JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
Since the Koll Center expansion was shot down by local voters last
week, I have been reading with a growing sense of wonder the complaints,
recriminations and sour grapes from the people who were pushing it. They
obviously need to place blame, but in their search for the guilty, they
have looked everywhere but the most obvious place: in the mirror.
Instead, we have such draconian statements as this one from Richard
Luehrs, president of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce: “I
think this sends a clear message that Newport Beach is not open to
further development.”
Or this one from Tim Strader, president of Koll Center developer
Starpointe Ventures: “The fact that only a small percent of the
registered voters decided to vote is further proof that planning issues
should not be decided by popularity contests.”
Before they lay their defeat off on an unsophisticated citizenry that
doesn’t understand where its best interests lie, they should get some
back copies of the Pilot and read the letters on the Koll issue. Koll
supporters clearly didn’t learn anything from these letters before the
election. Maybe in retrospect, they might usefully consider the
possibility that this election’s only clear message was that insulting
the intelligence of the voting public isn’t the way to get ahead with
development projects.
The catalyst of the screw up was a Koll-sponsored organization either
conceived by a saboteur of the Koll Center or someone who never took
Psychology 101 in high school. It was called the Greenlight
Implementation Committee, apparently on the premise that a guileless
public would believe that Greenlight was really supporting the Koll
Center. If any of the $170,000 we are told Koll spent on the election
campaign went to public relations consultants, they should return the
money and get into some other line of work. For the price of a cup of
coffee, I would have told the Koll people that this committee was a
terrible idea.
So would the dozens of Pilot letter writers who cited the committee as
a large factor in their opposition to the Koll expansion. Four examples
will illustrate:
“We were shocked and very disappointed to see that Koll and its
project supporters had resorted to semantic deceit. Usurping the term
Greenlight for themselves appears to be a deliberate attempt to confuse
the voters”;
“I just want to express my deep frustration and horror with the
tactics of the Greenlight Implementation Committee that has adopted the
name of the organization trying to minimize growth in our lovely city”;
“There is just no defense or excuse that can justify this plot to
confuse voters”;
“I was going to vote ‘yes’ on this Koll project because I thought
maybe it was the stretching of Greenlight. But after looking at these
deceptive underhanded lies, I’m voting against it. I wonder how many
votes Tim Strader has cost himself by his undermining of the public
trust?”
The kind of juvenile ploy represented by the Greenlight Implementation
Committee says two things to the people who are debating how to vote: (1)
the case for the project in question is not strong enough to stand on its
own legs, and (2) the voters are dumb enough to buy into this scam.
Neither is very helpful to the developer.
Nor was the disappearance of Koll consultant Scott Hart from a public
informational meeting in Corona del Mar before the question-and-answer
session, leaving the field to the Greenlight representative who didn’t
cut out. Or the bylined piece by Tim Strader in the Pilot in which he
warned -- apparently with a straight face -- that voters should not be
“fooled by political rhetoric and misinformation.”
The lesson to be learned from the Koll vote is not so much that
Newport Beach has shut the door to future development as that developers
who are contemptuous of the people opposing their projects, especially to
the point of insulting their intelligence with silly and deceptive
tactics, are probably going to lose any project put to a vote. And
deserve to lose.
Greenlight is going to be around for a while, along with the strong
and legitimate feelings that brought it about in the first place -- and
which are very much present in other local communities that lack a
Greenlight. Developers who have done some fine work in this community in
the past are going to be around for a while too.
No purpose is served by regarding all developers as greedy exploiters,
out to make big bucks at the expense of the public. Or to regard the
citizenry that supported Greenlight as made up of human fossils trying to
hang onto the fantasy of a past that is no longer relevant or in our best
interests today. Both attitudes make it more difficult to look with
reasonable objectivity at a project under consideration.
Making it even more difficult -- maybe impossible -- are mindless
travesties such as the Greenlight Implementation Committee, which should
be a case history in every manual for developers on how not to win an
election.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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