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Photo/Lenny Ignelzi) <br />While more recent arrivals in town may be unaware of this fellow’s <br />significance, veteran Sierra Madreanos are likely to remember Joe Mosca. <br />The one-time mayor of Sierra Madre first arrived in town in late 2005, only <br />to run for City Council less than a year later. Obviously he was a young man <br />in a hurry. One of splendid gifts and much promise all were assured by his <br />handlers. <br />Running as a preservationist opposed to a clunky mixed-use nightmare <br />known as the “Downtown Specific Plan,” Joe rode to elective glory upon a <br />wave of local revulsion at the city’s fraudulent proto-development political <br />establishment. When his election gave slow-growthers a clear City Council <br />majority, many declared the town’s troubles over. <br />Alas, no. As often happens with local baby-kissers, Mosca quickly flipped <br />on everything he’d previously promised. He became an aggressive <br />supporter of the very project he’d opposed when running for office. <br />Something that led to a successful resident land use revolt called Measure <br />V, an unsuccessful recall, general civic mayhem, plus some annoying blogs. <br />Then, for reasons remaining unclear to this day, in 2011 Joe suddenly <br />resigned his office. This only months after he’d won re-election with a <br />campaign vowing his eternal love of Sierra Madre. Some credited Chris <br />Holden for effortlessly crushing Mosca’s state Assembly ambitions, leaving <br />him with little reason to stay. Others pointed to his physician husband being <br />awarded a lucrative job in San Diego, bread winner’s needs carrying the <br />day. <br />Shortly after landing in the San Diego County surf and sand suburb of <br />Encinitas, Mosca somehow managed to get himself appointed to an open <br />11/12/23, 11:16 PMPage 2 of 4