Tuesday, November 20, 2012

1987: Portents



“The color guard twirled their guns and marched the flags with precision; Melanie Usher gave a gospel-singer’s gut-vibrating rendition of ‘America’, and two thousand people in the semi-dark bleachers bowed their heads to the invocation.  It was then that Superintendent Clyde Smyth of the Hart District announced: ‘I’d like to inform you that at 4:30 this afternoon we officially became the city of Santa Clarita.” The Signal, December 16, 1987  

“I've been at many impressive events, and I've even been honored at some, but nothing has thrilled me more or given me more goose bumps than this event.” State Senator Ed Davis[1]
                                                                                                                                                                         



Much of the City of Santa Clarita’s future was portended in the mere sixteen days she spent in 1987.  Incorporation represented a fresh beginning, not the end, of our defining struggle between development and preservation.  Santa Clarita's most successful politician ever won an important titleAnd our first city ordinance safeguarded an enduring symbol that pervades Clarita's past and present.

A City Realized
In November of 1987, voters in Santa Clarita were asked to decide whether they wished to form their own city.  Ted Vollmer of the L.A. Times called incorporation of Santa Clarita “the hottest race in Los Angeles County.[2]”  He explained, “The issue here was one of growth […] some residents have become increasingly concerned over unchecked development.”  The plan to become the largest city in California ever to incorporate was widely debated as the vote neared.  In a point/counterpoint feature, Connie Worden argued for cityhood: Without the creation of municipal government, the area will simply become another San Fernando Valley, which the residents of the Santa Clarita Valley view as a series of overbuilt developments, clogged arterials, mini-malls and garish billboards.[3] Anthony Skirlick, Jr., of Citizens Against Cityhood, expressed misgivings: There are at least seven completely different communities within this area. ...From Sand Canyon to Valencia, cultural values are sufficiently divergent to invalidate the entire concept of cityhood.[4]”  The November vote made it clear that Claritans favored self-governance.  14,723 (69%) voted in favor of incorporation, and 11,166 (58.5%) voted in favor of electing council members at-large rather than by district[5].  The choice of at-large representation seemed to challenge Skirlick's view of Santa Clarita as a valley divided[6].

Cityhood became official on December 15, 2012.  A celebratory ceremony took place at the College of the Canyons gym, which was decorated with flags and poinsettias for the occasion[1].  Buck McKeon was sworn in as mayor, Jan Heidt as mayor pro tem, and Jo Anne Darcy, Carl Boyer, and Dennis Koontz rounded out the city council.  By all accounts, it was a rollicking event[7], and it was certainly gratifying for those who had been working since 1985 to achieve cityhood[8].  


Buck Up
Howard "Buck" McKeon served as Santa Clarita's first mayor.  McKeon's service on numerous local boards (among them Newhall Memorial Hospital, Canyon Country Chamber of Commerce, Hart School District) and work as a local businessman (Valencia National Bank, Howard and Phil's Western Wear)[9] garnered enough visibility and support to earn him the most votes in a field of 26 city council candidates[5]. 

Looking back on his term in 2007, McKeon wrote, “Being part of the first City Council, and then becoming the first mayor, was quite an adventure…It was a bit of fun, it was a bit of an adventure, it was a challenge and it was an education and it was even a bit scary.[10]Who knew, in 1987, that McKeon was bound to serve as Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee in 2012?   McKeon's election as mayor was no small step in his unconventional political trajectory.  


Quercus[11]
Santa Clarita’s identity is decidedly arboreal; our oaks define us.  The Tataviam were sustained on acorns.  The Oak of the Golden Dream brought prospectors and fame.  Buck McKeon used an acorn/oak metaphor in his first speech as mayor[1]John Quigley protested development by perching in an oak slated for cutting.  Oaks are in our place names, pictured on our seal, and in our protected areas and landscaping alikeOaks and Santa Clarita are inseparable.

Fittingly, the first ordinance passed by the new city council on December 15, 1987 protected oak trees.  The statement of purpose in the ordinance showed surprising conviction: "The City lies in the Santa Clarita Valley, the beauty of which is greatly enhanced by the presence of large numbers of majestic oak trees.  Development of the area has resulted in the removal of a great number of these trees.  Further uncontrolled and indiscriminate destruction of oak trees would detrimentally affect the safety and welfare of the citizens of Santa Clarita.[12]"  So fundamental are oaks to Santa Clarita's character that it may be fair to ask: is it Santa Clarita without the oaks?  Like the other narratives initiated in 1987, this one will be revisited.
      

Notes
[1]Mayerene Barker.  “Santa Clarita: New City Opens for Business.”  Los Angeles Times.  16 Dec 1987.  http://articles.latimes.com/1987-12-16/local/me-19568_1_santa-clarita
[2]Ted Vollmer.  "Voters Favoring Incorporation of Santa Clarita."  Los Angeles Times.  4 Nov 1987.  http://articles.latimes.com/1987-11-04/news/mn-12375_1_santa-clarita  
[3]Connie Worden.  "Point/Counterpoint: The Issue: Santa Clarita Cityhood: FOR."  Los Angeles Times.  4 Oct 1987. http://articles.latimes.com/1987-10-04/local/me-32872_1_santa-clarita
[4]Anthony J. Skirlick Jr.  "Point/Counterpoint: The Issue: Santa Clarita Cityhood: AGAINST."  Los Angeles Times.  4 Oct 1987. http://articles.latimes.com/1987-10-04/local/me-32874_1_santa-clarita/2
[5]A .pdf of old election results: http://votesantaclarita.com/pdfs/HistoricalResults.pdf
[6]An interesting aside: Santa Clarita was originally envisioned as being much, much larger: 95 square-miles.  But Ruth Bennell of LA LAFCO (Local Agency Formation Commission) decided the incorporation of a smaller area was prudent for financial reasons.  Read a delightfully terse account from the LA Times here:  http://articles.latimes.com/1987-06-07/local/me-925_1_santa-clarita
[7]Apart from "America" being sung by student Melanie Usher, the Barker article[1] says Scott Seamons sang "The Impossible Dream" and the booming Allan Cameron sang "Reach Out and Touch Somebody's Hand."
[8]Jerry Reynolds.  "Birth of a City," in History of the Santa Clarita Valley, ed. Leon Worden.  1988.  http://www.scvhistory.com/scvhistory/signal/reynolds/part70.html
[9]"Biographical Information" at http://independenceave.org/congress/member/ca/25
[10]Gail Ortiz, Diana Sevanian.  The City of Santa Clarita: Celebrating 20 Years of Success.  Pioneer Publications.  2007. 
[11]That's the genus of oaks.  We have a number of species in Santa Clarita, but the ones you see most often around the city are Quercus agrifolia, the Coast Live Oak, and Quercus lobata, the Valley Oak.
[12]The original ordinance is featured on the City's 25th Anniversary page.  

Monday, November 19, 2012

Welcome to The Recent Past

Dear Reader,

Santa Clarita's 25th Anniversary of Cityhood is fast approaching[1].  The organizations to which we look for leadership during such occasions are making modest efforts:

  • The City of Santa Clarita offers a 12-question quiz, brief history, and list of "25 REASONS TO LOVE YOUR CITY!" on a special section of its website[2].  Its annual State of the City Luncheon celebrated a quarter-century of cityhood.
  • Earlier today, The Signal announced plans for a special 25th anniversary issue[3].  Publisher Randy Morton is quoted in the announcement: "This is a good branding opportunity for businesses as we congratulate the community and a job well done since 1987."  Pragmatic, if inelegant.
  • The SCV Historical Society will host a combination open house/Posada/25th Anniversary celebration on December 15th[4].  

The story of Santa Clarita's past 25 years is being told, but perhaps not fully.  That is, we expect a certain amount of restraint in the tone and scope of coverage from these institutions.  City Hall will not be recounting tantrums, paper-weight throwing[5], and coups from city councils past, nor is it likely that The Signal will be focusing on scandals as heavily as successes in its excellence-focused special issue.  The SCVHS cultivates a broad perspective on local history, which may explain why it has not more fully embraced the rather myopic view of Santa Clarita, P.C.[6]   This isn't meant to sound conspiratorial--as if there's some hidden history that Santa Clarita's power-brokers are trying to keep hidden.  Rather, it's meant to justify the aims of this blog to touch on milestones from the past 25 years that go beyond road widenings, skate park openings, and mall expansions.  The City hosted "Cheers to 25 Years: The Best is Yet to Come," and The Signal promises a review of "25 Years of Excellence," but it hasn't all been perfect.  As comments on The Signal's special-issue page allude, back-in parking fiascoes have their place among our finer moments in history[3].  

The year 1987 will be posted tomorrow, the year 1988 on Thanksgiving's Eve, etc., concluding with a post for the year 2012 on December 15th, 2012.  After a wrap-up of festivities on the 16th, the blog will be complete.  Entries will be succint: a few key events from each year with a little background color.  Please consider commenting on these posts to augment the short histories provided or to point out events I've left out.  Being an optimist, I will thank you in advance for contributing your thoughts, stories, and memories from each year. 

Yours,
IHSCV  


[1]December 15, 2012, 4:30pm.  That's what the countdown clock to the right is for.
[2]25th Anniversary of Santa Clarita
[3]The Signal's special edition announcement
[4]SCV Historical Society
[5]A story kept alive largely by Tim Myers; wait for 2000 if you're unfamiliar.
[6]That's Post Cityhood.