Several residents used the public-comment period at the Dec. 10 Escondido City Council meeting to raise concerns about transparency, homelessness and climate policy.
James Stone, one of three local applicants for the Grand Avenue Roundabout public-art RFQ, told the council he had found "a lack of transparency, inconsistency with RFQ requirements, and procedural irregularities" during the finalist-selection process and asked the city to "provide a public presentation" showing how finalists were chosen. Stone said he gathered 148 resident signatures supporting his request and asked for the city to allow local artists to present concepts before final selections are made.
Susan Neany, executive director of North County Community Services and Growing Minds Early Education Programs, introduced her nonprofit’s early-childhood services in Escondido and asked the city to consider partnerships to expand preschool access for children ages 0–5.
During oral communications Lisa Richards described worsening homelessness in Escondido and urged a publicly articulated vision for Measure A (Measure 1) spending; she suggested the city consider a permitted encampment or use of a city-owned property at Ash and Washington for shelter or low-income housing.
Laura Hunter asked council to add to next week’s agenda a discussion about the climate-action-plan promise to create a multi-stakeholder climate commission. Richard Garner asked whether recent vandalism of a mural and an election-day incident at the senior center had been investigated and reported back.
Deputy Mayor Martinez thanked speakers and noted that those who had signed up for a separate council-appointment agenda item would be given an opportunity to speak during oral communications.