Santa Barbara's new Mayor Helene Schneider gets a round of applause from the audience and elected councilmembers at City Hall Jan. 12, 2010
Paul Wellman

If sweet talk were cash dollars, the City of Santa Barbara’s budget woes would have quickly vaporized amid all the bi-partisan good will and high regard expressed at Tuesday’s swearing-in ceremony for Santa Barbara’s new mayor, Helene Schneider, and newly elected councilmembers Grant House, Bendy White, Frank Hotchkiss and Michael Self. Given that the election that put these five in their current positions was the most personal, acrimonious, and—with combined campaign contributions far exceeding the million-dollar mark—expensive ever, a conciliatory love fest was not a bad way for the new council to start.

Certainly, as almost every speaker noted, the new council faces a range of daunting challenges. And it’s easily the most narrowly split between liberals and conservatives in many years. Still, Helene Schneider could not stop herself from beaming upon being sworn in as mayor. “A lot of people ask me, ‘Why do you want to be mayor in such times,’” she said. “And I tell you, I’d rather be nowhere else.”

Incoming Councilmembers Frank Hotchkiss (left) and Bendy White.
Paul Wellman

Schneider, a liberal Democrat, was also mindful that the new council is far from homogenous when it comes to political values. “If we spend all our time and energy bickering and arguing,” she cautioned, “all of us will fail.”

New councilmember Bendy White was quick to itemize many of the challenges confronting City Hall, and to remind his new council colleagues and members of the overflow crowd that he’ll be a swing vote in the months to come. But mostly, White wanted to thank each and every friend and relative who helped get him elected, name by name. This prompted new councilmember Frank Hotchkiss, a Republican, Buddhist, real estate agent, and one-time actor, to quip, “I want to thank the one person in the audience Bendy didn’t mention—my wife.”

Outgoing Councilmember Iya Falcone
Paul Wellman

Stepping down to make way for the new elected officials were outgoing Mayor Marty Blum, who served two terms as mayor and two on the council, and councilmembers Roger Horton and Iya Falcone, who served two terms each, all precluded from running again by the city’s term limits restriction. Falcone urged new councilmembers to be true to themselves, and, by way of farewell, said, “If you see me riding around on the back of a beautiful blue Harley, please wave and say hello.” She then quickly changed into a leather motorcycle vest bearing the insignia, “Brotherhood of Carpinteria” on the back. Roger Horton, now battling cancer, was praised for his passionate support of kids, trains, and historic preservation. Blum exhorted the new councilmembers to keep their minds open and their tongues civil.

David Starkey, the city’s official poet laureate, warned in his poem, “Swearing In,” of the tough fiscal choices already made—libraries temporarily closed, for example—and the even tougher choices still looming: “This past Christmas, for days together books were locked from their readers. A man named ‘Freedom’ froze to death. Some mornings the air still smells of ash.” Combining blunt commentary with class clowning, homeless advocate and recent mayoral candidate Bob Hanson addressed the new council wearing a wig and a beard spray painted fluorescent green. He presented Schneider with a miniature shopping cart affixed to a tripod, and blasted the war on the poor which he charged City Hall has been waging. Dismissing the Ten Year Plan to end chronic homelessness, as well as the city’s 12 point plan to deal with homelessness—both championed by Schneider—as “bull,” Hanson complained that City Hall had locked up four public restrooms frequented by the homeless.

Mayor Helene Schneider (right) and Councilmember Dale Francisco.
Paul Wellman

Shortly after winning election as mayor, Schneider started tackling some of the thornier problems on her plate. She contacted First District County Supervisor Salud Carbajal and Goleta City Councilmember Roger Aceves to find out the status of the South Coast Gang Task Force considering the imminent retirement from City Hall of acting gang czar Don Olson. County officials, confronting a $20 million budget deficit, are not eager to commit any funds to the effort. Negotiations with the city’s politically powerful Police Officers Association—which donated at least $65,000 to their slate of candidates this past November—are right around the corner; with an $8 to $9 million city budget shortfall looming on the horizon, Schneider is anxious to see what concessions the POA is willing to make. She’s also anxious to get started with a program allowing home owners to fund solar installations and other energy saving investments by “borrowing” against a voluntary increase in their property tax assessments. Down the road, of course, the council will again set to work on the long simmering update to Santa Barbara’s general plan, the city’s planning bible, to guide land use policy for the next 20 years. Intractable differences have separated traditional slow-growthers from so-called new urbanists, the latter more comfortable with higher densities and mass transit.

City Council swearing in, January 12, 2010.
Paul Wellman

But on Tuesday, Schneider’s first exercise of mayoral authority was symbolic. She insisted that councilmembers pose for a photograph as a group instead of posting individual councilmembers’ photos on the walls outside the council chambers. “At the end of the day, we have to work together as a group,” she said, “in the best interest of the community, if we want to keep it amazing.”

Hovering over the event, naturally, was the death of former mayor Harriet Miller—who died last Wednesday at age 90. Miller has been remembered for prodding many councilmembers, past and present, into civic engagement, getting things done, running short meetings, and keeping her own comments shorter still. Blum noted that Miller would probably have been aghast at all of Tuesday’s speechifying. “I remember Harriet,” she said. “Four words, and you’re done.”

Out-going Mayor Marty Blum at City Hall Jan. 12, 2010
Paul Wellman

Blum was quick to wave off discussion of her own mayoral legacy, stating, “There’s no solo act in government.” But more than any councilmembers can, the mayor personifies City Hall. As mayor, Blum proved exceptionally accessible, clocking 70-hour work weeks, answering every email, and attending every ribbon-cutting. People who mistook Blum for her school-marmish persona—she is a former elementary school teacher—did so at their own peril. Blum clashed famously with the police union, and still expresses regret at the size of the last contract City Hall approved with the POA, when the department was experiencing an exodus of trained officers leaving for other departments. While other politicos grumbled privately—and incessantly—about News-Press owner Wendy McCaw and her editorial page alter ego, Travis Armstrong, Blum declared open rhetorical warfare on the News-Press, proclaiming in a mass-mailed fund-raising missive that there was “a stench” emanating from De la Guerra Plaza where the newspaper offices are. Blum loved being mayor with a formidable ferocity. While stricken with breast cancer early in her second term, she became convinced that Councilmember Falcone was planning a putsch. (Falcone denied this.) Only three days after having both breasts surgically removed, Blum was back at the job. She spoke publicly and openly about her ordeal, inspiring and comforting many in the community of cancer survivors and their families. Relations between Blum and Falcone, however, remained sour ever since.

Outgoing mayor Marty Blum
Paul Wellman

As mayor, Blum exerted a much lighter hand on the council than did her predecessor, Harriet Miller. For good or for ill, the City Council was both more open and more unpredictable. Councilmembers feuded more publicly, but they were also more involved in policy-making. The outcome of key votes was far from pre-ordained, and Blum’s own final position often came as a surprise to her council colleagues.

While not much of a stump-speaker, Blum knew what mattered to her—sustainability—and she hammered away at it relentlessly. Under her regime, City Hall initiated a number of green reforms that have significantly reduced the government’s carbon footprint and reduced energy costs. Likewise, Blum never made any bones about her peacenik proclivities, marching regularly in the State Street protests against the war in Iraq. Less visible was the protective cover she provided Arlington West—the Sunday morning display of crosses at the foot of Stearns Wharf—allowing a highly visible peace demonstration to take root and flower at one of the most public places Santa Barbara has to offer. Just before stepping down from the dias for the last time, Blum declared, “Being mayor of Santa Barbara has been the greatest honor of my life. I have truly loved every minute of it.”

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