Coast residents will get their $18 million
June Casagrande
NEWPORT COAST -- The $18 million owed to residents of this newly
annexed community could start to show up as credits on their annual tax
bill, perhaps as soon as this fall.
The Newport Coast Advisory Committee this week decided that the best
way to pay residents the $18 million owed them over the next 15 years is
by crediting their tax bills -- an arrangement that will depend on the
county’s cooperation with Newport Beach.
The money was promised to Newport Coast residents as a condition of
annexing the area to the city. The money comes from the Irvine Ranch
Water District, which is paying the city a total of $25 million over six
years as part of an agreement to supply water to the recently annexed
area. Newport Beach has pledged to return that money to the community’s
residents.
The $18 million, committee members decided, will be used to repay a
portion of residents’ assessment taxes, which were used to build roads
and other facilities during Newport Coast’s infancy. The other $7 million
has been set aside to build a community center, if residents want one.
“Everybody’s going to get a credit on their tax bill each year. That’s
what has been decided,” said Jim McGee, a Newport Coast resident and
member of the committee. McGee was also a leader in annexing the area.
City officials are working with the county to transfer the money through
the county-issued tax bills.
City officials had worried that they would be unable to work out the
details with the county. But Dick Kurth, deputy director of the city’s
Administrative Services Department, said recent talks with county
representatives suggest it can be done.
“There are no guarantees yet, but I think it’s going to work out,”
Kurth said.
Refund amounts will vary from homeowner to homeowner, based on the
amount of assessment district tax each resident pays. For residents of
the fully built-out Newport Ridge area, the amount will probably remain
constant throughout the 15-year term. But in the remainder of the Newport
Coast area, the annual amount will diminish each year as more residents
move in, spreading the wealth among more people.
Officials originally estimated that the owner of a $1.7 million home there would get about $722 the first year. But McGee said that estimate
is too rough to be reliable.
“We’re crunching the numbers right now,” McGee said. “It’s too early
to know the figures.”
The committee is also looking into an even more complex aspect of
their assessment district taxes: namely, the question of how the county
spent their money.
Some worry that up to $20 million the county collected may be
unaccounted for. Committee members are scrutinizing details of the county
tax expenditures and plan to come up with a list of questions and a list
of county documents they want to review. County and city officials have
assured residents that the money has been put to proper use.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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