Deirdre NewmanNature and the environment had always...
Deirdre Newman
Nature and the environment had always been important to Tom Billings,
but sailing halfway around the world reinforced on a more spiritual
level the preciousness of the Earth’s resources.
“Sailing changed my whole outlook on life and what’s important,”
Billings said. “I call it my Henry David Thoreau experience.”
That transcendental time helped fuel Billings’ passion for keeping
the Marinapark site -- where mobile homes now sit -- zoned for
recreation and open space.
Hotel designer Stephen Sutherland has created a plan for a luxury
hotel on the site, as well as amenities to neighboring buildings. On
Tuesday, voters will decide if they want to adopt a general-plan
amendment that would change the zoning of the site to allow for a
hotel such as Sutherland’s.
Billings, 50, was born in Los Angeles, and his family moved to
Newport Beach when he was 6. He attended Newport Elementary School,
Ensign Intermediate School and Newport Harbor High School.
He worked as a lifeguard during high school and college and
learned to sail on the bay. He witnessed his parents treating the
environment with care as he was growing up, he said.
Following college at USC, he worked overseas, then domestically
and went to graduate school at the University of Texas at Austin.
After working in Los Angeles for a while, he embarked on his
sailing odyssey, circumnavigating half the globe.
“Ever since I was a child, I’ve been inspired by solo sailors who
went on these adventures,” he said. “I read stories like about Josh
Slocum, the first person to sail solo around the world.”
Billings bought a Vancouver 32-foot cutter rig, similar to a
sloop, designed for open-ocean sailing. He spent a year getting it
ready for his voyage and took off for the open seas in April 1987.
For the next year-and-a-half, he sailed to exotic locations in the
South Pacific, including Marquesas in French Polynesia, New Zealand
and Fiji. His last stop was Hawaii, and instead of returning to the
American continent, he ended up dropping anchor there. He found work
as a management consultant and diversified into marketing and
advertising as well. He also served on an economic-development board,
a private/public partnership that tried to generate balanced growth
in Honolulu.
There, his environmental awareness came of age.
“[It] evolved from being a lifeguard to water quality, nature and
not wanting to take that for granted,” he said.
He returned to California in 1999, after his father passed away,
to help his mother, which he continues to do.
The West Newport resident said he wasn’t aware of the Marinapark
hotel proposal until the end of 2002. Concerned about the
ramifications of changing the zoning from open space to allow the
hotel, Billings proposed a meeting for others who felt the same way.
They had one meeting, then another and decided to form an
organization.
“We said, ‘OK, we have so many months before the campaign, let’s
preserve the parkland,’” Billings said. “It wasn’t just me. Once we
were all in one room, it was like ‘Wow!’”
The group calls itself Protect Our Parks, although a park is not
the definitive alternative to the hotel, Billings has said. The
battle to preserve the open-space zoning is a natural evolution for
Billings, considering his profound respect for the environment.
“It’s a kind of deep, instinctual feeling that it’s wrong to take
away parkland,” Billings said. “Whether it’s Marinapark or in Santa
Ana Heights, I would feel the same way.”
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