Greenlight contention focuses on hospital
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- As the battle between competing growth-control
measures enters its final rounds, the question of what will happen to
Hoag Hospital’s expansion plans has become a hotly debated issue.
Measure T supporters have stated in newspaper advertisements and
campaign literature that the opposing Measure S jeopardizes Hoag’s future
growth by potentially forcing a citywide election on its expansion plans.
“I find that to be unconscionable,” Tom Edwards, co-chairman of the
Measure T campaign, said of a possible halt to Hoag’s plans.
Should Hoag propose “anything outside their development agreement,
they need a general plan amendment,” he said.
Debra Macalello Legan, the hospital’s spokeswoman, said Hoag plans to
remain neutral regarding both measures.
She added that a 309,000-square-foot Women’s Pavilion -- scheduled to
open in 2004 -- and a planned heart institute should fit within the
hospital’s master plan approved by the city in 1992.
“If we need something larger, we would need to go back to the city,”
Legan said.
Measure S proposes to put before a citywide vote any development that
allows an increase of more than 100 peak-hour car trips or dwelling units
or 40,000 square feet over the general plan allowance.
Measure T would add parts of the city’s traffic phasing ordinance to
the City Charter and nullify Measure S, should voters approve both
measures.
The debate between the two sides has gone deeper -- and further back
in history, as well.
A Measure T newspaper advertisement had stated that “... supporters of
Measure S vigorously fought to delay or stop [Hoag’s] Master Plan. Here’s
just one sentence from an eighteen page letter they sent... ‘Above all,
no development should be granted for so vague a proposition.”’
While Measure S supporters acknowledge that the hospital might be
subjected to a citywide election on future expansion plans, they rejected
their opponents’ claim that they had opposed Hoag’s master plan.
Phil Arst, a spokesman for Measure S, said the letter referred to in
the ad had been written by Stop Polluting Our Newport, an environmental
activist group.
He added that while the group had opposed the vagueness of the
development proposal, it did not oppose Hoag’s expansion in general.
Arst also referred to a letter dated July 5, 2000, that Measure S
supporters sent to the hospital’s executive committee.
In it, Measure S proponents stated that they supported “Hoag’s entire
health center expansion plan as filed with the city government.”
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