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MALIBU SEEN

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GRAND SLAM

Despite last minute changes, drop-outs and injuries, the MusiCares Foundation served up a memorable night of tennis at its 9th annual “Night at the Net” fund-raiser. David and Linda Foster were among the local fans who flocked to UCLA to help kick-off the Mercedes Benz Cup on July 24. Dave is still trying to get a grip on things after breaking his wrist in the Bahamas. “Can you believe this?” he sighed. “Four months of physical therapy.”

Even if he’s not quite keyboard ready, Foster has been a longtime supporter of the MusiCares Foundation, which provides financial assistance in the form of health care and housing to members of the music community.

Every year, the Mercedes Benz Cup opens with a celebrity match that features hearty laughs as well as lobs and long shots.

Top pros Andre Agassi and Gustavo Kuerten had to cancel due to injuries. But the show must go on — and it did with Michael Chang and Mark Philippoussis stepping up to the baseline.

Chang played alongside Dustin Hoffman. Dennis Miller paired up with Philippoussis. Miller threw out snappy one-liners while Hoffman pulled off some impressive serves, volleys and saves. Together with Chang, the Oscar-winner seemed destined for glory, but Philippoussis and Miller surprised everyone with a last-minute rally and went on to win.

NICE WORK IF YOU CAN GET IT

John Spencer took a break from “West Wing” to take in the sounds of music at the Hollywood Bowl. The Cahuenga pass was rockin’ with a repertoire of American standards courtesy of Rose Clooney and Michael Feinstein on July 22. Rose, 72, needed a helping hand to reach the stage, but once in place by the piano, the songbird wowed the crowds with a voice that defies the test of time. Her set featured an enjoyable selection of all-time favorites from “Nice ‘n Easy” to “In the Wee Small Hours” and Cole Porter’s “I Concentrate on You.” She sent her fans home with a couple of greats from Gershwin as she teamed up with Feinstein for “Our Love is Here to Stay” and “Strike Up the Band.”

PARTY ANIMALS

The Dems don’t have any shortage of tony friends in Tinseltown. Locals are kicking into high gear to celebrate the upcoming convention. Plastic surgeon-to-the-stars Steve Teitelbaum will be hosting an intimate cocktail reception for Hillary Rodham’s New York Senate campaign. Suggested contributions start at $1,000. Across town, media superstars will be gathering at the Los Angeles County Performing Arts Center for some boozing and schmoozing of their own. Michele Willens and David Corvo will have a beach house full of high-rollers and political power players and famed F-O-B Barbara Streisand will open her doors to raise dollars for the Clinton presidential library.

President visits Malibu for event at Streisand/Brolin home

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The President came to town this weekend to visit with Barbara Streisand, Jim Brolin and a few of their well-heeled Hollywood friends, and to pick up a bunch of bucks for his new Presidential library.

But to three Malibu kids, ages 9, 8 and 4, they’ll always remember it as the day the President stopped his motorcade to shake their hands and to sign their poster.

Hallie Sills, 8, stood with her older brother GT Sills (you’ll have to ask him what it means), 9, younger brother Danny Sills, 4, and their mom Laureen Sills, by the side of Zumirez Road where they knew the presidential cavalcade of limos and black Suburbans were going to pass. The kids held up their sign asking the President to stop. Much to everyone’s delight, the presidential cavalcade stopped suddenly, under the watchful eye of a bunch of very suspicious Secret Service agents who jumped out and told everyone not to move. Then the word came through–“The President wants to meet the children.”

President Clinton got out of his limousine and spoke to the kids, patted their heads, smiled, shook their hands, posed for a few pictures, signed their poster and was whisked off to Casa Streisand/Brolin on Pt. Dume.

In a later exclusive interview with The Malibu Times, 8-year-old Hallie said she considers herself a “dyed-in-the-wool Democrat” and a long-time supporter of the President. Hallie was introduced to the Clinton administration in 1992 when she accompanied her parents to the President’s Inauguration. She told us she reminded the President that she had recently sent him an e-mail offering to give him her 4-H prize-winning guinea pig, complete with cage, in the event the President was considering going back to a more rural lifestyle after retirement.

The kids, mom and several neighbors, apparently all Democrats, told him they were going to miss him and wished him a great retirement.

A misty-eyed Hallie told the President, “I like you.” As we went to press we’ve had no word yet from the White House on the prospective status of the guinea pig.

Before leaving The Malibu Times offices, Hallie shook everyone’s hand so we’d all have a chance to shake the hand that shook the hand.

Malibu real estate values jump

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If your Malibu home was worth $ 1 million in the last fiscal year it’s a reasonable prediction that you’re $94,000 richer today, at least on paper, than you were the year before, according to a recently released study by the L.A. County Assessor.

County Assessor Rick Auerbach said that the value of real estate in Malibu went up 9.4 percent in the 1999-2000 fiscal year, and though Malibu was ranked high ( 7th in the county), the city was not at the top of the charts. That distinction, perhaps surprisingly, went to El Segundo, which held the lead in a booming South Bay area. The top 10 value gainers in fiscal 1999-2000 were;

  • El Segundo +13.1 percent
  • Carson +11.5
  • Redondo Beach +10.9
  • Hidden Hills +10.5
  • Rolling Hills Estates +10.1
  • Manhattan Beach +9.8
  • Malibu +9.4
  • West Hollywood +9.0
  • Sante Fe Springs +9.0
  • Hermosa Beach +8.9

Overall, L.A. County did well, gaining 6.7 percent in the value of its real estate, which converts, in dollars, to an assessment roll that 37 billion dollars higher than the year before .

We asked our new City Manager Marilyn Leuck, who has a heavy background in finance, what this means to the City of Malibu. She said that Bill Thomas, Malibu’s former administrative services director, had previously anticipated a raise in property tax revenues that were apparently right on target and probably were based on projections from the Assessor’s office. In actual dollars, the city received $2.4 million in property tax revenue for the 1999-2000 fiscal year, which ended at the end of June, 2000. Next year they anticipate the revenue from property taxes will actually be about $2.670 million, a gain of about $270,000, which is an increase of roughly 9.7 percent.

What the city receives from real estate property taxes was determined in 1978 when Prop. 13 passed and froze property taxes, putting a 2 percent annual cap on individual pieces of property. But Prop. 13 did a few other things, and, according to Leuck, it has created some inequities between cities. The older cities, like Ventura, actually receive about 16 cents of every property tax dollar. Smaller, newer cities, like Malibu, get only 3-4 cents out of every property tax dollar, which, when converted to dollars, means Malibu, if it were being treated like the city of Ventura, might be receiving another $7 million or so in property tax revenue. Because Prop. 13 has been treated as sacrosanct, that inequity has never been corrected.

According to the Assessor, Malibu has 6,149 single-family residences, 210 residential income parcels (which means apartments) and 382 commercial/industrial parcels. Overall, when added up, Malibu jumps from an assessed value of $4.1 billion to a new valuation of $4.5 billion, an increase of $390 million.

Arson watchers spot ‘suspicious activity’

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You’ve pulled over by the side of the road in Malibu, and decide to hike up to the top of a canyon for a view. Immediately someone shows up and asks who you are and what your business is. That person could be an old lady or a 12-year-old child.

Before you tell the person to take a hike, don’t get your blood pressure up. This person might be one of Allen Emerson’s Community Arson Watch volunteers.

“Actually, we don’t have face- to-face confrontations,” says Emerson. “We observe. If we can get a name, fine. If not, we at least have a description.”

Emerson, a retired restaurant owner living in Topanga, has been involved with the Arson Watch for 18 years. He spends hundreds of hours each month devoted to the cause.

There are six different teams of volunteers, with Malibu having 51 people.

“A lot of our members, as homeowners, have had close calls with fires so that’s what motivated them to sign up as volunteers,” said Emerson.

“Our main focus is to spot ‘suspicious activity,’ said Emerson, which he defines as “people or cars which are out of place.”

He gave an example from his own logbook. Last week he was driving along an empty road in Malibu and saw a car parked where there usually are none. He wondered, “Is the person that owns that car down there just hiking; or starting a campfire or . . .?”

He checked it out, found the person just wanted a view of the ocean, and went on his way.

Every time a suspicious activity is observed, arson watchers fill out a report, indicating the person’s name if given, the description of the vehicle and license plate, time of day, location, etc. After a week the reports are shelved, but if a fire happens to start, this information is made available to the fire department as soon as possible, in the event one of the observed might be an arsonist.

Emerson looks upon the Arson Watch’s activities as only slightly intrusive, but weighs the intrusion against the fact that, as he sees it, anybody living in the Malibu area lives in a fire area.

“If you’re not doing anything wrong, you shouldn’t be bothered by being asked what you’re doing,” he said.

Emerson has never made a formal study of what is an arsonist.

“I understand that they are usually disgruntled persons, who get a feeling of power by getting all of those pieces of equipment rolling.”

The 1993 fire, he speculates, was started by arson.

“But it was never proven. In fact,” he said, “arson is very difficult to prove, unless you can find some residue of some flammable liquid. You almost have to catch someone in the act in order to convict them on arson.”

Community Arson Watch is set up primarily as a deterrent, Emerson said. The members don’t hide what they do.

“We wear orange vests, some of us have yellow flashers on our cars–we carry scanners. We’re high profile,” he said.

The ultimate goal of Arson Watch volunteers is to spot a fire that just started and get the word to the fire department, fast. There have been at least two incidents when members of this group spotted a fire in the early stages.

Fires are caused by a myriad of circumstances. Lightning strikes are fairly rare in Malibu. More often, fires are started by careless use of cigarettes, metal blades on lawnmowers striking rocks and downed high voltage power lines. Another common cause is sparks caused by a careless welder.

“We had one that started when a welder was making a wrought-iron gate,” said Emerson.

“Downed power lines are what started the 1996 fire,” he said. “When the Santa Ana winds blow, firemen have a double danger–that downed lines will start fires and then the wind will propel the fire faster than it does on a windless day.”

The option of installing wires underground is available in some areas, but not in Malibu.

“They could, but with our terrain it’s not going to happen,” said Emerson.

The team uses hand-held mobile radios to communicate. The radios represent the biggest expense of their approximately $10,000 per year budget. A fee has to be paid to the repeater stations to repeat their broadcasts so they reach a wider area.

“Communication is what we need most,” said Emerson.

If a fire starts, Emerson has a set procedure.

“I assign a patrol to go to the fire, to connect with the radio base station operator to relay any latest information,” he said.

Emerson has lots of advice for homeowners.

“You should always have a fire extinguisher,” he said. “Not just in your kitchen, but in your workshop as well.”

Another key bit of advice is for owners with chimneys to put spark arrestors atop their chimneys. A spark arrestor is nothing more than a screen that breaks big bits of ash into little flakes so the ash will be less likely to waft out into the air, possibly starting a brush fire. If you use your fireplace a lot, Emerson said, you should have a chimney sweeper come and clean it because if too big a build-up of combustible material lines the chimney, it could catch fire.

One little known danger that’s relatively new is the fact that all the cars sold in the U.S. in the last decade have catalytic converters, basically little ovens to burn exhaust gases. The converter temperatures easily exceed 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit at times.

“If you park a car with a hot catalytic converter on tall grass,” Emerson warns, “you could start a fire that will not only burn your own car up but start the whole neighborhood afire.”

Another thing homeowners can do is work on an evacuation plan when there’s no fire danger, so they will be ready if one does happen. The plan should include what will be moved, who goes where and where family members will meet up.

“And don’t try to stay until the fire gets close, “said Emerson. “If you wait too long, you might not be able to get out because the fire could block the road.”

Anybody who has trouble organizing and moving, such as the elderly or children, should be evacuated at the first hint of fire, no matter how far away it may seem.

Also, Emerson does not advise anyone to stay with the house and fight the fire unless they are prepared not only equipment-wise–with a pump, a generator and a hose–mentally and physically.

The Arson Watch does not report on structures that need brush clearance.

“That’s the fire department,” said Emerson.

They also do not tell people to evacuate, but they do assist the Sheriff’s Department in traffic control.

Emerson has clocked 100,000 miles on vehicles since joining Arson Watch. One thing the program could use, he said, is a new command vehicle–one with four-wheel-drive so he can get off-road to see what those SUV’ers are up to.

Can we all relax when the fire season is over?

“There is no ‘fire season’ per se,” Emerson said laughing. “When we get sufficient rain, that will be the end of the fire season.”

Just my Bill, an ordinary man

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Three of us sat in a crowded bar in Guido’s Monday night waiting to watch the Clinton’s take center-stage at the Staples Center and the occasional TV cuts to the surging crowd outside the arena.

Karen and I were both a little apprehensive because our son Tony was out there on the street covering the protesters for the on-line magazine Salon.com, and these things can get ugly real fast. In Philadelphia he had drawn the assignment covering the inside of the convention hall. There was so much good-natured sugar being disbursed from the podium he damn near caught diabetes just standing on the convention floor. This time he wanted to be where the action was, so he was outside and the other reporters from Salon were inside.

Sunday night I gaveTony a few words of parental wisdom. Wear your press credentials up high where the cops can see them because it’s not easy to see with those plastic shields over their faces. If the batons start swinging keep your head down and your face covered. Lastly, but most importantly, I gave him the number of an old friend, Malibu bail bondsman Harry Fradkin, who has gotten many a client of mine out of jail, his motto being, “Don’t wail in jail, call Harry for bail.” As you can see, sometimes this press business is more dangerous than it looks.

But I digress. We sat in the bar waiting to watch the Clintons in action, one making her entry and the other making his exit. With us was Marlene Marks, a friend of ours who writes editorials for The Jewish Journal. Marlene and I were watching, looking for a hook, because we knew we were going to write something about the speech. Karen was more casual about it since she didn’t have a deadline breathing down her neck. All of us are rock-rib Democrats and none of us in particular is set on fire by this entire presidential election. We found it a little hard to understand how, with 300 million-plus Americans, we ended up having to choose between the son of previous Sen. Al Gore and the son of George Herbert Bush, the elder. Nevertheless, you have to play the cards you’re dealt, so there we were.

It was obvious from the outset that light powder blue was the color scheme of choice among the Democratic power women. The men on the podium, of course, were mostly dressed somberly and looked like Republicans.

After assorted senators and others had finished, which brought us to the heart of prime time–no accident I’m sure, Hillary took the podium and began.

Now Hillary is a very smart lady, which she does little to disguise, and is probably one of the reasons she is having popularity difficulties. Just about the time she was getting into her part about the children of America, someone said, and I don’t remember who, “She looks great. Do you think she’s been done?”

That was followed by a careful analysis of the question and the ultimate conclusion that, “No, she hadn’t been done, but whoever did her clothes, hair and makeup, did one hell of a job.” This serves to point out one of Hillary’s problems. Despite a good and carefully crafted speech, an enormous intelligence and a reasonably decent delivery, political speech-making is an art, and very few are good at it. The audience tried to help her; they waived the signs, cheered and applauded at the right spots, but no magic.

Next came the chief, the boss, numero uno and in five minutes he had the audience wrapped up like children. In the practice of the art-of-politics, there have been in recent memory, only a few who could reach out and touch you in a way that touches your soul.

FDR had it, Truman and Eisenhower didn’t. Jack Kennedy had it, and Johnson, Nixon, Ford and Carter didn’t. Reagan had it and Bush didn’t. Bill Clinton has definitely got it. I can understand why he drives the Republicans crazy. They hit him with enough stuff to drop two presidencies and there he is on the podium, looking great, on top of his game, utterly indestructible, drinking in the crowd, in total sync with the waves in the room, milking every pause, reacting to every minor mood shift in the room. This isn’t something you can do consciously. He really loves the audience and it, in turn, loves him back. He could be reciting nonsense syllables and they’d still love him. This is Othello, loving not wisely, but too well.

I think if Clinton could run again, the country would forgive him and reelect him, and besides, he’s damn good at the job.

And that is Al Gore’s problem. It may very well sink him. He’s not running against ‘W’, he’s running against the image of Bill Clinton and Bill Clinton is a hell of an act to follow.

No matter what Al does, he just isn’t Bill.

Property besmirched

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In response to recent letters regarding the Harris Tree Farm property as a possible site for future ballfields, I would like to set the record straight regarding some of the mistruths put forth by upset neighbors. These false statements could negatively impact the marketability of the property.

1. While the 12 plus acres are not entirely flat, the site is as large and flat combined as you will find in Malibu (not owned by Malibu Bay Co.)

2. There are no known archeological sites on the property. The soils and geology are good.

3. The one easement on the western portion of the site is for utility lines only. This does not limit the development in any way.

4. The east side of the property is bordered by Steep Hill Canyon, which does not make the site environmentally sensitive. The creek in Steep Hill is one that dead-ends into PCH.

I understand the plight of my neighbors. They have been hoping that a Barbara or Cher will buy the property. My job is to sell the property to the highest and most qualified buyer. As I have told my neighbors, the ballfield proposal is viable for a number of reasons, and I still believe the highest and best use for the property is as a large estate site.

Please refrain from besmirching the Harris property any further.

Henry Workman

R.G. Harris Co.

Socially conscious

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I was fine ’til she called, her voice full of stress

“I just read the paper,” she said,

“And the world is a mess!

Our healthcare system is up the creek

Floods have ravaged Mozambique.

The turtle is history. They’re still killing whales

Crime is rampant so we’re building more jails

And I read about that African nation

Where AIDS is killing a whole generation!

Some see the world as their own Utopia

I think they suffer from a case of Myopia

I have to close down now; I’ve no time to spare

I have a lunch date and I must do my hair.

The world’s full of sorrow,

What more can I say?

I’ll call you tomorrow.” she said

“Have a nice day!”

Geraldine Forer Spagnoli

No goose tale for council

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The words, the rhymes, the rhythms of Mother Goose tales have been hallowed by time. They are among the first stories read to our children. Age may blunt a memory, but it can never erase Mother Goose!

Yet many of the tales leave their characters in awkward situations. Did the wife of Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater live forever in her pumpkin shell? What happened to Humpty Dumpty after neither the King’s horses nor the King’s men could repair him?

How would Mother Goose have handled the current Malibu political panorama? I know, Mother Goose would have theorized something like this.

Boogie, Malibu Council, dance up high!

Never mind, Council, Segel is by.

Swagger and frolic, frolic and crow,

There, Malibu Council, there you go!

Up to the wetlands, down to the ground,

Backwards and forwards, round and round;

Waltz, little Council and let Segel sing,

Election begets Van Horn, ding, ding, ding!

Oh Yes, Humpty Dumpty did get refurbished because

They called a doctor from the town

To come and fix poor Humpty’s crown.

He put a stitch in Humpty’s leg

And bandaged up poor old Humpty’s egg.

He used some tape and then some glue,

And Humpty’s now as good as new.

But alas there is no Mother Goose ending for the awkward situations the Malibu City Council keeps getting into.

And that is all I have to say (sure).

Tom Fakehany

Coach swims to the top

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Nick Rodionoff knows everything there is to know about diving. And there are many ways to dive: Front dives, somersaults, backward dives, reverse dives, inward dives and twisting dives are all part of the sport.

His expertise has led him to be the women’s head diving coach for the past 15 years at Pepperdine University. Now, he has recently been selected to also be the head coach for the women’s swim team.

Rodionoff, a Malibu resident since 1972, previous to being the women’s head diving coach, worked with the men’s diving program for 11 years. When he interviewed for his first coaching position at Pepperdine, the first question he was asked was about values, which he strongly believes in.

“If you’re coaching to win at any cost, that can be destructive,” he said.

That is why he decided to come to Pepperdine from UCLA where he had coached for 10 years before.

“The best part of my job is that I deal with people who care about one another,” he said. “The student population is much smaller and you get a chance to know people.”

Though he was a diver in college and aimed for a physical education major, most of Rodionoff’s personal experience as a diver was self-taught. But he considers this an asset since he learned first-hand what mistakes to avoid and he can now impart that knowledge to his students.

“Divers don’t usually have a coach, so I took a lot of hard smacks and I learned from that,” he said.

“Diving is a very patient sport,” said Rodionoff. “You have to take your time and be safe, you can’t rush it, it’s a balance and body control sport.”

As he was talking about the sport he loves, three students were working on their diving techniques. The youngest, Kristen Whittemore, 13, was practicing a “line up.” This skill involves getting in the water without making any splashes. Judges usually give higher scores for that.

“My mom saw stuff about Nick in the newspaper,” explained Whittemore, a swimmer who has been diving for two months.

Junior High swimmers, who were coached by Rodionoff, do well in the Junior Lifeguard program, she said, emphasizing the respect she has for her coach.

Though it may look like divers are prone to getting hurt easily because of the multiple acrobatics they have to learn, Rodionoff said that there has been only one accident in the 25 years he has coached. A student hit the board, but she was okay afterwards.

To avoid such accidents, Rodionoff said, as far as safety goes, he considers himself strict.

“Diving is a pretty individual sport,” he said.

Currently, six women are on the Pepperdine team that Rodionoff now heads. They practice twice a day for about three hours each day. He also coaches another group of six children who practice four times a week in the morning and twice weekly in the afternoons.

Because these athletes have to really trust their coach, Rodionoff said they develop a special relationship.

Amy Lehman, 20, is a Pepperdine student who benefits from Rodionoff’s coaching experience.

“As a swimmer and diver I think he is very understanding of the athletes,” she said. “He gets to know them personally and understands their point of view.”

Tiffany Linder, 15, has been diving for five years.

“I have been with Nick the whole time,” she said.

Linder dives at Viewpoint High where she won a championship in the California Interscholastic Federation for California High School students.

“I like it because he is not forceful, if you’re not ready he doesn’t make you do a dive,” said Linder, who believes that Rodionoff is an “all-around coach.”

“I coached her dad at Birmingham,” explained Rodionoff, as he talked about Linder.

All three divers who were present during the interview are also swimmers.

“This is pretty unique in this age of specialization,” said the coach.

Rodionoff also coaches at the Malibu Aquatics Club with his wife, Carrie. But this will be his last month since the new promotion will take up all his time. Carrie is also involved with the sport. She was a diving coach at Santa Monica High School and still teaches peer-helping classes there.

“I’ll drag her over here to help me,” he said. “She is a very good communicator.”

Aside from coaching, Rodionoff also enjoys photography. He has taken photos for a local newspaper in the past and now he enjoys taking pictures of seascapes in Malibu. There is an overabundance of surf and ocean photography already, so Rodionoff specializes in capturing pictures of things that people in Malibu can relate to.

His big goal is photographing the art show every year, he said.

During his long career as a swimming and diving coach, Rodionoff has been successful enough to send a few of his pupils to the Olympics where they set records.

Sue Gossick, an Encino Swim School student, went to the Olympics in 1964 and 1968. Cindy Schilling won a National Championship in swimming and broke a world record in a swim relay team competition.

Though he has done this for many years, Rodionoff is not about to give up what he loves.

“I’m having too much fun,” he said.

Second candidate enters council race

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By late last Friday afternoon it was beginning to look like Sharon Barovsky would be the only candidate for the open council seat in the Malibu City Council November election.

Then, just under the 5 p.m. deadline, another candidate filed his petition. What had momentarily looked liked a coronation was now a real election contest.

The new candidate was not one of the expected candidates, either former Councilmember Carolyn Van Horn nor Commissioner Ted Vaill. It was a totally new face.

The candidate, Robert Roy van de Hoek, is a new name to the Malibu political scene he describes himself in the candidate statement, filed with the signatures he’s collected, as a 44-year-old scientist and environmental educator. Van de Hoek returned our phone calls, but declined to make any statement at this time and referred us to his campaign statement filed with the city clerk.

One of the telephone numbers he lists in his statement, 457.0300, is the same number that answers for the Wetlands Action Network, the Sierra Club and Earth-Water-Air-Los Angeles. In the recorded phone message on the answering machine, van de Hoek is identified as a biologist and geographer at the Wetlands Action Network Research and Restoration Office.

The Wetlands Action Network, whose executive director, Marcia Hanscom, has been one of the leaders in the opposition to the proposed development deal between the Malibu Bay Company and the City of Malibu, has an office here in Malibu.

In his candidate’s statement, which is intended to be included in the voter pamphlet that will be sent to all registered voters before the election, van de Hoek says: “I attended California State University Northridge where I obtained degrees in environmental biology, geography and archeology . . . I worked for the U.S. Forest Service for five years as a scientist and . . .with the Department of the Interior to establish a preserve for antelope, elk, eagles, condors, sandhill cranes, wildflowers and endangered species.”

“I continue to work as a recreation supervisor for the [L.A. County] Dept. of Parks and Recreation,” he said.

In his statement van de Hoek gives as his philosophy: “My vision is to keep Malibu natural and I am a champion for nature. I want to begin a program to bring the bald eagle back to Malibu . . . No limits to growth means pollution, traffic, no deer, no seals, no dolphin . . . As a park supervisor, I understand how ballfields are important, but so is wild nature and sea otters. The decision before us is whether to save the Malibu coast or destroy it. Every new home is a risk.”

In her candidate’s statement Barovsky lists herself as a writer, indicates she has been a resident for more than 30 years, was a former member of the General Plan Task Force, was a member of the Civic Center advisory committee, which attempted to design a master plan for the central Malibu, and currently, is a member of the council.

She says in her statement, “If elected, I will continue to work for a master plan that will minimize commercial development, increase dedicated open space, provide a community center to serve our seniors and our youth and supply additional active and passive recreational opportunities.”

She indicates she supported putting the initiative and two referendum items on the ballot so the people could vote. However, she says, ” . . . I am troubled by the possible unintended consequences of the Malibu Right to Vote Initiative, which requires that the community vote on almost every development project . . . .”

Ted Vaill, who was weighing whether to run, had actually pulled papers, but decided not to go this time. He told The Malibu Times, “My feeling was that I wanted to run for a seat, but not against anyone. Sharon was given the seat and so far she’s not done anything that warrants criticism.”

Vaill said he believes that anyone who runs against her has a small chance of winning. He also felt it was not worth it financially to run for the two-year term, spending the $10,000 to $20,000, and then having to do it again in 2002 for the full-term. He intends to wait, stay active in the community and run for the full four-year term in 2002.

In a phone interview, Carolyn Van Horn said: “I had not put in my name, in any way, shape or form. That was something that you concocted, but what’s new.

“These days I’m on the Malibu Volunteer Patrol and playing tennis,” Van Horn added.

When asked if a political comeback was in the cards, she replied: “We’ll see.”

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