Beth Brooks (Glendale City Council At-Large, California, candidate 2026)
Beth Brooks is running for election to the Glendale City Council At-Large in California. Brooks is on the ballot in the general election on June 2, 2026.[source]
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Biography
Beth Brooks has not yet completed Ballotpedia's 2026 Candidate Connection survey. If you are Beth Brooks, click here to fill out the survey.
Elections
General election
The general election will occur on June 2, 2026.
General election for Glendale City Council At-Large (3 seats)
The following candidates are running in the general election for Glendale City Council At-Large on June 2, 2026.
Candidate | ||
| Vrej Agajanian (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Elen Asatryan (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Alex Balekian (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Alek Bartrosouf (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Beth Brooks (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Dan Brotman (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Ronnie Gharibian (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Gevorg Grigoryan (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Carolyn Kaloostian (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Davit Mnatsakanyan (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Patrick Murphy (Nonpartisan) | ||
| Evelina Sarian (Nonpartisan) | ||
= candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey. | ||||
| If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey. | ||||
Endorsements
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Campaign themes
Ballotpedia survey responses
See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection
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Campaign website
Brooks' campaign website stated the following:
Protecting Single-Family Residential Neighborhoods
We must say "NO" to overdevelopment to protect what makes Glendale Glendale.
Our city is facing increasing pressure from overdevelopment and state-driven housing mandates that risk reshaping entire neighborhoods, especially those with single-family homes, without the full support of the people who already live here.
For Beth, the core issue is simple: all city planning should prioritize current residents and the communities they have built. Neighborhood change should not be imposed in ways that undermine established residents' needs, as well as the character, stability, and zoning of existing neighborhoods.
Too often, residents criticizing overdevelopment are characterized as "frozen in time," "old-fashioned," or resisting "inevitable change" because they are unwilling to have their quality of life, neighborhoods or even businesses threatened or destroyed. This makes no sense, because change is a neutral concept. It's the quality of the change that counts. Resisting NEGATIVE change is a good thing.
Stopping Reckless Driving
Unsafe streets and reckless driving are among the most pressing concerns raised by Glendale residents, yet the City’s response has fallen short of the urgency the community expects.
Real progress demands more than intermittent traffic crackdowns—it requires a sustained, citywide commitment built on the proven “Three E’s” of traffic safety: Enforcement, Education, and Engineering.
Beth supports a comprehensive, multi-faceted street-safety initiative for: greater police presence, including speed traps, higher fines, impounding vehicles, public education campaigns to change the messaging that speeding is "cool," in the same way that smoking campaigns created a negative "stigma" around cigarettes, and bringing back hands-on driver's education in high schools.
Beth also wants a pedestrian public safety campaign using the lessons she herself learned navigating the crazy streets of New York City. She is holding onto one other "solution," but it's completely out-of-the-box, so stay tuned.
Beth does not support removing car lanes to deal with unsafe streets. That not only doesn't solve the problem, (reckless drivers don’t just "disappear;" they just move onto side streets), but the increased congestion threatens public safety: emergencies turn into fatalities in a matter of seconds.
A plan that makes traffic worse isn’t a plan — it’s a problem.
Lowering Utility Costs
GWP (Glendale Water and Power) customers have watched their utility bills increase around 70% in just three years—even as the City keeps expanding their rebate program.
Meaningful customer relief will come from the following reforms: ending costly, politically driven programs that are not state-mandated; expanding local power generation and selling surplus energy into the market; increasing enrollment in the CARE program to ensure qualified residents receive the discounts they deserve, and redirecting rebate money.
It's also time to reform GWP’s pricing structure. Many residents are unaware that Glendale residential households pay higher per-kilowatt-hour rates than large commercial customers like Disney. The burden of rising costs should not fall more heavily on families than on corporations.
It's not a Housing Shortage, It's an Affordability Crisis
We don't have a housing crisis in Glendale, as politicians, developers, and some council candidates would have you think. We have an affordability crisis.
That's why expanding Glendale’s rental housing stock has not resolved anything, because the core issue is not supply. Increased construction has failed to address affordability because almost 90% of all new apartment units built by private developers in the past few decades are renting at market rates. Not only that, but the City of Glendale has only built 1500 low-income affordable housing units in over 50 years.
As Beth's core message and approach to problems faced by this city, not just regarding rental housing, is that urgent concerns require immediate solutions, the current reliance on waiting years for new buildings to be completed, while new supply offers only a handful of affordable units, is neither practical nor compassionate.
The most effective approach is to make the homes people already live in more affordable. This means providing direct rental assistance for those struggling the most with affordability -- low-income renters, especially seniors, the disabled, and veterans, by vigorously investigating fraud within our Section 8 program, which shockingly hasn't opened to new appplicants in 25 years, and redirecting funds from city councilmembers' politically-driven "pet projects" and low-need, low-priority programs.
Beth wholeheartedly supports mom-and-pop landlords, who are struggling along with everyone else in Glendale from high utility rates and waste removal bills that have increased sometimes 400%! Helping one group doesn't mean punishing another.
Treating the Public as Partners in Governance
The Glendale City Council often operates in ways that feel opaque, with most major decisions taking shape before the public even knows they're under consideration. Residents are not given meaningful opportunities to provide input at an early stage, and the city’s outreach efforts have not produced genuine engagement.
What’s needed is a complete overhaul, where the public are treated as true partners from the outset.
Beth has two original solutions that she repeatedly offered the Council to increase public engagement and participation, which are the direct result of her decades in marketing research doing analysis and writing:
- The city must actively motivate participation rather than passively solicit it, in the same way that marketing and advertising campaigns encourage consumers to act (buy a product). This requires using the same messaging techniques as those industries;
- Public comments must be treated as data (collected, coded, and analyzed) rather than testimony so as to inform and shape councilmember decisions. Every bit of public comment matters.
Spending Responsibly & Removing Political Bias from Decision-making
Glendale is facing a debt crisis caused by years of no oversight and reckless spending. The City Council should not impose new taxes or revenue schemes that will hurt residents and small businesses while simultaneously failing to manage existing taxpayer dollars responsibly.
We must spend smarter, require independent review of major expenditures, conduct transparent audits, enforce competitive bidding that prioritizes the lowest qualified bids, and require voter approval for all bond measures, not just some, as we've been doing.
Spending decisions must also use objective criteria rather than the subjective, arbitrary, and politically-motivated bias we see on the council now. All decisions should at very least include a "system" for "scoring" spending proposals to determine legitimate public need, public benefit, and fiscal impact. Every potential dollar spent by the Council should be judged and scrutinized. The public deserves nothing less.
— Beth Brooks' campaign website (April 4, 2026)
See also
2026 Elections
External links
Footnotes
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