In hot water
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Art Vitarelli has been a national champion in
kayaking. He’s directed award-winning documentaries about the sport and
helped open up the Grand Canyon to kayakers in the 1960s.
The 59-year-old former teacher has made the 680 steps from his Newport
Heights home to the bay countless times to spend more than 10,000 hours
paddling through the water. He’s also participated in the Newport Harbor
Christmas Boat Parade every year since 1968.
But the last couple of times, his holiday mood was dampened by Orange
County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol officers who thought he was getting in
their way, Vitarelli said Tuesday.
In 1999, he was arrested and ticketed for failing to comply with an
officer -- a charge later dropped by the district attorney’s office, he
said.
When he entered the bay Sunday to paddle along the parade’s lighted
boats, officers again tried to intimidate him and push him away, he said.
“I don’t want to appear to be complaining about this thing,” he said.
“But it’s cuckoo.”
Those on the other side see things differently.
Harbor Patrol Sgt. Ron Peoples said Vitarelli had kayaked alongside
his officers’ boat, preventing them from leading the parade in an orderly
fashion.
“We don’t mind him paddling,” Peoples said. “But he wanted to get so
close to the lead boat that he is now impeding the entire parade.”
Peoples added that while his officers had not stopped or arrested
Vitarelli Sunday, they had paid “special notice to him.”
“If we have to pay more attention to where he’s at than us running a
safe parade, then he’s in trouble again,” Peoples said.
Still, Vitarelli said he’ll keep participating in the event.
“My response is, ‘I don’t need you to know where I am,”’ he said. “I
know where you are.”
An independent filmmaker who worked on the raft camera crew for the
movie “Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom,” Vitarelli said he knows how
to stay out of danger and paddle in the parade without getting in the
way.
The parade, incidentally, is no longer what it used to be, he added.
The event, in its 92nd year, now draws about a million people to Newport
Beach. Vitarelli said in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Beek family
asked him to paddle alongside the ferry. Back then, Vitarelli stood at
the helm of his kayaking career and the ferry still led the parade.
“The Harbor Patrol is an excellent police facility,” he said, adding
that as the leading ship, the patrol boat’s sirens and blinking lights
dampen the festive atmosphere of the parade.
“They do fabulous rescues,” he said. “But they shouldn’t be leading a
Christmas parade.”
Parade officials said a growing number of private boats on the harbor
during the parade has made it necessary to have Harbor Patrol officers
lead the line of ships.
“Many of the spectator boats are not familiar with the parade route,”
said Richard Luehrs, the president and chief executive of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce, which organizes the parade.
“They camp themselves right in the middle of it,” Luehrs said. “Having
the Harbor Patrol lead the parade to clear the way is obviously
important. This isn’t Colorado Boulevard here. This is an open harbor.”
Luehrs added that Vitarelli is welcome to share his concerns with the
chamber at the annual wrap-up meeting, which will take place after the
parade ends Saturday.
Vitarelli said he’ll gladly take the opportunity.
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