REBUTTAL -- Frank Eisendrath
On Nov. 7, Newport Beach citizens will have the opportunity to vote
yes or no on two measures (S and T). The results will have a profound
effect on the quality of life in our beautiful city.
Measure S (also known as Greenlight) is sponsored by resident
volunteers, whereas Measure T is sponsored by wealthy and powerful
developers.
Measure S would allow voters to approve or disapprove any proposed
major development, which required an amendment (change) to the city’s
zoning plans (commonly known as the general plan). Measure S qualified
for the ballot by obtaining more than 10,000 signatures, all collected by
citizen volunteers.
Measure T was sponsored by developers for the sole purpose of
invalidating that measure.
Another significant difference is that many of the Measure T
signatures were collected by nonresidents who were paid to collect them.
Marion Bergeson, in a paid political ad published in the Daily Pilot,
stated Measure S (if enacted) would force dozens of elections over the
next few years.
The electorate is entitled to know as much factual information as is
available. Bergeson’s statement is grossly misleading, based not only on
Greenlight’s election frequency analysis but also by a second and
independent analysis, requested and paid for by the city of Newport
Beach.
The same Marion Bergeson ad stated that “Measure S abandons
representative government.”
This accusation assumes that the current Newport Beach City Council is
in fact representative government and is therefore acting on behalf of
and for the benefit of the citizens who put them in office. But
representative government means that when citizens’ wishes are
overwhelming, such wishes would prevail over other minority interests,
such as developers.
Do we have representative government today? No. We have
misrepresentative government, as evident by the council’s bias in favor
of the Dunes hotel, and its directive to solicit a bid for a hotel in
Marinapark.
Such a development would uproot the American Legion, a city park,
tennis courts, a Girl Scouts meeting house and a playground. The
citizens’ outcry against both hotels has gone unheeded by the current
City Council.
Citizens’ remedy for nonrepresentative government is twofold: elect
council people whose views unmistakably reflect the wishes of residents;
and secondly, in accordance with California law, give voters the
opportunity to bypass the legislative process by resorting to the
initiative process.
Both remedies are being pursued by the proponents of Measure S.
* FRANK EISENDRATH is a resident of Newport Beach.
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