Watchdog commentator fast and loose with facts
TOD RIDGEWAY
It’s important to correct the record in regard to a recent column by
a local watchdog (“Watchdog,” May 29). The person’s commentary played
fast and loose with the facts in several ways, including:
* A Newport Coast Drive overpass. I believe that many Newport
Coast residents would be outraged to see a $7-million to $10-million
monolith over Newport Coast Drive (complete with long ramps or
elevators for disabled access). There are practical problems with
this idea, too. The overpass would have to be on private property and
be permitted by the Coastal Commission. After the two to three years
it would take to find project funding, go through design, go through
the California Environmental Quality Act and receive a Coastal
Development Permit, the entire side of the Newport Coast near the
school will be built out, negating the need to protect the area
against construction traffic. The overpass would be an unpopular and
unnecessary white elephant.
* City Council appointments. All City Council appointments have
been filled per the requirements of the City Charter. The charter’s
provisions were approved by the people of Newport Beach more than 60
years ago and have stood the test of time since then quite well. I
don’t question the time-honored “constitution” set forth by the
Newport Beach voters -- I’m surprised that the writer does.
* Our harbor. In criticizing the work of our Congress, the writer
forgets that our legislators in Washington and Sacramento have
secured almost $17 million for the Newport Bay in recent years --
enough to get the major dredging program underway this fall, if all
goes according to plan. I think that’s a good track record.
* City Hall, part I. The writer, while admitting to the City
Council on May 24 that she thinks we need a new City Hall, alleges
that the city’s issuance of Certificates of Participation to fund it
isn’t legal. It clearly is -- the world-class Central Library on
Avocado was built with such certificates. They can be issued without
new taxes.
* City Hall, part II. The writer offers a cost of “$760/square
foot” for City Hall compared with only “$1.50/square foot” for a
lease. She therefore compares a per month rate with a cost to
construct an entire project (and even her construction cost is
wrong). That’s just bad math. Then, without telling her readers, she
includes the cost of a parking structure and a new fire station in
that figure. Here are the facts. The annual cost to finance about $40
million (which includes the cost of the new City Hall, the parking
structure and a new fire station) is about $2.8 million a year for 30
years. City Hall should last 60 years. If we use the writer’s idea to
pay $1.2 million annually to lease space in a tilt-up building on the
edge of Costa Mesa, the net present value of the cost of those lease
payments is more than $56 million over that same 60-year period.
The cost of the certificates to replace City Hall (and build the
fire station and parking structure) is $44.5 million. Plus, at the
end of our 60 years, the taxpayers still own a valuable parcel of
land on the Balboa Peninsula. Not so with a Costa Mesa-adjacent
lease. It’s no wonder that cities and businesses across our region
are moving away from leasing when they want to keep a permanent
presence in the community.
I appreciate the writer’s interest in our town. She obviously
wants to provide a service to our city. But if she keeps stretching
the truth in her columns, she is not serving anyone.
* TOD RIDGEWAY is a Newport Beach City Councilman.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.