Countdown to 2000: Politics
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Noaki Schwartz
In contrast to the conservative years a decade earlier, the political
atmosphere of the 1960s in Newport-Mesa was characterized by
environmental activism. This interest in curbing the community’s
increasing development took root and nearly 40 years later, it is still a
controversial political issue in the Newport-Mesa.
What spurred the anti-development movement was that the Irvine Co. had
given large blocks of land to various businesses and industries
surrounding Newport-Mesa. As a result, the pressure to develop homes
increased exponentially. And this touched the lives of many local
residents who decided to voice their discontent.
In 1963, when Frank and Francis Robinson heard the Irvine Co. was taking
steps to purchase Upper Newport Bay, they began to organize to prevent
the development of the area.
Their involvement helped to convince the county not to give the Irvine
Co. the property. And, after a great deal of legal fighting that
continued into the next decade, the Robinsons eventually helped Upper
Newport Bay become a state Ecological Reserve.
Some of the environmental activism was a result of direct personal
hardship. In the mid-1960s, when the erosion at Seashore Drive in West
Newport began to pull Don McInnis’ home into the ocean, he was disturbed
to find the City Council completely unresponsive.
Following the experience, he ran for the council, serving from 1968 to
1980, including two terms as mayor. It was during this time that he
helped develop a plan to prevent beach erosion.
These were also the years when the antiairport expansion voice grew. The
airport built additional runways in 1967 and the movement has grown ever
since. Environmentalists Daniel Emory and Carroll Beek were particularly
involved against the noise and air pollution.
The close of the decade saw the early beginnings of another vociferous
group. The pollution of Upper Newport Bay led to a group of residents
eventually organizing Stop Polluting Our Newport, in 1974.
Sources
“A Slice of Orange: The History of Costa Mesa,” Edrick Miller, 1970;
“Newport Beach 75: 1906-1981” James Felton, 1981; Costa Mesa Globe-Herald
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