Thanks are owed to past civic leaders who shaped Yorba Linda's identity, growth against big odds
Yorba
Linda residents should give thanks to many of the community's past
citizens whose actions led to the ambiance and amenities enjoyed by
close to 70,000 individuals in 2019.
Today's
20-square-mile city wasn't destined to become a self-governed entity,
since some powerful interests opposed incorporation in the 1960s, and
later plans for the surrounding area threatened the city's identity
as a safe, less-urban haven for families.
The
first attempt at cityhood came in 1956 with the formation of a
citizens committee to study the issue. Other incorporation groups
organized and disbanded during the next decade, with all facing
intense opposition, mainly from large landowners and holders of oil
and gas leases.
Finally,
a favorable court ruling and less resistance from the county Board of
Supervisors led to the long-sought special election in 1967, with
incorporation winning by a 1,964 to 638 vote.
Without
that decade-long incorporation effort and successful election,
residents today might be living in Brea, Placentia and mostly
Anaheim, since each city had attempted annexations in the past, and
they were prepared to continue piecemeal efforts in the future.
But
incorporation didn't solve all of the community's problems, since
proposed nearby developments would have made living in the rapidly
growing city much less desirable.
One
challenge that appeared in the 1970s has faded from many memories
today. But the possibility of a regional airport on 25,000 acres in
the Chino Hills, initially supported by the Anaheim City Council,
galvanized Yorba Linda residents into opposition.
Thirty-year
City Council member and five-time mayor Hank Wedaa, who died Nov. 13
at age 95, played a key role in preventing jet runways from being
built only a few miles from the city.
Wedaa,
several leaders in nearby cities and newly arriving residents worked
to prevent a four-runway facility with 500,000 annual commercial and
private flights from becoming a reality by forming a citizens action
group, Prevent Airport Traffic in Chino Hills, or PATCH.
Although
the Federal Aviation Administration gave conditional approval to a
smaller project in 1972, the agency ruled in 1974 that federal funds
wouldn’t be available. PATCH continued to play whack-a-mole as
powerful airport proponents tried to revive the plan for several
years.
Wedaa’s
long council service was partly due to his role as an effective
airport opponent. He served 1970-1994, won a seventh term in 1996 and
retired in 2000. A final stint came when he won a special election
in 2007, but voters nixed his bid for a ninth term in 2008.
Wedaa's
position as a leader at the South Coast Air Quality Management
District; the Southern California Association of Governments,
including the aviation subcommittee; and other regional bodies gave
Yorba Linda outsized influence on such matters as the airport, as
well as the once-proposed Gypsum Canyon jail facility.
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