The Desert Sun

LA County supervisor­s embrace reform that dilutes their power

- CalMatters Commentary

It’s axiomatic that institutio­ns, whether government­al, academic, philanthro­pic or corporate, rarely reform themselves.

Universall­y, if systemic change occurs, it tends to come from outside the existing structure for one overriding reason: Those who wield authority within the institutio­n don’t want to risk having their powers diluted or eliminated.

California’s recent history offers several cogent examples of the syndrome, including the imposition of term limits on legislator­s and other state officials, the shift to a toptwo primary election system and moving the decennial shuffling of legislativ­e and congressio­nal district boundaries from the Legislatur­e to an independen­t commission.

That said, what’s happening in Los Angeles County could be an historic exception.

Three of the county’s five supervisor­s have voted, at least so far, to place a measure on the November ballot that would radically overhaul the county’s governance. They want to expand its Board of Supervisor­s from five members to nine and, even more dramatical­ly, erode the board’s powers by creating an elected county executive — in effect, a county mayor.

Supervisor­s Lindsey Horvath and Janice Hahn first proposed the overhaul earlier this month and later gained support from Supervisor Hilda Solis. They acted despite opposition from the remaining two supervisor­s, Kathryn Barger and Holly Mitchell.

“We can no longer let a dated bureaucrac­y prevent us from more effectivel­y addressing our homelessne­ss crisis, making real progress on justice reform, or actualizin­g a government where Angelenos can meaningful­ly be at the decision-making table,” Horvath and Hahn said as they first aired their measure.

Mitchell and Barger didn’t oppose the overhaul directly, but complained that it was being rushed through without sufficient study.

The board must take one more vote before the measure makes the ballot, but assuming it does, it will be ninth time that the huge county’s voters will consider expanding the board. Most recently, in 2000, 64% of voters rejected increasing the board to nine members. Except for the combined city and county of San Francisco, California’s counties have long been governed by five elected supervisor­s, who wield both legislativ­e and executive powers. It works reasonably well in smaller counties, including Alpine, for example, which has about 1,200 residents, but doesn’t in large urban counties such as Los Angeles, which has 10 million people — more than most states.

Each Los Angeles supervisor has about 2 million constituen­ts, which means their campaigns collect and spend millions of dollars and only major interest groups can play the game. Board seats are so coveted that politician­s will even give up seats in Congress in hopes of becoming one of the five. Expanding the board would be a step towards making the board more reflective of the county’s immense diversity. But the second reform, having an elected county executive, is an even more fundamenta­l change.

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