City splits annexation requests
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Residents in Santa Ana Heights and Bay Knolls will
have to wait longer than folks in Newport Coast to become part of the
city.
This week, City Council members unanimously agreed to split the
annexation applications for the three areas.
The break came because officials for the county agency overseeing
annexations want to consider applications by Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
for the two unincorporated territories between the two cities at the same
time.
Newport Beach city officials have said the costs for providing
municipal services in Newport Coast will be substantial. Completed papers
for the transfer of property taxes from county to city coffers must be
filed with the state agency responsible for the transfer by December.
If that doesn’t happen, the city must wait 18 rather than six months
from the annexation date before it gets any money. Under the worst-case
scenario, the city would have to front $5.25 million to cover services.
“It’s really in our interest to get things done by December,” said
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff.
While the two cities’ applications don’t overlap -- Costa Mesa seeks
to annex several unincorporated islands along its eastern border -- West
Santa Ana Heights residents are vehemently opposed to belonging to Costa
Mesa and want to be annexed by Newport Beach instead.
Newport Beach officials filed their application March 20 and have said
they wouldn’t oppose a decision by the Orange County Local Agency
Formation Commission to consider the western and eastern parts of Santa
Ana Heights as one community. But they didn’t include the western portion
in the application because it lies within Costa Mesa’s sphere of
influence.
Costa Mesa City Council members approved their application April 2,
but city officials haven’t yet filed the document with the commission.
Newport Coast’s annexation also still hinges on approval from the
community’s residents. Although neighborhood leaders have endorsed the
plan, support from residents might not reach the same level of almost
unanimous approval annexation gets in Santa Ana Height and Bay Knolls.
In addition, the state Legislature still must approve a new law that
would keep in place a local coastal program after Newport Beach annexes
the area.
The program allows local government agencies to issue permits for
developments in California’s coastal zone. The city lacks such a program
and, without the bill’s protection, the construction of an additional 825
homes in Newport Coast could face legal challenges.
The splitting of the three applications will cost Newport Beach
roughly $18,000, because each filing costs about $9,000.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.