READERS RESPOND
* AT ISSUE: We asked readers if they would vote for the proposed
Greenlight initiative. Here’s what a few had to say:
I would vote “yes” for the Greenlight initiative. This initiative would
give Newport Beach voters oversight regarding any major amendment to the
city’s general plan. It’s time to change the system, for as former state
treasurer Jess Unruh once said, “money is the mother’s milk of politics.”
It took the Orange County bankruptcy to wake up the county’s voters
regarding oversight. I hope it doesn’t take absolute gridlock on the
city’s only major cross-town arteries to wake up Newport Beach.
JENNIFER W. FRUTIG
Newport Beach
My worst fears have come true. A mayor from another beach city, Santa
Barbara, has used Newport Beach in the same sentence as Santa Monica. Her
reference was to how our city planners and government leaders have let
the city go down hill in a big way.Maybe Greenlight is not the answer.
But whatever is our policy now doesn’t seem to be working very well.
Consider what has happened to Newport Beach in the last few years. Coast
Highway in Newport is looking more and more like Melrose Avenue in Los
Angeles. Bill Hamilton said it all when he said that the city makes it
impossible to do business. As a result, we lost yet another landmark of
old Newport. Is this good city management? What has happened to our fine
city by the sea?
Norma Glover stated that, “I think that to put the community under a
slow-growth policy is not in the best interests of the city.” Norma,
would you consider careful and controlled growth? I think that would be
in the best interest of the city?
It appears to me that Glover and some of the others in city government
are not solving our problems, but are in fact part of the problem.
ARMANDO EASON
Balboa
I wanted to register a pro-vote that is in favor of the Greenlight
initiative. Largely on the basis of trying to get the City Council to
reassess it’s policy on growth.
ROSS BILLINGS
Corona del Mar
I would like to say that a recent letter to the editor from Chris Welsh
implied that Greenlight supporters are not playing by the rules when they
protested City Attorney Bob Burnham’s legal challenge against the
initiative (“Greenlight should apply high standards to itself,” Jan. 11).
If a legal error had been made by Greenlight, Welsh would actually have a
valid point. And yes, we would have just had to fold our tent and
disappear from view. However, the error did lay with the city and the
fact that the City Council voted to accept the petition Tuesday night
supports this. The Greenlight initiative was drafted by a lawyer
experienced in initiative law and it does comply with the election code.
I am sure that Welsh joins the developers in wishing that Greenlight
would just disappear. Instead the residents of Newport Beach will
rightfully have the opportunity to make decisions about major
developments in our city. And yes, I would vote for Greenlight.
CLAUDIA OWEN
Newport Beach
I am calling to voice my approval of the Greenlight initiative. And I
take offense to Councilwoman Jan Debay and other city officials’
implications that the people are unengaged and too ignorant to understand
these issues. Aren’t we, after all, the same people who elected them to
office?
STEVE LEACH
Newport Beach
The response from our City Council members to the Greenlight initiative
was something right out of the “Stepford Wives.” Following like lemmings
over the cliff of the “God of Development,” their little eyes all wide
open and shiny, only Tom Thomson seems to have the intelligence and
political savvy to check the box titled: “Let the electorate speak.”
Has anyone driven around Newport Beach lately? It feels like going to
Disneyland for the first time -- what is that, what is this, when did
that go in? Notice that traffic? What is next? Where is the senior and
low-cost housing we were promised? Our borders with Irvine are being
pushed with new development. What is our “Joint Development and Planning
Committee for Irvine, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach” doing now? Oh, we
don’t have one?
Hey, so there is an initiative on the ballot. Why does this scare our
public officials so much, and not just in Newport Beach? Will their
political contributors cut them off if they don’t get what they want? Why
is it we can spend $1.25 million every year for a pro-airport marketing
campaign that directly affects people in other parts of the county, but
we can’t spend $50,000 for a special election that may affect every
person in Newport Beach? Someday, politicians might get it. Initiatives
come around because somebody isn’t doing their job.
RON and ANNA WINSHIP
Newport Beach
I would vote yes -- there’s too much development and traffic already.
There seems to be no limit.
JILL AMADIO
Balboa Island
Yes, I intend to vote for the Greenlight initiative. My opinion is that
for some time the City Council has put the developers’ interests above
those of the Newport Beach homeowners. Those of us who live in the
“original” Newport do not want to see it turned into a Miami Beach clone,
concrete jungle, high-rises and traffic congestion. The council says we
need more development and the income it generates. But at what price? In
my business, we not only consider how much income there is, but how
wisely it is spent. Those of us who support Greenlight hope that it will
put a stop to this never-ending development and expansion.
DORIS HOPE
Newport Beach
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