Howard Finn
Howard Arthur Finn was an expert in city planning, a builder and a land-use consultant who represented part of the San Fernando Valley on the Los Angeles City Council from 1981 until his death in 1986.
Biography
Finn was born September 20, 1917, in Holyoke, Massachusetts. His family operated a grocery store there, and when Howard was fourteen, they moved to California "in search of new opportunities," Finn earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1939. His first job was as a statistician studying human migration into California for the U.S. Department of Agriculture.In World War II, Finn worked in Britain as an analyst with the U.S. Foreign Economic Administration. With peace, he returned to California and began to design and build homes. He was "generally regarded" as an expert in city planning and became a "successful construction consultant and land-use activist."
After his election to the City Council in 1981, the "gray-goateed Finn" was known as a "mild-mannered man who preferred discussions of such practical matters as garbage and sewage to more general political topics." Politically, he was a "former Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-registered-Independent."
Finn was stricken while he was conducting a meeting of the council's Planning and Environment Committee at City Hall. He was taken to White Memorial Medical Center in Boyle Heights, where he died on August 12, 1986. He was survived by his wife of 44 years, the former Anne Volk, and daughters Bonnie Haskell, Jocelyn Wyma and Melinda Marchuk. After a tribute in an overflowing City Council chamber, Finn was buried in Eden Memorial Park Cemetery in Mission Hills, with a service conducted by Rabbi Stephen Robbins of Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills.
City Council
Elections
Finn lost his bid for the Los Angeles City Council District 1 seat to Louis Nowell in 1973 and to Bob Ronka in 1977. In that era, the 1st was the largest City Council district in the city with a sixth the total area of Los Angeles.Finn was next appointed by Mayor Tom Bradley to the city Board of Zoning Appeals, where he served three years, two of them as board president. Finn was also on the Mayor's Committee on Affordable Housing. He "doggedly attended community meetings and built a strong network of backers" by 1981, the Los Angeles Times reported. "People who try to run a slick, grabby campaign out here will be surprised on election day, and my plain talking doesn't hurt because I have roots in this area," Finn said.
In 1981 the 63-year-old Finn was seen as "an underdog who finished a surprising second" to former Assemblyman Jim Keysor in the primary race and who suffered from a "plodding campaign style—a tendency to speak in fuzzy, convoluted sentences and technical language."
Nevertheless, he beat Keysor in the final by 1,700 votes despite the fact that the latter had key political endorsements and outspent Finn by almost 2 to 1. Finn was criticized for a last-minute mailing engineered by Harvey Englander, his campaign chief, "falsely suggesting that Keysor had withdrawn from the race," the Times reported. Finn denied that his mailings had brought him victory.
Finn was reelected in the 1981 and 1985 primaries.