New council reflects a community split over growth

Posted 11/07/2007 12:57:00 PM

Las Cruces Mayor Bill Mattiace and District 1 Councilor José Frietze and their supporters should have seen the writing on the wall in April, when Doña Ana County voters shocked many by only narrowly approving a gross-receipts tax increase to help fund Spaceport America.

If they didn’t understand the situation then, it should have become increasingly clear in May, when a galvanized group of Las Cruces residents cried foul over the city council’s approval of a 6,000-acre development on the East Mesa without as much public involvement as they wanted.

There were strong signs that a growing number of Las Cruces residents weren’t on board with the vision shared by Mattiace, Frietze and others. They believe the city’s growth is either too fast or happening without rules to ensure adequate infrastructure and services are being provided. They don’t like the idea of paying a tax for a spaceport in Sierra County when infrastructure in their neighborhood is lacking.

Most important, they feel left out of the process. One of the main issues in the Las Cruces municipal election was the difference between public input and public involvement.

The slate of candidates who argued that the city hasn’t done enough to involve the public in decisions related to growth – Ken Miyagishima for mayor, Miguel Silva for council District 1, Vince Boudreau for council District 2 and Nathan Small for council District 4 – made an impressive showing. Boudreau was the only loser among the group, and even he gave incumbent Dolores Connor quite a scare.

The debate over the public’s role in government explains the election. Voters gave Miyagishima a razor-thin victory over Mattiace. They handed 12-year District 1 Councilor Frietze a resounding defeat. They gave Small a solid victory in a field with three strong candidates.

Miyagishima and those who ran on similar issues said throughout the campaign that the city wasn’t doing enough to involve the public in its decisions. Mattiace and Frietze frequently countered by listing all they had done to inform the public of their decisions.

There’s a huge difference between informing and involving the public in decisions – one involves talking at people and the other involves talking with people – and it carried over to the campaigns. Mattiace and Frietze informed people of their campaigns. Miyagishima, Silva and Small involved people in their campaigns.

Miyagishima went a step further than Mattiace

It’s one thing to tell people how much you’ve helped them, and that’s what Mattiace did: He frequently cited all the high rankings the city has received in recent years and statistics including the low unemployment rate. Miyagishima went a step beyond that, acknowledging those numbers but also asking what he could do to make the lives of the city’s residents even better.

And when he and that slate of candidates heard concerns – that the city is growing too quickly, that infrastructure and services aren’t keeping up, that public input isn’t being considered – they latched on to those issues, making them the focus of their campaigns.

That helped people relate to them. Meanwhile, Mattiace and Frietze spent much of their time defending big-name developers and themselves.

It’s true that Miyagishima and other like-minded candidates succeeded with the help of out-of-town conservation groups. But they also did it with support from Las Crucens who walked neighborhoods, hosted events, organized on the Internet and raised money. The result was a sophisticated, well-financed effort that had a great deal of grassroots support.

Now, those who helped elect Miyagishima, Silva and Small can carry that momentum into a coming special election to replace Miyagishima with a new District 6 councilor, and beyond that into the 2008 election.

The anomaly in Tuesday’s election was Connor, but I’m not surprised she won. While Mattiace and Frietze represented one extreme in the growth debate, Connor is a true moderate, someone who has advocated for growth and wilderness protection at the same time. She’s also worked visibly on a number of other issues, including recycling. Being in elected office hasn’t caused Connor to lose touch with the people around her.

Expect that councilors will try to work together

What happens next? Expect the council to come up with new policies that expand public involvement in decisions, especially those related to growth. Expect developers to face greater scrutiny.

But also expect the developers to adapt. Some of the rules may change, but they’ll still have rules to follow that will help them prepare development proposals.

And expect those who backed Mattiace and Frietze to learn from this experience and be better prepared for future elections. There has been a shift in Las Cruces, but it wasn’t a mandate. Miyagishima’s margin of victory was razor thin, and Silva and Small won with less than 50 percent of the vote.

Their victories are a sign that Las Crucens want some changes, but the reality is that the spaceport tax still passed and Mattiace almost won re-election. The city’s growth has resulted in a lot of good, but there are also some serious issues that haven’t been adequately addressed. As a result, the community is fairly evenly split on the growth issue.

Like it or not, the new council more accurately reflects that split.

Expect reasonable, moderate councilors from all sides of the debate to spend some time figuring out the dynamic of the new council and learning how to work together. They all want Las Cruces to progress; they just disagree about how it should happen. The diversity of opinion on the new city council will force an open and, hopefully, rational debate. There’s reason to hope that will lead Las Cruces to an even better future.

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24 Comments:

At 1:14 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Excellent review of what has and is happening in the city.
As a voter, I vote against the incumbents unless I can see a visible advancement they have made while being in office. If they can't do that, then it is time to give someone else a chance. Some will succeed and some will fail. Thats the way things work.

 
At 1:18 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This may seem like a dumb question, but now that Miyagishima is mayor, who is/will be the Council member from district 6? And where does Mattiace go?

 
At 1:18 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

It will be interesting to see the out of town money, and the organizations to run the city.
I wonder if Ken is taking a door to put back on the office.
Before you know it, the people who moved here and voted for a change, will realize that they shouldn't take things for granted.

Connor will be a good mentor for the new guys.

Mattiace is still my mayor, and I will still keep his bumper sticker on my cars. And his sign will be in my yard.

Thanks Bill for doing your best, and putting the People first, not small interest groups.

 
At 1:40 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Now let's hope we don't see a bunch of developments surrounding us built to county standards and with septic tanks that pollute our water.

 
At 2:05 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Perhaps snowball is not the appropriate means to describe the contasting of candidates.
With so much going on you have to assume that some may still sneak in the back door.

 
At 2:28 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This if for Bill,

I am sadden and my entire family is sadden as to the outcome of the Mayor race.

You will be very hard to replace, and you were good for LAS CRUCES!

What will become of las cruces?

 
At 2:45 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Heath. Excellent overview of election. Hopefully you will do an expose on the "strong connection" with the National Wilderness Movement and this local election. We are ground zero for a much greater cause...getting a wilderness designation here will set a precendent nationally. We are being used. Yes, people were riled about the annexation. The Wilderness groups capitalized on this for their greater concerns nationally. And for Ken, he saw the wave and rode it into City Hall as our new Mayor. Now he has to lead. Something he has yet to do. Wishing him success. For the sake of our city.

 
At 4:23 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would point out that Miyagishima lost in districts 1,2,3 and 4. Winning only in 5 and 6 and among absentee votes.

 
At 5:53 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Like it or not, the new council more accurately reflects that split."

I'm not sure. Didn't Miyagishima get maybe 30-40% in the last election? A certain amount of people would vote for him with or without his growth platform. If Mattiace had 60% and now around 50% that should indicate that the growth issue swayed about 18-20% of his supporters. Is it possible only 20% of voters agree with Miyagishima on growth issues? Yep.

 
At 5:57 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I hope Connor will show more consideration of taxpayers who show up to give their opinion in the future. Her conduct at the meeting regarding the Las Cruces Convention Center being built in her district (or across the street on University property) didn't show a lot of respect for voter involvement.

 
At 6:30 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mattiace will go back to working at his wife's travel agency. There will be a special election for the District Six seat.

Question: what is the difference between public input and public involvement? Aren't there citizens (public)appointed to the Planning and Zoning Commission to review the land use cases? These aren't elected officials.

I guess I still don't understand exactly what people wanted in terms of "public involvement". There are numerous land use cases every month that no one seems to care about, and they have no problem letting the Planning and Zoning Commission and the City Council act on them. That's what those folks are appointed/elected to do. Ultimately, the decision is up to them. Problem is, it's a slippery slope. There are such things as property rights, and the Council must be careful not to start arbitrarily denying land use requests or they will end up in a lawsuit, which does nothing to help anyone.
I also think that people have a responsibility to find out for themselves what's going on. Short of sending someone to knock on every door of every citizen in the City to inform them that there is a land use case before the City Council, there is no way for the City to "get the word out" in a manner acceptable to everyone. All this information is readily available to anyone who bothers to inquire. Civic responsibility instead of laziness, anyone?

And remember, even with all the public involvement in the world, the decision the Council makes may not be one you like--but that doesn't mean your input was ignored.

 
At 9:10 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The only special interst group I'm aware of is the Progressive Voter Alliance and their out of state Mentors.John

 
At 10:14 PM, November 07, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

HEATH YOU'RE NOT A JOURNALIST!!!! WHY DON'T YOU JUST DO P.R. FOR THE WILDERNESS ALLIANCE, PROGRESSIVE VOTERS ALLIANCE AND KEN? YOU ARE SLANTED AS THEY COME AND IF YOU CLAIM TO PRESENT THE REAL STORY...HA...YOU AND BILL O'RILEY.

YOU ARE PART OF THE DARK CLOUD THAT HAS MOVED OVER CITY HALL. I WILL GREATLY MISS MAYOR MATTIACE. HE'S STILL THE MAYOR IN MY BOOK.

 
At 3:19 AM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mayor Mattiace supported the spaceport and he lost his seat. Bill McCamley pushed the spaceport down our throats and he will lose his job too. This is a clear message to these politicos "Dona Ana comes first."

 
At 5:23 AM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Has anyone read the Sun-News? All of the sudden, Ken is pro-growth! Boy, is he going to have to dance as mayor--it's going to be very interesting to watch.

 
At 6:31 AM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

No argument? Lost an election? Lashing out at the media will sometimes make people feel better.

 
At 10:01 AM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

btw, it was Mattiace who got a big out of town check, I believe 10k, for his race. Miyagishima only got $500 from a conservation group...so lets get the facts straight. so, if anybody got more out of town money, it was Mattiace, and 2 years ago, it was Isaac Chavez getting 20k from swift boater Bob Perry (and he wants to criticize Small for getting a small chck from cvnm, what a hypocrite).

 
At 12:17 PM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wanda Mattiaces brother, who is a doctor in Florida contributed that check for 10K. Wanda is the wife of Bill Mattiace. So it was a family member.

Just a little FYI, for the BTW dude.

 
At 12:50 PM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

To the BTW dude,
Isaac Chavez recived that 20k in a previous state election where his opponent received 40K coutesy of Ben Lujan. How can you claim that Chavez is a hypocrite? This was a small CIty Coucncil election and it is a whole different animal than a state election where 100k is practcally necessary these days to win. Grow up ad quit bringing up old news from previous elections.

 
At 2:13 PM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

It was Nathan Small that received the big out of town money and support not Mayor Mattiace. You will never see that again because the next city race will only see a city of senior citizens on fixed incomes living in Las Cruces.

 
At 2:31 PM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"Has anyone read the Sun-News? All of the sudden, Ken is pro-growth! Boy, is he going to have to dance as mayor--it's going to be very interesting to watch."

He's always been pro-growth, but did you really expect him to say so before the election?

 
At 2:36 PM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ken is in the insurance biz he needs a growing population to keep his and Susie Chaparro's business afloat.

 
At 3:59 PM, November 08, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Mr. Haussamen is a very conscientious journalist that this city needs.

He wrote an opinion piece, which is very much a part of journalism.

Thanks to Haussamen, people can read unfiltered news and state their opinions.

This is a great venue.

Thank you, Mr. Haussamen, for your expertise and great writing!

 
At 12:42 PM, November 10, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Congratulations, Mayor Miyagishima and concilors Connor, Small and Silva. We are counting on each of you to represent the best interest of the City as a whole, not just one district.

As an ex-Mattiace supporter, I was happy to see that my vote helped put Ken M. into office. If anyone really took the time to listen, they would have to admit that he is ok with growth. He just wants more public participation in the process.

During this campaign the opposition twisted his words and tried their best to make him look bad. However, the people of this city have elected an intelligent, energetic young man. I am anxious to see how this new council moves our city forward.

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CITIZENS OF LAS CRUCES!

 

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