Readers respond
AT ISSUE: Readers are divided about the proposed 470-room Newport Dunes
resort hotel in Newport Beach. Some say it will destroy the environment,
while others say it’s good for the economy.
When is the last time you were caught driving anywhere near Dover Drive
and Pacific Coast Highway in the morning or early evening hours? Have you
been as frustrated as I have been trying to negotiate PCH from either
Newport Drive on the west or Jamboree on the east?
It is common knowledge that, over time, traffic throughout Newport Beach
(and elsewhere in the country) has become more congested.
I was informed recently that there are plans afoot to build a
hotel/time-share complex/conference center in the Dunes. If I can believe
the handbill, a traffic study approved by the Planning Commission stated
that the hotel will improve traffic at 36 major intersections in our
city.
They must be talking about cul de sacs--certainly not Dover Drive and
PCH!
It simply doesn’t make sense. A sizable hotel and convention center with
only one narrow entrance and exit would not only cause a pileup at the
crossroads of Bayside Drive and PCH but would further befoul the existing
congestion on a number of major crossroads, as well as the constant flow
of traffic on PCH.
Don’t tell me that a large hotel is not going to complicate an already
existing traffic pollution.
Once again it appears that commerce and political collusion weigh in with
the profit motive over restraint and common cause.
Let’s rethink our priorities: Continue growth and development within a
fast-shrinking natural preserve or be grateful for whatever is left for
us in nature. And preserve what we have.
ELLIS R. WAYNE
Newport Beach
I have been coming to Newport Beach since the mid-’30s, and living here
since that time with the exception of seven years away at college and in
the Korean War. My wife and all our children have attended Newport Beach
schools through high school except our youngest, who attended high school
in Washington, D.C., while we were there.
We have been a part of the community and watched its orderly growth for
all these years. Yes, there has been growth and development and
expansion, but it has been orderly, valuable and acceptable. The benefits
have been obvious in commerce, creating wealth and a magnificent way of
life.
For some time now, we have been without meeting facilities adequate to
service the numerous charitable and business functions attended by our
own citizens. Now we have the prospect of a complex that would provide
adequate space for the functions that our citizens support without having
to go out of town for any large function.
The Planning Commission is a good example of representative government;
it weighed the facts and presentations and voted unanimously to support
the project. Let’s not let a selfish minority “pull up the gangplank” and
shut our community down.
ROBERT E. BADHAM
Newport Beach
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