| La
Caņada
Community History
It took two trips
to the polls by LCF voters to approve cityhood. The first came
in 1964 with the Chamber of Commerce and Realtor Dick
Keilholtz, head of the newly formed incorporation committee,
leading the ill-fated change. When the County Board of
Supervisors, behind La Caņada member Warren Dorn, drastically
changed boundaries of the proposed city at the 11th hour,
cutting its size nearly in half, the city hood plan was
doomed. Many La Caņadans felt it was a sellout to influential
property owners by Dorn.
In 1969, there was
another step toward cityhood when a small group of La Caņadans,
headed by John Bond and including two Flintridge and two La Caņada
residents, formed to restudy the incorporation issue. The
effort lasted about six months and was followed by a general
mailing to the community. However, the movement came to an end
when a defiant Flintridge, always wanting separation from La
Caņada, put up too strong a fight.
Five years later
in 1974, community residents organized the La Caņada Cityhood
Action Committee for another shot at incorporation with George
Parrish its leader. The decision to try it again came at a
town meeting hosted by the La Caņada Coordinating Council
with backing from the Chamber of Commerce, then the only local
organizations with a broad-based membership. A hand vote was
taken there with 658 La Caņadans favoring cityhood and only
two dissenting.
Of course, the
paramount challenge was for the committee to convince
Flintridge to join in this all-important effort to save the
valley community's identity. Neighboring Pasadena and Glendale
had agreed on how they would carve up unincorporated LCF,
according to a "sphere of influence" plan of the
State Legislature. A Glendale "prize" would be
Descanso Gardens. Pasadena's takeover included all of
Flintridge.
In May of 1976,
some 986 La Caņadans still remember visiting the LA County
Supervisors chamber for a Local Agency Formation Commission
meeting on cityhood. LAFCO felt that urban areas should belong
to adjoining cities. Resident Warren Hillgren dramatically
stated that the County "had recently divided our
community in two, with a freeway decision in which we had no
participation - something we seek should never happen
again"
Parrish and his
cityhood committee were successful in bringing several
Flintridge leaders into their fold. It took a lot of selling
to Flintridge voters, who wanted to protect their high living
standards and retain their low density zoning, but the job was
accomplished. The vote in the election was 7355 to 2849.
Fifteen La Caņadans
vied for City Council seats. The five winners were, in order
by vote count, Mike Mount, George Parrish, Warren Hillgren,
Edmund Krause and J.D. Smith. Mount and Parrish won four-year
terms, and other three won two-year terms.
A month later, on
Dec. 8, the official incorporation of LCF took place as
Councilman Edmund Krause filed the incorporation certificate
of completion with the County Recorder. The new city would
comprise 8 1/2 square miles and have a population of 21,000.
Later that evening
and historic community event was recorded. Held at the La Caņada
Golf and Tennis Club (later becoming the Country Club) with
500 La Caņadans in attendance, the five Council members were
sworn in by local County Supervisor Baxter Ward, who had
earlier unseated incumbent La Caņadan Warren Dorn. The first
City Attorney was announced as well - J. Kenneth Brown, a
resident of the Flintridge area.
The new City
Council held its first regular meeting on Dec. 9 in the La Caņada
Elementary School Auditorium with an agenda to set up the LCF
government with its necessary resolutions, city staff and
volunteer city commissions.
As formation of
the new city took place in the days to follow, Clark Smithson
was named City Manager, Caroline de Llamas City Clerk, and
John McCormick City Treasurer. De Llamas stayed only briefly
and was replaced by Pat Anderson, who only recently retired.
The City chose to contract to Los Angeles County for police
and fire protection, road repair and building inspection.
McCormick and
Krause, who was a retired senior state tax collector and a
person with many contacts, provided wise direction for the new
city. Krause was instrumental in scheduling the incorporation
timetable in 1976 so that completion of cityhood occurred late
in the year, enabling LCF to receive a full year of state
funding. Financially, it was Krause and McCormick who knew the
money market and had contacts who were helpful in making sage
investments for the City. Those investments created an
unheard-of $10 million reserve fund in the first year of
operation in 1977.
La Caņada
Flintridge became known as the city without a hyphen in its
name, demonstrating community unity. There was a local furor
when it was learned that a clerk in Sacramento had
inadvertently added a hyphen while working on some LCF papers.
It took an ordinance to correct the mistake. Never was that to
happen again.
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