Caught between cities
Mathis Winkler
SANTA ANA HEIGHTS -- To Robert Hanley, it’s all about the dragon.
But not the beast from fairy tales. Hanley and a group of residents
don’t want to see their neighborhood become part of Costa Mesa and hope
to be annexed by Newport Beach instead.
Squeezed between the two cities -- the Santa Ana Country Club to one
side, the Newport Beach Golf Course to the other -- only the San Joaquin
Hills Tollway separates the area from John Wayne Airport.
That’s the dragon Hanley’s talking about. Together with fellow
annexation activists, Hanley believes Newport Beach will do a better job
at protecting West Santa Ana Heights from its noisy airport neighbor.
“Newport Beach is the one and only entity that has held that dragon at
bay,” Hanley said. “They are responsible for flight caps and for the fact
that there is no flights after 11 [p.m.] and none before 7 [a.m.]
Obviously they have our interests at heart.”
A majority of Hanley’s neighbors appear to have the same opinion.
About 96% of the area’s 1,800 residents have signed a petition to become
part of Newport Beach, he said. About a year ago, residents also filed an
application with the Local Agency Formation Commission, which oversees
the annexation of unincorporated areas, said Hanley, who spoke about the
annexation plans at last week’s Newport Beach City Council meeting.
But unlike eastern Santa Ana Heights, which lies just across the golf
course and is set to be annexed by Newport Beach, Hanley’s neighborhood
forms part of Costa Mesa’s sphere of influence, putting that city first
in line to annex it.
Officials in both cities said that they understand the concerns over
splitting an area that has long perceived itself as one community.
Historically speaking, it also has been true that Newport Beach has
played a more aggressive role in opposing the expansion of John Wayne
Airport, said Allan Roeder, Costa Mesa’s city manager.
“That is because Newport Beach is substantially more affected,” Roeder
said, adding that both cities were against any expansion plans.
Residents’ overwhelming opposition to being annexed by Costa Mesa
would likely fend off attempts to incorporate West Santa Ana Heights,
since an election needs to take place if more than 25% of residents
publicly speak out against the move.
In the end, commission members might have to decide whether both parts
of Santa Ana Heights should come to one city.
Newport Beach City Manager Homer Bludau said that his city would not
include the western area in an annexation application.
The commission’s “staff have said that they will take a look at
whether it’s one community,” Bludau said. “If they decide [that,] it’s
all right with us. But we don’t want to pick a fight with Costa Mesa.
They have to be part of that decision.”
It’s still unclear when Newport Beach will file its application, which
likely would include Bay Knolls and Newport Coast as well. Trouble with
state legislation governing Newport Coast could delay the application
until 2002.
Roeder said that at the earliest, Costa Mesa’s council members would
look at the issue in the beginning of March.
Should Newport Beach file an application before that, Roeder would
bring the issue to Costa Mesa’s elected officials right away or ask the
commission to look at Santa Ana Heights as one area, he said.
While Hanley acknowledged that Costa Mesa’s city officials had spent a
lot of time discussing the issue with West Santa Ana Heights’ residents,
he said that some city leaders had failed to ask the most important
question.
“They don’t get down to the basics of saying, ‘Do you want to be part
of Costa Mesa,’ ” Hanley said. “They feel that we should belong to them.
I don’t belong to anybody. Except my wife.”
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