visited Peterson, toting a budget
adorned with about 200 Post-it notes.
“She had done her homework,” Peterson said. “I am impressed with her
ability to understand what’s going on and how it fits in with other
issues.”
O’Neal has lived in Laguna Beach since 1989, first in South Laguna and
then in the Mystic Hills home she occupies with her husband, Mike, and a
rescued boxer named Raleigh.
She met her husband of 16 years as a schoolmate in Greeley, Colo.
where O’Neal was born. He is a sales consultant in the computer industry.
She owns a small general contracting firm, serving water and wastewater
infrastructure needs for rural communities and Native American tribes.
O’Neal was born in 1963. Her parents taught in the local school
district in Colorado. She met her future husband on the junior high
school stage.
O’Neal graduated from the University of Northern Colorado in 1985. She
has worked as a gerontologist, grant writer, facilitator and consultant
to municipalities and the private sector.
She served as president of the Santa Clara County Assn. of Geriatric
Social Workers from 1987-89, president of the California Park &
Recreation Society, Aging Section in 1994-95 and as District 10 director
in 1993-94.
“It’s no secret that our rich diversity is what makes our town a
unique and inspirational community,” O’Neal said.
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