TERRANCE PHILLIPS -- The Harbor Column
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Newport Beach, community or commodity?
We’re not known as Newport Desert, Mountain or City, we’re called
Newport Beach. Generally, a town name attached to the word “beach” means
there is either sand, fish, water or waves involved.
Newport Beach was a city formed because we have all the above
ingredients.
Over the years, our waterfront location has been kind to boaters, the
tuna trade, Dory fishermen, “Wedgicons,” surfers and sun worshipers. The
most famous internationally recognized place around here is called the
Wedge.
The Wedge can pound your trunks into a “wedgie” faster than you can
say cowabunga. The Wedge is no place for nautical novices.
The city has stretched, grown and moaned since the 1920s, when we were
nothing more than a little picnic paradise with boat rental shops,
campgrounds and even a beauty pageant or two. We were a little bit like
the Atlantic City of the West Coast.
Our shores were dotted with cottages, hot dog stands and a port for
the commercial fishing trade. Many original local inhabitants owned
businesses that serviced tourism. It appears today that we have
flip-flopped and changed from beaches to banking and the tourism trade is
now servicing the residents.
At one time Newport Beach was a community. Are we now a commodity?
Have we sold out?
Our harbor front is beginning to look more like Marina Del Rey every
day.
Now the City Council is faced with finding reasons to justify a hotel
that consumes our waterfront at the expense of our charm and the fate of
an organization that contributed to creating it.
The thought of even considering to change, downsize or dislodge the
American Legion Post 291 is nothing short of a travesty. This
organization has put so much into our community during the past 60 years
the council should be giving them recognition plaques, not threatening
pink slips.
Oh, I know we need more money in the city coffers and the council has
not yet made any final determination as to the fate of our charm.
However, on Tuesday, the council will review just such a proposal.
Another hotel -- just what we need! Although we widened Newport
Boulevard down past Hoag Hospital heading toward the peninsula and added
two new wider bridges, the road still funnels into a two-lane street a
block later, doesn’t it? Am I missing something here?
It almost appears if you want to see our harbor in the future, you’ll
have to either purchase a million-dollar home or rent a room at a hotel.
Must we become tourists in our own town to savor the benefits of
living in our waterfront community?
What this town really needs is more people and organizations just like
the American Legion.
Anyone for or against such a proposal is encouraged to attend the
council meeting.
TERRANCE PHILLIPS is the Daily Pilot’s boating writer. You can leave a
message for him at (949) 760-0221 or via e-mail ato7
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