THE FRED COLUMN
As my friend Jimmy Durante often said, “I’m surrounded by
assassins.”
From “da boids in da trees” to the never-revealed Umbriago, it seemed
somebody was always picking on “Da Schnoz.”
Jimmy would certainly empathize with the people of Newport-Mesa.
From the beginning of life as we know it, the region has been under
siege, fair game for tap-dancers with big ideas and a bankroll.
With few exceptions, residents have always banded together to protect
their quality of life. Most of the time, these volunteers have been able
to beat developers at their own game. At worst, they succeeded in
diminishing what could have been dreadful assaults on the environment and
the natural beauty of the area.
When our family moved to Balboa from Los Angeles in 1963, the hot idea
was to plant a forest of very high-rises up and down the Peninsula.
Condos, co-ops, hotels, apartments, it didn’t matter. “Why, this’ll make
Miami Beach look like chump change,” the would-be developers boasted.
Fortunately, the citizens fought back, as they have every time an
overambitious development or other user-unfriendly scheme has threatened
the quality of life in Newport-Mesa. And they won.
Not too long after those who would have Trumpified the Peninsula were
beaten back, Caltrans tried to put a freeway down Coast Highway: Locals
shooed those varmints away, too.
Though defeated on the PCH plan, the state agency still extracted half a
pound of flesh some years later when it brought the a freeway to an
abrupt stop in downtown Costa Mesa.
It was supposed to have linked up with the Coast Highway freeway in a
splendid cloverleaf where the new Arches bridge was abuilding for what
seems like 20 years.
It was the freeway to nowhere, and as a sort of farewell gotcha, Caltrans
ended the turnpike at 19th Street, creating one of the finest, most
reliable ongoing traffic jams in the nation. Worse yet, the Costa Mesa
Freeway was a death sentence for about a dozen small businesses.
When Pacific View Memorial Park was taken over by a billion-dollar
Texas-based company, residents had to go to war again. This time, it was
to battle a hush-hush plan to allow new, high-rise mausoleums to flourish
in a landscape of well-clipped lawns with flat headstones. Once again, a
posse was formed.
The result was neither a victory nor a loss for either side. But had it
not been for the residents’ determination in fighting a huge
conglomerate, today’s Pacific View would be looking like a Wilshire
Boulevard for the dead.
Two of the more calamitous assaults on community sensibilities and
quality of life were focused in and around the Back Bay. You remember the
Irvine Ranch Water District, eh? And its plan to infuse the bay with more
than 5 million gallons of treated sewage a day?
When that hassle began, Newport Beach citizens didn’t just have to fight
the IRWD, they had to battle their own city council to convince their
elected rulers and hired hands to join the fray.
Now, some five years later, the IRWD nightmare bounces in and out of
courts and state governing boards and may still be going on when we
colonize Mars. These civic warriors don’t give up easily.
The other Back Bay transgressor was the Fletcher Jones Mercedes
dealership -- specifically its hundreds of powerful lights refracting
among the mirror-like surfaces of glass, metal and marble.
Once again, citizens pulled together and did what they had to do. And
once again, a compromise and an armistice were reached.
But. unquestionably, the biggest fight in the area’s history was against
the airport.
When the local airfield appeared destined to become Orange County
International, coalitions formed and factions that often bickered pulled
together.
The result was a court-sanctioned agreement that limited flights and
noise. Need I mention that the gladiators from the old conflict are back
in armor, fighting again to preserve quality of life?
Those who aren’t directly involved in the battle to convert El Toro are
sighing and wondering if there is a threat to residents in the massive
new hotel project planned for Newport Dunes.
Still others are sharpening their strategies to deal with the proposed
development of Crystal Cove, the recurring push for a bridge to
Huntington Beach, the expansion of traffic phasing ordinances and on and
on and on.
Protecting paradise around here is virtually a full-time job. And it is
certainly not one for the faint of heart.
* FRED MARTIN is a former Newport Beach resident who now writes from his
new home in Fort Collins, Colo. His column appears on Wednesdays.
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