Commissioners display European flair
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- It actually never crossed anyone’s lips. But
“cosmopolitan” was definitely the word du jour.
Allowing an Italian restaurant owner to serve liquor and keep his late
hours, the city’s planning commissioners revealed sympathy for Newport
Beach’s international visitors during discussions that took place after
10 p.m. Thursday.
“Most of the time, we have European” tourists, Domenico Maurici, who
owns Cafe Il Farro on Balboa Peninsula, told commissioners as they began
debating his request.
“And Europeans like to eat late,” he said.
Soon, it became obvious it was the location of Maurici’s restaurant,
rather than his desire to add Campari and grappa to his drink menu, that
worried commissioners.
He feeds people in the city’s infamous high-crime area, bound by 38th
and 20th streets on Balboa Peninsula. Tightly packed with bars and
nightclubs, city officials have pointed to the area’s large number of
liquor licenses as reason for its skyrocketing rate of arrests for
driving under the influence and public drunkenness.
The Newport Beach Police Department, which refers to the neighborhood
as Reporting District 15, made 37.4% of all such arrests throughout the
city in the area in 1999. City Council members are expected to decide
Tuesday whether to shut down the Buzz restaurant -- partly as a result of
a record number of police calls to the establishment and its immediate
area.
District 15’s bad reputation -- it is one of more than 30 reporting
areas -- came up immediately when Commissioner Michael Kranzley explained
his desire to deny Maurici’s request.
“At some point, we’ve got to stop putting on [liquor licenses] in this
district,” he said.
Not that he didn’t hold Maurici and his cuisine in high regard.
“You need to try this restaurant,” he told his fellow commissioners
and audience members, who still filled the council chambers despite the
late hour.
“It is a terrific restaurant,” Kranzley said, adding that Cafe Il
Farro ranked high on his family’s list of favorite dining places.
Other commissioners could only back up their colleague’s praise.
“On Commissioner Kranzley’s recommendation, I’ve been to this
restaurant on a number of occasions,” Commissioner Larry Tucker said.
“And it really is . . . a really good restaurant.”
After Newport Beach Police Capt. Tim Newman told commissioners that
officers never had experienced problems at Maurici’s establishment, the
mood on both sides of the dais lightened up even more.
“I patronize this restaurant without Commissioner Kranzley’s
recommendation,” said Edward Selich, who chairs the commission. “It’s one
of a few places that you can get a late dinner. I understand the concern
that people from other countries eat late.”
Selich added that he’d had occasions for late dinners in the past
himself, possibly referring to the commission’s meetings that regularly
last until midnight.
Even Commissioner Earl McDaniel, who had originally proposed imposing
an 11 p.m. closing time on Maurici, decided to go along with leaving the
restaurant open until 1:30 a.m. from May through August and until 12:30
a.m. the rest of the year.
“The way we’re going [with the meeting], I might need a drink after 11
[p.m.],” McDaniel said to laughter from the audience.
In the end, Kranzley cast the only dissenting vote, followed by
lighthearted threats from his side.
Kranzley “will sit outside [at the restaurant] during the winter,”
Tucker decreed and had the room in stitches again.
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