A Letter from Mark Aguirre
I want to personally inform you that after much thought and
deliberation, I will not be seeking re-election as city commissioner this
year. At this particular time, I have chosen to focus on family concerns
that need my attention. As many of you know, when I was elected to local
office, my son Brendan was also born. Since then it has been a wonderful
few years, filled with lots of great challenges and joy. At first, Brendan
was living in Houston, Texas, and I commuted there quite often. Now,
Brendan has moved to the Washington, D.C. area, and I feel I must take
advantage of this time with him.
I have taken my elected office responsibilities very seriously and am
proud of what I have accomplished during my term. I have lobbied to
improve building regulation efforts by increasing the Building and
Licensing Department staff, preserved Lake Gerar by installing aerators to
improve water quality, encouraged recreational opportunities and decreased
traffic congestion by adding more bike racks throughout town, and
introduced a measure that supported statewide efforts to guard against
discrimination based on sexual orientation. In an effort to build
consensus, I reached out to members of the community and other authorities
to address important quality of life issues involving the proliferation of
geese on Lake Gerar, managing and removing obscene graffiti and loitering
in city public restrooms, conflict growing from the enforcement of noise
ordinances in our commercial district, and community concern over efforts
to limit dog recreation opportunities on our boardwalk.
I am also proud of the vision and thinking I brought to the
decision-making processes. I championed the final Streetscape Phase III
Option as I discovered that the other alternatives placed businesses at a
disadvantage, by limiting parking during construction. I was also able to
see that the city would be able to purchase the much more desirable
in-town Wilmington Trust property, which can be used to alleviate city
office congestion, by reconsidering the sale of a less desirable
out-of-town canal property we owned. I also determined that the proposed
rezoning of the school property would cause problems in obtaining state
approval of our Comprehensive Development Plan. The agreed upon compromise
took the shape of an earlier suggestion I proposed preserving the old
school building, a part of Rehoboth history.
Another issue near and dear to me has been my work as Chair of the
Animal Issues Committee. This committee reached beyond animal welfare and
control, as we updated and corrected the entire section of animal code. It
demonstrated that it is possible to successfully use the committee process
to address complicated and city-wide important concerns without polarizing
the community. This has broader implications as the city moves to rewrite
the equally complicated and important residential building code. If
updating code can be done with an emotionally charged issue such as animal
welfare and control, then updating residential building code, which is
highly emotional as well, can also be carried out successfully.
I plan to remain involved in the community through my work with the
Rehoboth Beach Historical Society, Rehoboth Beach Homeowner’s
Association, Rehoboth Beach Entrance Improvement Panel, CAMP Rehoboth, and
other organizations.
I want to thank all the individuals I have worked with, as well as the
other members of the board of commissioners. Together, we have truly
tackled some major issues for the city and created a better community for
all residents. I thank you for your generous support and for giving me the
opportunity to serve you and all the residents of the City of Rehoboth
Beach.
Have a safe and fun summer.
Sincerely,
Mark Aguirre
Letters should be sent to CAMP Rehoboth, 39 Baltimore Ave., Rehoboth,
DE 19971, or e-mail: editor@camprehoboth.com.