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 Post subject: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Thu Dec 11, 2014 2:39 pm 
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From NBC San Diego:
Quote:
Wednesday, Dec 10, 2014 • Updated at 9:04 PM PST

The San Diego City Council saw a shake-up in leadership Wednesday when Councilwoman Sherri Lightner was voted to be the next council president, ending the tenure of Councilman Todd Gloria.

A 7-2 majority elected Lightner, the first woman to hold the council president position since a strong mayor system was enacted.

"I understand the decision today," said Gloria. "It's about politics. It's not about my performance as council president, and I will show up here tomorrow to do the work of representing the people of District 3 and do my very best to make this city a better place to be."

Ligthner left City Hall without commenting on her new position. However, she later issued a statement that said she is honored her colleagues have selected her as their new leader.

"I have worked hard during my six years on Council to be fair, open minded, and independent. I’ve always been a voice for our neighborhoods, and I’m not afraid to go against the grain or stand up for the little guy. I’ll continue to do my homework and make well-researched, informed decisions," her statement read in part.

Wearing purple and carrying yellow signs, more than 100 people showed up to support Gloria in City Hall as the council elected their new leader.

The vote came the same day newly elected Councilman Chris Cate and returning members David Alvarez, Myrtle Cole and Lorie Zapf were sworn in, allowing everyone in the new council to have a say in the issue.

But first, over 30 public speakers gave testimony either for or against Gloria, most describing his hard work during a dark time in San Diego politics. Gloria stepped in as interim mayor last year after Bob Filner’s sexual harassment scandal and eventual resignation.

"Primarily when the city had a crisis, he stepped up and he put the city first," said Will Rodriguez-Kennedy, one of the speakers. "But in addition, as a person of color, it's good to see people in power and who are doing well in power as examples for our children."

The strong show of support was a bright spot in an otherwise disappointing day for Gloria.

"And as unfortunate as the outcome is, as disappointed as I am about the outcome, I'm really heartened by this testimony that was given today by people from all corners of this city who are very happy with the job that I'm doing," said Gloria.

However, some in city leadership have expressed anger with Gloria’s minimum wage proposal. And as the Democratic-controlled council's top leader, Gloria would likely have been in a position to go up against the mayor on certain issues.

Republicans on the council and in the mayor's office decided they would rather battle it out against Lightner instead of the outspoken Gloria.

Gloria told NBC 7 he is looking forward to continue his work with Lightner, whom he had selected as his second in command.

In turn, Lightner's statement commended Gloria for his time in office.

"He has done an outstanding job during his tenure as Interim Mayor and Council President," her release read. "He brought stability and a calming presence to the City during a very difficult time and helped restore faith in city government. I will always be one of his biggest fans, as he is one of the best and brightest elected officials with whom I've ever worked. I cannot say enough good things about Todd and the job he has done. I know everyone in San Diego shares my gratitude for his service.”

Lightner, who held the second highest post on the council as president pro tem, is also chair of the Economic Development and Intergovernmental Relations Committee.

As the new council leader, she said she and her colleagues need to improve police salaries, update the city charter, approve the Climate Action Plan, address infrastructure and water needs and put more city services online.

Mayor Kevin Faulconer quickly responded to the vote, releasing the following statement:

“I want to congratulate Sherri Lightner on being elected City Council President for 2015. We already have a great working relationship and I look forward to working together to create more opportunities for all San Diegans. I would also like to commend Councilmember Todd Gloria for his leadership over the past two years and for working collaboratively with me to get the City back on track.”

Council presidents are elected for one-year terms. Gloria was first elected in 2013 and then re-elected by his peers in 2014, according to his online bio.

The position gained importance almost a decade ago when San Diego switched over to a strong mayor form of government. Since then, a council president runs the council meetings and sets the agenda.

"He or she is the person who brings items forward, stops items, delays items," said Stampp Corbin, the publisher of the San Diego LGBT Weekly who supports Gloria. "That's really important. They make the decision about what the agenda's going to be for the city."


From Fox 5 San Diego:
Quote:
SAN DIEGO — New San Diego City Councilman Chris Cate and three reelected colleagues were sworn in Wednesday for four-year terms, and Sherri Lightner was subsequently named as the panel’s first female president.

Cate, who was the vice president of the San Diego County Taxpayers Association, defeated Carol Kim in the runoff election last month for District 6, which includes Mira Mesa, Kearny Mesa and part of Clairemont Mesa.

Cate is also a former council staff member for Kevin Faulconer, who is now the mayor.

“Mayor Faulconer, fellow council members, I look forward to working with you to improve San Diego’s neighborhoods,” Cate said.

“Yes, we’re all going through trials and tribulations, but I see these as opportunities, not challenges,” he said. “Know that I am here, just as you are, to improve the quality of life for all residents in America’s finest city.”

Cate’s ascension into office allowed the council to choose a new leader. Such a vote had been scheduled for Monday, due to a quirk in the council rules, but it was postponed until Wednesday so Cate could have input.

Lightner, who represents La Jolla and Carmel Valley, replaced Todd Gloria as council president. Gloria, who filled the position for two years, was lauded by representatives of organized labor, the gay and lesbian community and environmental groups, but he failed to muster a majority of other council members.

He was nominated for a third year by Councilman David Alvarez, who gave an impassioned speech on his behalf, but his motion failed by a 5-4 margin.

Lightner was then nominated by Councilwoman Marti Emerald, who said she had “a great sense of promise that Sherri would be an excellent president.”

“She shares many of the same values that Todd has exhibited in the field and she’s done the same thing — she’s stood for the same issues,” Emerald said.

Lightner was an engineer for 23 years for General Atomics and Rohr Industries, after which she became a consultant and community activist.

She was first elected in 2008 and was reelected in 2012. She was the council president pro tem, or Gloria’s second-in-command.

Her colleagues named her president on a 7-2 vote, with Alvarez and Gloria dissenting. That followed nearly 90 minutes of public comment in which everyone supported Gloria and praised him for moving the city past the scandals of former Mayor Bob Filner.

Councilman Scott Sherman said Gloria was the right guy at the right time, but on most boards, the job of president rotates routinely.

“There’s limits on your time in the presidency — there just is,” Sherman said.

Lightner said she has worked hard to be a “fair, open-minded and independent” councilwoman.

“We need to continue to be advocates to strengthen the voices of each of San Diego’s diverse neighborhoods,” she said. “We need to improve police salaries, update our city’s charter, approve the Climate Action Plan, address our infrastructure and water needs, and put more city services online to make city government work better for our citizens.”

She said she was “honored that my colleagues trust and respect my leadership” and “am proud to stand up and serve the city of San Diego as the first female council president.”

Mayor Kevin Faulconer issued a statement congratulating Lightner.

“We already have a great working relationship and I look forward to working together to create more opportunities for all San Diegans,” Faulconer said. “I would also like to commend Councilmember Todd Gloria for his leadership over the past two years and for working collaboratively with me to get the city back on track.”

The council president wields considerable power over setting meeting agendas, determines committee assignments and often appears with the mayor in a ceremonial role.

At a ceremony at Golden Hall, Alvarez and Lorie Zapf were sworn-in for second terms. Alvarez represents Barrio Logan and South San Diego communities.

Zapf, who had represented Cate’s District 6, shifted over to District 2 — Point Loma, Mission Bay, Bay Park — for reelection because of a change in City Council boundaries.

Myrtle Cole began her first full term on the panel, representing Southeast San Diego. She took office last year after a special election that followed the resignation of Tony Young.

Ed Harris, who served on the panel for eight months after Faulconer became mayor, stepped down to make way for Zapf. He said he will resume his duties as a lifeguard next month.

Around 25 demonstrators stood quietly along a side wall of the cavernous hall for the inauguration ceremony, quietly holding their hands in the now-familiar “hands up, don’t shoot” symbol from the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, where a police officer shot an unarmed black man.

They also placed their hands at their throats to signify the death of a man in New York, who asphyxiated during a struggle with an officer.

They didn’t disrupt the ceremony, however, and waited for the event to end before marching through the room and chanting.

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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Thu Dec 11, 2014 6:36 pm 
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:? :?: :? :?:

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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Thu Dec 11, 2014 7:46 pm 
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Bob,

That's a lot to read. Is there some part of all that that is important to the Torrey Hawks? Locals may get it, but those of us further away may be scratching our heads. ( ? ? ? )

First off - Is Sherri Lightner the counsel member who represents (or represented) the City District in which Torrey Pines City Park is located?


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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Thu Dec 11, 2014 11:46 pm 
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Wingspan,
It looks to me that the situation is now worse off.
Sherri Lightner of District 3 (Torrey Pines is in #3) not only was of no help to follow the legal settlement and establish the advisory board under City charter 43A but she will now be able to control the agenda for the counsel meetings.

I know where she stands and now she has more power to stand in the way of hang gliding pilots ever being assigned to an advisory board that legally should be established but for sure now won’t be.


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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Fri Dec 12, 2014 12:50 am 
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Bill is exactly right.    :(

The US Hawks is really growing lately, and I'm beginning to learn that if I wait long enough to answer a question, someone else might actually do it for me.
   :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: :clap:

Thanks Bill. This is a new high water mark in establishing the Torrey Hawks and the US Hawks as being independent of that "bobk" fellow!!

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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Fri Dec 12, 2014 5:21 am 
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What Bill said. :( That's what I thought it all added up to. :thumbdown: :problem:

bobk wrote:
US Hawks .. being independent of that "bobk" fellow!!


:crazy: This scares me more than learning to Loop.

Unless, like I suggested a couple of years ago, bobK gets elected as San Diego's Mayor :clap: :thumbup: 8-) :clap: :thumbup: 8-)

We have seen bobK unite both sides across the isle, literally, in his address to city council. They all know bobK by now.

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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Fri Dec 12, 2014 12:41 pm 
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Here is an educational copy/paste with the goal of aiding the readers to come to their own conclusion. A conclusion as to being able to have trust, or not, in the San Diego City Council following the law or circumventing it when it comes to the Ralph M. Brown Act, the state's open meetings law:
After the controversial election of a new San Diego City Council president, NBC 7's Gene Cubbison learned more about how that change in command took place. (Published Thursday, Dec 11, 2014)
Thursday, Dec 11, 2014 • Updated at 6:45 PM PST

In the aftermath of Wednesday’s controversial election of a new San Diego City Council president, more details have emerged about the process of how that change of command came about.

Let me direct your attention to the section that you will find lower in the NBC 7 news report:

------------“NBC 7 has learned from council aides with direct knowledge of the pre-election process that there was a series of private, one-on-one meetings that involved a total of six council members including Gloria and Lightner.

It appears no official "quorum" of five was ever reached – which would constitute a violation of the Ralph M. Brown Act, the state's open meetings law.

They recounted separate meetings involving Marti Emerald and Gloria, Emerald and Lightner, Sherman and Lightner, Lori Zapf and Lightner, and David Alvarez and Lightner.

According to one aide, Lighter told Gloria last week that she was “going for it."

Because the meetings appear to have involved discussions that would fall under the “Serial Meetings” section of the Brown Act, our findings were forwarded to the city attorney's office for review.”----------


After NBC 7 first reported rumblings of a move to replace Council President Todd Gloria two weeks ago, his vice president Sherri Lightner did not comment on her thoughts about the key job that Gloria had held for two years.

On Wednesday, Gloria offered his thoughts on Lighter, who’s represented San Diego’s 1st City Council district since 2008, having replaced him.

"This is politics, and so you can't take it personally,” Gloria said. “And I won’t act out personally where this is concerned. I'm just going to do my level best to continue the initiatives that I've been pushing."

Some of the initiatives Gloria has been pushing may have struck the four Republicans on the nine-member Council as too bent on "social engineering" instead of the "nuts and bolts" of municipal operations.

Lightner and two other Democrats joined them in a 7-2 vote ousting Gloria, who got support from fellow Democrat David Alvarez in opposing Lightner’s selection.

As for the move being "politics"?

"Last time, I voted for Todd Gloria and I was praised for being nonpartisan,” Republican Councilman Scott Sherman said before Wednesday’s balloting. “Am I going to be partisan if I vote for a different Democrat this time?"

NBC 7 has learned from council aides with direct knowledge of the pre-election process that there was a series of private, one-on-one meetings that involved a total of six council members including Gloria and Lightner.

It appears no official "quorum" of five was ever reached – which would constitute a violation of the Ralph M. Brown Act, the state's open meetings law.

They recounted separate meetings involving Marti Emerald and Gloria, Emerald and Lightner, Sherman and Lightner, Lori Zapf and Lightner, and David Alvarez and Lightner.

According to one aide, Lighter told Gloria last week that she was “going for it."

Because the meetings appear to have involved discussions that would fall under the “Serial Meetings” section of the Brown Act, our findings were forwarded to the city attorney's office for review.

A key paragraph to consider in the law: “It must be determined whether the communications were used to develop a concurrence as to the action to be taken. If the serial communications were not used to develop a concurrence as to action to be taken, the serial communications do not constitute a meeting and the (Brown) Act is not applicable.”

Council aides told us there were no impermissible communications in those discussions.

Lightner, meantime, declined to speak with reporters Wednesday, but has scheduled media interviews for Friday.

"She needs to be able to explain why she's going to do what she's going to do,” said Scott Lewis, editor in chief of Voice of San Diego. “ And why she wanted to do this in particular -- to somebody that even she and everybody else agrees was doing a fine job."

Said Gloria: "The nuts and bolts, the gears of this city have been running incredibly smoothly, which is why it's disconcerting that we would try to make a change when things are finally hitting stride and we're doing well."

Source: http://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/B ... z3Li9Nx0oE
Follow us: @nbcsandiego on Twitter | NBCSanDiego on Facebook

Here is my take (Bill C.)
Gloria stepped in as interim mayor last year after Bob Filner’s sexual harassment scandal and eventual resignation.
Lightner now is in a position to act as interim mayor should the current mayor, Mayor Faulconer, be unable to fulfill his duties.
Sherri Lightner whom is an impediment to my sport of hang gliding, is a political climber. With each step up the political ladder she will have even more power to work against my interests as a hang gliding pilot.


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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Fri Dec 12, 2014 6:47 pm 
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Okay, now I get it!

Sounds like a VERY BIG can of worms has been opened. If the local NBC affiliate is reporting on corruption (?) being involved in the recent changes to the San Diego City Counsel then there's some big news there.

Could be retired San Diego Narc Cop, David Jebb, and AIR CALIFORNIA ADVENTURE, Inc. is just the tip of a much larger Ice Berg! :shock:

- - - - I once worked for a business that I later learned (after I quit) may have actually been a cover for a drug dealing and smuggling ring. That seemed hard to believe but then, too many things made sense, looking back on various events.

Hmmmmmmmm, . . . .


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 Post subject: Re: Musical Chairs on San Diego City Council
PostPosted: Sun Dec 14, 2014 1:09 pm 
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It is somewhat poetic justice that Todd Gloria was stabbed in the back by Sherri Lightner.

During his entire term as Council President and Interim Mayor, Todd Gloria backed Sherri Lightner by not taking action on the Gliderport (presumably in deference to her because the property is in her district). Furthermore, Todd Gloria also violated the Brown Act by only broadcasting selected video angles during my presentations and explicitly NOT showing my slides despite my repeated requests and my repeated references to the Brown Act.

It's particularly ironic that it may have been violations of the Brown Act that were involved in Sherri Lightner's back-stabbing take over of Todd Gloria's Presidency.

Here's a picture of Sherri Lightner (left) and Todd Gloria (right) from: http://www.sandiegometro.com/2014/12/daily-business-report-dec-11-2014/

Attachment:
File comment: Sherri Lightner and Todd Gloria in lighter times — at the Roosevelt Dinner on April 14, 2012
Lightner-Gloria.jpg
Lightner-Gloria.jpg [ 18.74 KiB | Viewed 9144 times ]

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