Sign not so jiffy
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Councilwoman Norma Glover thought the designer face
lift of Mariner’s Mile would be a sure thing when City Council members
approved new guidelines for the strip of road in her district.
Then, planning commissioners sidestepped the framework’s guidelines at
their Dec. 7 meeting and approved a sign for a new Jiffy Lube station
that didn’t fit the document’s recommendations.
Concerned that a 6-foot-tall and 4-foot-wide block on the ground would
become the first new sign on Mariner’s Mile after the framework’s
adoption, Glover called for a City Council review of the commission’s
decision. Council members will address the issue at their Jan. 9 meeting.
“People in this city want beautification on Mariner’s Mile,” Glover
said Monday. “And I am determined to make that happen. . . . We either do
business as usual or we have a plan that’s been put together by community
members, business owners and a professional architect and we work toward
it. I’m trying to take that route to improve” Mariner’s Mile.
Glover said she planned to meet with city officials today to discuss
the matter and get more information on the sign, as well as the
commission’s decision.
“If the Planning Commission cannot live by the design framework, we
may need to go back and see if there is another way to administer” the
framework, she said.
But Planning Commission Chairman Edward Selich said the Jiffy Lube
station’s size had unfortunately forced commission members to make an
exception to the framework with the first application.
“The first [project] out of the box didn’t fit that particular
framework,” said Selich, adding that commissioners believed a taller sign
would have appeared too imposing in the available space.
Selich said he had pointed out the dilemma to his colleagues before
making a decision.
“Personally, I find that lowering the sign is a solution,” he said at
the Dec. 7 meeting.
“But it seems that when we approved the Mariner’s Mile sign
framework,” planning commissioners voted to encourage tall-standing signs
rather than those closer to the ground, Selich added.
Planning commissioners approved the framework in September before
passing it on to the City Council for final approval.
City officials said the sign proposed by Jiffy Lube representatives
had not met framework guidelines. At 15 feet tall and 6 feet wide, the
sign would have been wider than the 3 feet and 9 inches allowed for signs
that high.
James Campbell, the senior planner at the city who worked on the
project, said the sign’s fate was now in the hands of council members.
“They left it for staff to work it out,” Campbell said. “Obviously,
with the decision recalled for review by Mrs. Glover, everything’s put on
hold.”
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