Insiders ponder cause and effect of delay
Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- When City Council members voted last month to
postpone their decision on the Dunes resort to September, the reasons
they gave for the surprise delay were vacations and the desire to further
review the proposed $100 million project.
The move puzzled the Dunes owners, residents and former city officials
who had watched as Planning Commission spent six months -- among the
longest in any commissioner’s memory -- combing through the proposal
before approving it in April.
“I would not have done that,” said Clarence Turner, a former mayor and
co-author of a counter-initiative to the Greenlight measure. “It’s hard
sometimes to get everyone there, but they’re elected to be there and you
move forward. I don’t know what their thinking was.”
Many Newport Beach political wonks say they have a guess: Greenlight.
The so-called Greenlight initiative, if passed in November, would
require a citywide vote on major -- and some minor -- projects. The
stringent slow-growth measure would take crucial planning decisions out
of the council’s hands and give it directly to the residents.
Although most council members are standing by the justifications they
gave for the Dunes delay, Tod Ridgeway -- the only member absent during
the controversial vote -- has a different opinion.
“It had everything to do with Greenlight,” Ridgeway said. “Is
everybody going to hide behind the political reality that the Dunes has
become a huge influence in that election?”
Ridgeway said he plans to make a motion to table both the Dunes and a
proposal to expand the Conexant headquarters, which is also going through
the planning process, until after the Greenlight vote.
A common thought among Newport insiders is that the county’s biggest
developer, the Irvine Co., has been lobbying the council not to approve
too many developments this summer, fearing that it will fuel support for
the Greenlight initiative.
Irvine Co. spokesman Rich Elbaum declined to comment.
Another theory going around town is self-preservation. It goes
something like this: Three council seats will be up for election this
fall, and council members are concerned that approving the developments
already in the planning pipeline -- the Dunes hotel and the Conexant and
Koll Center Newport expansion -- will propel anti-growth candidates to
victory.
The Dunes project is scheduled to resurface on the council agenda
shortly after Aug. 11 -- the last day political hopefuls can file their
papers.
The controversial Dunes project has been a lightning rod for
Greenlight proponents, who point to the large bayside hotel as something
residents could vote on if the initiative were in place.
The council members who voted for delay flatly deny any ulterior
motives, instead saying that the decision was in the best interest of the
community.
“It’s a very strong, deliberative council,” Mayor John Noyes said at
the time. “We are not being influenced by outside political forces.”
HIGH-STAKES CHESS GAME
A group of slow-growth activists wrote the Greenlight initiative in
response to what they say was a pro-development council approving too
many developments and threatening the quality of life in Newport.
It was time, Greenlight proponents said, to take control of the city’s
future from the council and give it to the voters. The introduction of
the measure earlier this year sparked fierce reaction from most of the
council members, many calling it an affront to representative government.
“Trust your elected officials,” Noyes pleaded. Other council members
added that some development was necessary to provide the kind of stellar
city services residents were accustomed to.
Tom Thomson, who is up for reelection, was the only councilman to
publicly support the measure. However, hours after telling the Daily
Pilot in March that he favored Greenlight, Thomson started to waver after
receiving a call from Carol Hoffman, an Irvine Co. vice president.
Although Irvine Co. officials have not taken a public stance on
Greenlight, in February they pulled their expansion plans at Newport
Center, saying that the Greenlight initiative added too much uncertainty
to an already time-consuming and expensive city planning process.
The measure has succeeded in pitting city officials and developers on
one side of the fence and community activists and environmentalists on
the other.
Caught in the middle is the Dunes development proposal.
THE DUNES TUG-OF-WAR
Last month, the council stunned the community with its 5-1 decision to
delay the Dunes vote.
Noyes, whose district includes the proposed resort, said it was
important for the entire council to be present during the vote because
the Dunes is a major decision for the community. During the summer
months, at least one council member would be on vacation during each
meeting, he explained.
But Councilman Gary Adams, who voted against the delay, said it was
unfair to both fans and critics of the project who had watched the
proposal crawl through the Planning Commission at a snail’s pace.
Former Mayor Tom Edwards agreed.
“Why not call a special meeting?” he asked. “Time and again we voted
on major issues when council members were absent.”
Dunes Chief Financial Officer Robert Gleason said: “Of course we’re
disappointed. We have spent a lot of time over the last couple of years
working with this plan and the community and building support for the
project. I think we’re going to have to wait and see what the council
does and what happens in September.”
Even foes of the Dunes said the delay was unfair for the respected
Evans family, the developers of the project.
“Although I adamantly oppose the hotel, I think this is something that
was a terrible blow to [the Dunes developers],” said environmental
activist Susan Caustin.
At the meeting without Ridgeway in attendance, the council was able to
approve a $130 million budget.
THE INSIDE SCOOP
The Greenlight group, though initially confused by the move, was
pleased because it meant a decision on the Dunes would be pushed closer
to election time. And this could potentially increase support for their
measure.
But Greenlight supporter and former Mayor Evelyn Hart was suspicious.
Perhaps, she wondered, there was another motivation behind the
council’s decision. After all, why would a fiercely anti-Greenlight
council make a decision in Greenlight’s favor? Still, Hart could offer no
theories for the delay.
All of this is tricky business. Greenlight could radically change the
way Newport Beach operates, and a new wave of slow-growth residents could
be elected to the council on its coattails.
The slow-growth advocates have never had much political power inside
City Hall, though they made their presence felt with grass-roots groups
like Stop Polluting Our Newport and forcing referendums on major projects
in the 1980s.
Ridgeway downplayed the likelihood of the self-preservation theory,
pointing out that running for office is a major undertaking, and it’s
unlikely that candidates would simply run in reaction to a council
decision on the Dunes.
“If some Greenlight people want to run, get out and run,” he said.
Here is a look at some of the development proposals in the planning
process.
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)
DUNES
WHAT: 470-room hotel and time share
WHERE: Approved by the Planning Commission and slated to appear before
the City Council in September
CONEXANT
WHAT: Adding 566,000 square feet of industrial and office space
WHERE: Going through the Planning Commission
KOLL CENTER NEWPORT WHAT: Adding 25,000 square feet of office space
WHERE: About to go through the City Council
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