Council should heed residents
Phil Arst and Joe O’Hora
Councilman Tod Ridgeway’s recent Community Commentary, “Facts rosier
than Greenlight allows,” presents a promising picture of the impact
of proposed new growth in our city. However, the true facts tell a
vastly different story.
Thus far, the city has spent almost $2 million of our taxpayer
dollars on a general plan update process that is currently proposing
options for up to 3,700 additional housing units, up to
2.3-million-square-feet of additional commercial development and up
to 1,150 hotel rooms.
Even if only part of these proposals are implemented, they are the
exact opposite of the “residential beach community” that a large
majority of our residents said they wanted in the Visioning Festival
poll of residents and businesses sponsored by the city.
Our principal concern is that the city will couch this
contemplated excessive growth in terms that could permit them to
avoid the city law requiring voter approval/disapproval of these
proposed major developments. We have repeatedly asked city staff
whether the legally mandated vote of the people to approve/disapprove
this major change to the general plan will take place.
They say they are not ready to make a statement. Remember, this is
the same City Council that last year tried to avoid the same voters’
choice law. It took a lawsuit by the Greenlight residents group to
stop the attempt.
Greenlight is simply striving to preserve your right to vote on
these massive development proposals. You would then have the choice
to vote for or against each proposed project. We are campaigning to
ensure that you have that choice. Otherwise, Ridgeway, who recently
suggested adding an option for possibly several thousand more housing
units over and above the already excessive current proposals, and his
colleagues on the council, will have the sole decision-making power
to select just how much of the proposed increases in traffic
congestion will be authorized.
Our goal is to also protect residents’ property rights to preserve
their home values in an uncrowded city without having to face traffic
congestion every time they drive to shop, work or school. We hope
the council will appreciate that the residents of Newport Beach, in
the above- cited official city poll, expressed strong opposition to
changing their city into another Santa Monica and to massively
expanding the road system to accommodate this traffic.
Ridgeway also challenges our assertion that 170,000 additional
average daily auto trips are permitted to accommodate the unused
entitlements under the current general plan. We cited the city’s own
traffic study, “Traffic Model Executive Summary, 12/3/2003,” which
projects that 170,000 trips could be added and 18 unsatisfactory
traffic intersections or more created if the current general plan
were built out. The study also shows that six intersections are now
unsatisfactory under current city policies. The more we develop, the
more intersections that become unsatisfactory from a traffic
standpoint. We think the six currently unsatisfactory intersections
should first be fixed before we contemplate further major
development.
Councilman Ridgeway’s remarks that the present Traffic Phasing
Ordinance and similar measures would protect residents from
additional traffic congestion are misleading. Since he and other
previous Council Members voted to emasculate the traffic ordinance,
its purpose is now only to collect a usage-based fee from all new
developments. Even if the fees could cover the costs of all needed
street widening and overpasses -- which they cannot, since they are
generally cost-prohibitive -- the residents stated strong opposition
to turning the city’s major streets into wide highways to accommodate
more traffic.
Ridgeway’s statement that his suggested housing unit increases
applied only to the airport area also troubles us. He is contradicted
by the Jan. 11 City Council meeting official minutes, in which he is
quoted as requesting more intense housing unit development not only
in the airport area but also in Balboa Village, added units to
Emerald Forrest and in Corona del Mar along Coast Highway. This
demonstrates the reason why citizen watchdogs are needed to monitor
council activities.
Greenlight’s purpose is to keep residents informed of the huge
increases in traffic and density that are proposed in the current
draft of the general plan so that they can tell their council members
of their desires to maintain their quality of life, property values
and right to vote on major developments. The Greenlight website,
www.newportgreenlight.com, contains an overview of the city’s
official data, so residents can check out our statements.
Hopefully, the council will listen to the residents, drastically
cut back the unprecedented growth options proposed, and in the
process, remove the excessive entitlements in the current general
plan. We look forward to further dialogue.
* PHIL ARST is the spokesperson for the Greenlight Residents’
Committee. JOE O’HORA is a new member of the Greenlight Residents
Committee.
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