Seeking respect for all podium speakers
Deirdre Newman
Dolores Otting is the Aretha Franklin of city government -- demanding
respect for residents from the City Council, where she feels it is
lacking.
The City Council candidate thinks it should be more inviting for
people to speak up at City Council meetings, not intimidating.
“I think it’s important to make City Hall a more happy place to
make people come,” she said. “There has to be more respect for people
who speak at the podium. Whether we agree or disagree, they need to
be thanked for their participating in government.”
Otting is running against incumbent John Heffernan in a district
that includes Newport Coast.
She started attending City Council meetings more than a decade ago
for business purposes and got hooked. She continued going to meetings
to follow issues she felt passionate about, and that passion never
waned.
“I don’t have children, so I have more time than someone who has
kids and a family,” Otting said. “Once I heard about something going
on, I cared about that.”
Eventually, people asked her if she was going to run for a seat on
the council. That was eight years ago. She ran but lost.
Undeterred, she is running again because some residents asked her
to when they heard incumbent John Heffernan might not, she said.
“They said, ‘You go to the meetings all the time anyway -- you
might as well go for it,’” she said.
Heffernan ultimately decided to run for reelection, so the two of
them are competing for the spot he holds.
Otting grew up in Saugus, Mass., north of Boston. She has lived in
Newport Beach for 15 years.
She and her husband operated a trash-hauling business -- 5 Star
Rubbish Service -- that got a franchise from the city in the 1990s.
They no longer have the business. She would go to City Council
meetings to keep an eye on the trash-hauling scene.
“Because in this business, there’s always someone that wants to
have the whole pie -- you had to protect yourself,” she said.
She is a staunch believer in open government. One area she would
like to shine more light on is the council’s handling of its sphere
issues -- which evolved from the city’s desire to expand its role in
several areas, including John Wayne Airport, redevelopment of Santa
Ana Heights, administration of tidelands in the city and
environmental protections at the closed Coyote Canyon landfill.
She is frustrated that an ad hoc committee is pursuing these goals
and doesn’t have to adhere to the same open-meeting requirements as
the council.
“ ... The public has no knowledge of what’s going on,” Otting
said. “The public needs to know. When do we get to know? I don’t know
what they’re doing. There’s no communication to us.”
Ad hoc committees in general are a pet peeve of hers.
“Every time there’s some [issue] of short duration, [the council]
starts an ad hoc committee,” she said. “They don’t have to [put it on
an agenda] or adhere to the Brown Act. Not that a lot of people would
want to go [to the meetings], but they should still have a choice.”
She also is an advocate of town hall meetings, because they invite
more public input, she said.
“In the 15 years I’ve lived here, the city has its top-10 list of
priorities,” she said. “Not once has anyone asked us what our top 10
priorities are.”
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