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LIVING TRU by Lori Koop The Right Brain Business Coach Page 14 SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 2013 VOLUME 7 NO. 17 Photo and Story by Susan Henderson Following the long standing tradition of rotating council members through the positions of Mayor Pro Tem and Mayor, Nancy Walsh was unanimously elected Mayor of the City of Sierra Madre. In the town’s history, she is only the fourth female to hold such a position,three of which held the position within the last decade. (Enid Joffe, Mary Ann MacGillivray - who actually was elected Mayor twice, and now Mayor Walsh). Walsh was first elected to the council in 2010 and has been a very active member holding such positions as Board Member of San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments aka. SGVCOG, Member of the Energy, Environment and Natural Resources Committee (of SGVCOG), Council Liaison to Sierra Madre Chamber of Commerce, Council Liaison to the Senior Community Services Commission, Council Liaison to Sierra Madre Library Board, Council Liaison to the Green Advisory Committee, and Alternate Director to the Board of Directors of the County Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles County. In an interview held with Walsh in 2012, she noted that “serving the citizens of Sierra Madre requires ones undivided attention. It is no easy task, and also requires great sacrifice”. Prior to serving on the council, Walsh served as Chair of the city’s Senior Community Commission. An outspoken critic of the “protracted” General Plan process, she is not known for biting her tongue when it comes to facing the challenges of sitting on the council. The former CEO of LA County Coastal Outpatient Clinics, she has two daughters Jennifer & Melissa, two-son’s in law and three granddaughters. Many Sierra Madreans will remember her also for surviving the hostage situation in Mumbai in 2008 while vacationing. An avid world traveler, she has set her suitcases aside to take on the challenges of serving Sierra Madre as a member of the City Council, and now as Mayor. COUNCIL REORGANIZES - NANCY WALSH BECOMES MAYOR Sierra Madre’s reorganized council: (l to r) John Capoccia, Mayor Pro Tem John Harabedian, Mayor Nancy Walsh, Chris Koerber and Josh Moran Inside this week: JOHN HARABEDIAN ELECTED MAYOR PRO TEM DESPITE EFFORT TO CIRCUMVENT THE PROCESS SIERRA MADRE One of the last acts by outgoing Mayor Josh Moran was to set into motion the parameters for the council’s reorganization. He reminded the public that traditions established for the betterment of the community were important. He also reminded those who may have forgotten of the great divide that was created when those traditions were not followed in 2008 and 2009. During those years, the council twice overlooked then Councilman Joe Mosca as Mayor Pro Tem and Mayor. What followed were years of division in the community. It ultimately is said to have cost Mary Ann MacGillivray her re-election. Moran also shared a letter he had received with some of the same admonitions. The resident went on to ask that the position of Mayor Pro Tem be given to the person who received the most votes in the last election, Chris Koerber. To that, Moran objected. He explained the procedure which allows for each council member to serve as Mayor Pro Tem and Mayor, and that it is based on Seniority not votes. He noted that, contrary to the writers statement, Koerber had not been the highest vote getter, noting that Koerber’s race was a special election, not the regular election. Much discussion followed with Councilmen John Capoccia and Koerber disputing Moran’s statements. When the matter was finally called for a vote, a motion was made by Moran and seconded by Walsh that John Harabedian be elected Mayor Pro Tem. At that point Capoccia offered a second motion and nominated Chris Koerber for the position. Koerber seconded his own nomination. Harabedian expressed his disappointment that “what should have been the council’s finest hour” had become so contentious. “The issue is not very complicated. Councilman Koerber is not eligible to become Mayor Pro Tem because he is filling the vacancy of councilman Joe Mosca who already served as Mayor for this term. We have a tradition in Sierra Madre that a councilmember can only become Mayor and Mayor Pro Tem once in a term. I cannot sit idly by while others attempt to undermine and game that system for personal gain.” After several testy exchanges between Koerber and Harabedian, a vote was taken on the second motion. It was defeated 3 to 2. When the original motion was called (Harabedian for Mayor Pro Tem) it passed 4 to 1, with the only no vote coming from Koerber. S. Henderson/MV News Calendar Page 2 Sierra Madre News Page 3/4 Sierra Madre Historical Preservation Society Showcases The Caldwell/Fairbank House PASADENA/ALTADENA Pg. 5 Armenian Genocide Memorial AROUND SG Valley Pg. 6 Christopher Nyerges On What Every Hiker Should Take With Them A LOOK BACK FIVE YEARS AFTER THE SIERRA MADRE FIRE OF 2008 – ARE WE READY IF IT HAPPENS AGAIN? Bob Eklund’s Looking Up ARCADIA NEWS Pg. 7 Photos and Story By Bill Coburn, Sierra Madre News.Net Saturday, April 26th, 2008, started out like many other spring days in Sierra Madre. Blue skies, a high of 80 degrees expected, and multiple community activities scheduled. The City was going to hold dedication ceremonies for its first new park in thirty years, Goldberg Park in honor of long-time residents Milton and Harriet Goldberg that morning. Later in the day, at Memorial Park, the now defunct Community Arts Commission was going to hold a Jazz Festival featuring live music. Little did folks who planned to attend both events realize as they left the first one, that the second one would never take place. The Jazz Festival was cancelled because a fire, dubbed the Santa Anita Fire by state and federal fire officials, broke out at about 3pm in the mountains above Sierra Madre. The fire burned for several days, ultimately burning 584 acres at the time of its containment on May 1st. Two hundred thirty eight acres were in the Angeles National Forest, and three hundred forty six acres were within the corporate boundaries of Sierra Madre. Five minor injuries were reported, and at one point more than 1,000 firefighters were assigned to the fire. Just after midnight on Sunday morning the 28th, the City Council, under the leadership of Mayor Kurt Zimmerman, had an emergency meeting to declare the City to be in a state of emergency, freeing up resources from outside agencies to assist in fighting the fire. Two Red Cross shelters were set up. Approximately 1000 people were evacuated from Oak Crest Drive across Carter Avenue to East Mira Monte Avenue, continuing down Mountain Trail Avenue, across Grandview Avenue to Santa Anita Avenue. A wedding party of 45 people and four pets were helicoptered out from Sturtevant Camp, it took five helicopter trips to move them all. The people of Sierra Madre banded together as a community to help each other and the emergency personnel fighting the fire, controlling traffic, and keeping out looters (there was a false report that houses in the evacuation area were robbed). In the end, only one small non-residential structure was destroyed, and the people of Sierra Madre had a new sense of community and appreciation for one another and emergency personnel. Sierra Madre Fire Department In recognition of their efforts, the entire Sierra Madre Fire Department was named Grand Marshal of the 2008 4th of July Parade. I asked Fire Chief Steve Heydorff to assist with this article, and he was kind enough to do so. SMNN: How has the Fire Department improved its preparedness for the next fire? Chief Heydorff: Our Fire Department has changed a lot in the last five years; the most significant change being that we now have 24-hour staffing of both the RA and fire engine. Our 24-hour manning at the station has also improved our response time to the scene of any fire. The addition of full-time paid Captains is just one aspect in the Fire Department’s increase in preparedness. The other aspects are more training hours for both firefighters and officers; and we have received a new fire engine since the Santa Anita Fire. Communication is always the number one complaint on any after action review of a fire; community donations, like the radios from Rotary, help at a time when we were very low on new digital radios. Thanks to increased training and the change in staffing models we have improved from an ISO rating of class IV to a class III. However, the City still has the same levels of reciprocity as it did five years ago - mutual aid. One of the most important aspects of any fire is finance. The fires out, the engines go home, the firefighters pat each other on the back and have great stories for the rest of their careers. Now the work of the Fire Chief and the City’s Finance Director begins; and after 16 long months of filling out forms, finding and talking to the “right” person, the incident finally closes. (cont. page 3) A Walk of Champions Comes To Arcadia http://www.sierramadrenews.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/fire_3812-300x225.jpg MONROVIA/DUARTE Pg. 8 First Responders & The Madison Fire EDUCATION & YOUTH Pg. 9 PUSD schools receive national recognition http://www.sierramadrenews.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/fire_3783-300x225.jpg FOOD & DRINK Pg. 10 Peter Dills & Greece BEST FRIENDS Pg. 12 Harmonius, Happy Hummer THE GOOD LIFE Pg. 13 Savvy Senior Senior Happenings LA County’s Air Quality HEALTHY LIVING Pg. 14 ARTS / ENTERTAINMENT BUSINESS TRENDS Pg. 15 OPINION Pg. 16 LEFT TURN/RIGHT TURN PUBLIC NOTICES Pg. 17 Sierra Madre Ordinance PUSD Notice of Intent LEGAL NOTICES Pgs. 18-21 Read The Paper Online At: www.mtnviewsnews.com | |||||||||||||||||||||
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