City may cut chamber link from Web site
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NOAKI SCHWARTZ
NEWPORT BEACH -- City Manager Homer Bludau contends he will ask City
Council members to cut the electronic connection between the City Hall
Web site and the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce if chamber officials
don’t remove anti-Greenlight literature from their Web page.
Greenlight proponents say the link connecting the city’s official
Internet site to the chamber’s Web page is unfair.
“They carry the chamber up in the top left-hand, critical list of
links,” said Greenlight supporter Phil Arst, who issued a complaint to
the city. “It gives the appearance of city backing.”
The chamber, however, is defending its position and refuses to remove
its anti-Greenlight opinions.
“To single out these articles and remove the entire link because of
them I don’t think makes a lot of sense,” said chamber president Richard
Luehrs. “The city links to a whole bunch of Web sites, only one being the
chamber of commerce.”
The Greenlight initiative proposes to let voters have the final say on
certain major developments even if they’ve been approved by the City
Council and Planning Commission.
Although the chamber is entitled to post whatever information it
chooses on its Web site, Bludau said the city is not required to carry
its link.
“If the chamber doesn’t do anything, I will make a recommendation to
the City Council to disconnect their Web page to ours,” Bludau said. “The
council has taken the stand [that] they want to remain neutral on this
issue.”
But it doesn’t appear likely the chamber will make any changes to its
site soon.
“The reason why I won’t remove the anti-Greenlight position is because
it’s a fact that the Newport chamber opposes the Greenlight initiative,”
Luehrs said. “It’s our Web site and we can put information on it as we
see fit.”
While nearly all council members have publicly stated they would not
vote for the Greenlight measure, they have attempted to maintain a more
passive position on opposing the measure.
Mayor John Noyes reiterated that for now, the council will remain
publicly neutral on the issue and has yet to make a determination on the
issue over the chamber link.
However, Arst pointed out in his letter to Bludau that the link will
make it difficult for the city to appear impartial.
“We don’t believe political messages should be in the primary access
part of the city’s Web site,” Arst said, adding that only three other
city Web sites in the county -- Brea, Buena Park and Placentia -- include
chamber of commerce links on their Web sites.
In addition to the chamber opposing Greenlight, it is also backing an
alternative measure that would dismantle Greenlight’s initiative. The
Traffic Phasing Ordinance countermeasure proposes to make the city’s
traffic relief law part of the City Charter.
SITE OF CONFLICT?
Should the city remove from its Web site a link to the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce site, which features anti-Greenlight campaign
literature? Call our Readers Hotline at (949) 642-6086 or e-mail your
comments to o7 [email protected] . Please tell us your name and
hometown, and include a phone number (for verification purposes only).
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