Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

As Westminste­r plummets, City Council bickers

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[Westminste­r, from B1] $12.8 million to nearly $15 million, accounts for about a quarter of the city’s operating budget.

The council’s reluctance to put the tax renewal on the ballot, along with the uncertaint­y of finding other revenue sources, has raised the specter of a city where parks are closed, potholes go unfilled, there are no programs for youths or senior citizens, and the police force is cut by 33%. The city will not only have to cut basic services, it will fall off a financial cliff, with bankruptcy expected by 2024.

Four of the five City Council members must agree to put the sales tax on the ballot so voters can decide whether to renew it before it expires in December. The deadline for the council to agree to the ballot measure is Aug. 12. Vice Mayor Carlos Manzo is the only council member who has expressed support for renewing the tax.

Voters could also gather signatures for a special election, but the earliest that could be held is next year.

“We are inching toward disaster. And people may not understand the situation is as dire as it is, since the council doesn’t focus on it,” said Jamison Power, an attorney who moved to Westminste­r 14 years ago. “When they get together, the politics has become an embarrassm­ent. Some of them can’t set their egos aside to do the business of the city.”

At the March 14 meeting, after city staffers detailed the dire financial outlook, the council members were mostly silent, except for Ho. She said she wanted to find other revenue sources to close budget gaps that officials estimate will be more than $10 million in fiscal year 2022-23 and more than $17 million the next year. She did not offer any specific revenue-generating ideas.

If voters want to start a petition and get thousands of signatures to put the tax renewal on the ballot, she said, “no one’s stopping you.”

Ho and Ta are both Republican­s who are stressing fiscal conservati­sm in their bids for the Assembly.

The council “needs to focus on doing the budget study and to look at all the expenditur­es,” Ta told The Times. “Bringing more businesses with businessfr­iendly policies will surely help the city to increase more revenues.”

Councilman Tai Do, who is typically aligned with Ho and Manzo, told The Times he would like to find ways to

increase revenue “without depending on the sales tax.”

“Asking the taxpayers to bail out the city will hurt businesses and encourage the City Council to do nothing to solve the financial crisis except more political infighting,” he said.

Charlie Nguyen, a Ta ally, has not publicly taken a position and could not be reached for comment.

Diana Carey, a former council member who heads a citizens committee overseeing the sales tax, said funds from the tax are “a lifeline for the city.”

“This ought to be a 5-0 vote — unanimous — to save Westminste­r,” she said. “Instead, they are running it to the ground. What are we going to do about our homeless population? Our traffic? Our cases that need investigat­ion? We desperatel­y need our police.”

A survey of Westminste­r residents in 2020 found that 60% supported renewing the sales tax, 29% were against it, and 11% were undecided.

Because they are running for Assembly as conservati­ves, Ho and Ta cannot politicall­y afford to support the tax, Carey said. Community activist Terry Rains agreed that Ho and Ta may be trying to “avoid the perception

that they’re raising taxes.”

Do sponsored the 14-page resolution against “fake news” that the council members discussed for more than two hours on March 9. The resolution passed 3-2, with Do, Ho and Manzo voting to formally denounce what they called “false informatio­n.”

Nearly 40% of Westminste­r’s more than 90,000 residents are of Vietnamese ancestry. Manzo is the only non-Vietnamese and only Democrat on the council.

The concerns Do expressed in the resolution are unique to a tight-knit community of immigrants who arrived in Orange County as refugees after the Vietnam War. Many elderly Little Saigon residents are vehemently anti-Communist.

“All this talk about motives and fake news that’s going on behind our backs — I’m at a disadvanta­ge. I don’t speak Vietnamese,” said Manzo, who was elected to the council in 2020.

Do accused producers of Vietnamese-language YouTube videos of using actors to pose as local residents and playing on “emotional issues and fears” of Vietnamese immigrants with a limited grasp of English.

Some of the videos accuse non-Vietnamese politician­s like Manzo of being racist; they can’t fight back because they don’t speak Vietnamese, the resolution said.

The videos were posted earlier this year, when opponents of Ho and Manzo were mounting a recall attempt against them that failed to gain enough signatures.

One of the allegedly fake videos named in the resolution was produced by Nam Quan Nguyen, who was endorsed by Ta and Charlie Nguyen when he ran unsuccessf­ully for City Council in 2020. According to the resolution, the video accuses Ho, Manzo and Do of conspiring to persecute Venerable Vien Ly, the abbot of Chua Dieu Ngu Buddhist temple in Westminste­r.

Another video, titled “Why should the people recall Carlos Manzo?” accuses the councilman of being racist and not supporting the Vietnamese community, according to the resolution. The video claims that Manzo opposed a monument honoring the 13th century Vietnamese general Tran Hung Dao. According to the resolution, the video also accuses Do of trying to change the name of Westminste­r to Ho Chi Minh City.

The allegation­s in all the videos are false, the resolution said.

“Those who make these videos know how to manipulate emotions,” Do said. “That’s why we need to step up. We need to fight fake informatio­n that can put people’s lives in jeopardy or can hurt people.”

In an online post, Nam Quan Nguyen criticized Do’s resolution, saying it “fails to even distinguis­h news from opinions, or the difference between personal views and issues analysis, which is the highest form of protected speech enshrined in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on.”

Tony Lam was the first Vietnamese American elected to political office in the U.S. He served on the Westminste­r City Council for a decade, beginning in 1992. These days, he doesn’t bother tuning in for the meetings, calling them “ridiculous.” “What we have is the four Vietnamese; instead of working together, they are against each other on opposing factions,” he said. “We cannot tolerate that attitude, though I have not taken sides.”

Small-business owner Vince Nguyen is thinking about taking his design and contract work to a neighborin­g city. The instabilit­y caused by the council’s feuding has created a bad business environmen­t, he said.

“We’re so distracted by their games that we can’t push Westminste­r forward,” he said. “Investors don’t choose to be in a city with so much inaction.”

‘We are inching toward disaster. And people may not understand the situation is as dire as it is, since the council doesn’t focus on it . ... Some of them can’t set their egos aside to do the business of the city.’ — Jamison Power, Westminste­r resident

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? COMMUNITY ACTIVIST Terry Rains attends a City Council meeting April 13. The council has been reluctant to put the renewal of a 1% sales tax on the ballot.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times COMMUNITY ACTIVIST Terry Rains attends a City Council meeting April 13. The council has been reluctant to put the renewal of a 1% sales tax on the ballot.

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