The Palo Alto History Project
Ed Power
                                                                                                  
                                                                                     
Ed Power: Palo Alto City Council's Resident Gadfly

The city council gadfly --- it seems that every city has at least one. Are they lone, impassioned citizens boldly
challenging the system or eccentric wackos jamming up the city’s busy calendar with their own personal
grudges?

In Palo Alto, as in all California cities, City Council meetings begin with a half-hour Oral Communications
period. During this time anyone can speak up to three minutes on any topic, as is prescribed by California
law. For many years in Palo Alto, there was one citizen you could set your watch by. Ed Power never
missed a chance to use his three minutes to speak. And the subject was always the same, if not a bit
forgotten --- the 1986 closing of the Palo Alto Yacht Harbor.

At times, Power’s speeches ranged from the tiresome to the ridiculous. On a number of occasions,
frustrated with the laconic, always silent body language of the Council during his weekly harangue, Power
would actually launch into song. “Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes” and "I Wander Today to the Hill,
Maggie." were a couple of the old-time numbers that the Council was treated to. On one occasion Power
said he hoped the singing brought a little more entertainment "than speaking to this blank-faced council." He
also once compared the "immoral" closing of the harbor to the Holocaust and the council to a dog licking its
private parts. And in case any of the members might miss him, he would actually inform city officials of his
vacation plans so they would know why he wouldn't be in attendance at future meetings.

Power also took his message to the voters a half-dozen times in runs for City Council.  He never garnered
more than 1,000 votes.

In 1998, a few city council members including
Micki Schneider --- who had recently been personally
insulted during Oral communications--- tried to limit Power and a few other gadflies. They proposed pushing
Oral Communications to the end of the meeting for anyone who had addressed the council within the past
month. But after Palo Alto Weekly and others railed against the proposal as “abusive, punitive and
undemocratic,” Schneider reversed herself. The proposal was dropped and the Ed Power weekly tongue-
lashing continued unabated until 2005 when Power’s health declined. Power died in 2006 at the age of 88,
often ignored, but always heard.

                                                                                                                                   -Matt Bowling
Palo Alto: Then & Now
Ed Power in the 1990s
(PAHA)
The Palo Alto Habor before
its closing in 1985
Palo Alto Home Page
The Sea Scout Building
designed by Birge Clark in
1941
Another shot of
Power
2005

1943
The map below shows the East of the 101 Palo Alto Area
Palo Alto People
Micki Schneider, a city
council member who tried to
limit Power and other
gadflies
The Sea Scout Building today
Political Issues
Palo Alto Yacht Harbor in 1943 from a plane above.  The dark oval toward the
middle of the photo is the Palo Alto Duck Pond and one can see the yachts lined up
on the opposite side of the shore.
The Duck Pond is still drawing visitors, but the yachts have all gone home.  The Harbor
closed down in 1986, with Ed Power's boat being the last to leave.  Much of the harbor is
now mud for the majority of the year.  The sprawl of industrial complexes now appears
along Embarcadero Road in the top right hand corner of this Google Maps photo.
Palo Alto Memory Bank
Do you have memories or stories
of Ed Power?  Post them in our
memory bank.  Thanks!
Your name:
Email:
Subject:
"FYI, Ed Power was a College Terrace resident and known to many in the
neighborhood for walking his dog, so please cross list his entry
under College Terrace.  When his own dog died and he was getting too
old to handle the responsibilities of pet ownership, he started
walking other people's dogs."
-Kathy
Memories added by our readers:
Sources:
Palo Alto Times, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Historical Association