NEWSMAKER OF THE YEAR -- Like father like son
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Allan Beek ties his ties unlike most men. Instead of
a visible knot between collar ends, the fabric seems to flow like a
waterfall directly from his throat.
It’s not that the 73-year-old Newport Beach resident -- a retired
computer engineer and enthusiastic community activist --would fit the
description of a dedicated follower of fashion: He’s been doing it this
way since 1956.
The idea for the tie came from “Harold Teen,” one of the characters in
a popular comic strip at the time, Beek said.
“He got a lot of heat for it,” he said of the comic figure. “But he
wanted to do it because it’s better. I realized that he was right.”
In many ways, Beek seems to follow the same logic in his work as a
community activist. Most recently it led him to write the Greenlight
Initiative, a slow-growth measure the city’s voters approved
overwhelmingly in November. As a result, residents will now have the
final say in the city’s future growth.
That logic really all comes back to something Beek’s late father,
Joseph, always used to say. The older Beek, who would later become one of
the city’s dominant figures, began selling lots on Balboa Island to
finance his way through college in 1913.
“What’s everybody’s business is nobody’s business,” Beek remembered as
his father’s philosophy. “The things that we should be looking out for,
nobody will look out for, because [people] think that others will do it.
About a dozen of us put Greenlight together. If we wouldn’t have done it,
it wouldn’t have happened.”
That’s not to say Beek thinks change is necessarily a good thing. For
years, his breakfast has consisted of a fried egg, a glass of pineapple
juice, a spoonful of yogurt and a dish of jelly, said Beek, who stands a
lean 6 feet, 4 inches.
No reason to compromise
Beek, who solves multiple-valued logic problems for a hobby, doesn’t
seem worried about keeping up appearances when he knows the better way to
do something will involve swimming against the mainstream.
“I don’t do what I do to get a seat on the 50-yard line in heaven,”
said Beek, adding that he considers himself an atheist. “I want to be
good for goodness sake.”
Balancing his personal interest in campaign finance reform, population
control and international disarmament with his professional life -- Beek
said he spent 40 years designing computers for weapons of mass
destruction -- came easy to him, he said.
“I did not mind taking [the company’s] money and using it against
them,” he said.
When it comes to his track record as a community activist, Beek seems
far less willing to accept similar compromises.
“He’s stubborn,” said former Mayor Evelyn Hart, who defeated Beek
twice in City Council elections in 1982 and 1986 but closed ranks with
her former opponent as a Greenlight supporter this year.
“I don’t think Allan enters into something lightly,” Hart said. “But
by the time he enters his name and ideas [into a project], he feels
strongly that it should be carried out.”
Beek said he ran against Hart because she supported a controversial
expansion proposal for Newport Center. Hart said she supported the
project because she felt the city’s traffic phasing ordinance would have
ensured road improvements for the $300-million development that would
have dealt with increased traffic.
“Allan would like to have no growth,” she said. “I have always been
for moderate growth.”
Beek said the old differences with Hart are long forgotten, adding
that he picks her up and hugs her whenever they meet.
Hart didn’t hold back the compliments, either.
“I even think he has a good sense of humor,” she said. “It just takes
a long time to get there. At first, he seems a little more abstract. And
then you get to know him and realize that he wants so much to accomplish
what he has set his mind to. I respect him for that.”
‘They just don’t like me’
Beek, who counts donating 100 pints of blood, as well as 100 blood
platelet units, among his finest achievements, said he is well-aware of
his flaws as a politician.
In 1986, the city’s voters didn’t choose the former planning
commissioner to replace Hart on the council. But three weeks later, a
clear majority supported a referendum led by Beek to reject the Newport
Center expansion.
“It’s evident that people in Newport Beach like my politics,” he said.
“They just don’t like me. . . . I’m a nonconformist. I’m an introvert.
I’m not as likable.”
Beek’s clearly proud of his father’s devotion to civic responsibility
-- the elder Beek served as secretary to the state Senate for 50 years
and stood up to city leaders who wanted to open Newport Beach’s harbor
for commercial use.
But while he said he looks a lot like his father, Beek added that he
didn’t think of himself as a successful heir.
“I’ve not been successful professionally,” he said. “I’ve just kind of
coasted through life. I’m very lucky. . . . I was a crummy student. I was
a crummy engineer. I am a crummy activist. . . . People seem to think I’m
competent. But I’m not.”
Beek’s older brother, Barton, 76 -- Seymour, the youngest of the Beek
sons, now runs the family-owned Balboa ferry -- took the liberty to
disagree.
“He’s a very good student -- extraordinarily bright,” he said, adding
that apart from helping to secure Greenlight’s victory, his brother’s
involvement in preserving the Back Bay was maybe the most significant of
his accomplishments.
But Barton Beek, who used to work as a business lawyer in Los Angeles
and now has an office in Corona del Mar, said his younger brother did
stray a little from the family’s beliefs.
“I think the Beeks in general have been conservative,” he said.
“Allan’s a bit of a departure. He’s a bit of a radical.”
Some of Beek’s ideas seem to fit that description.
Concerned with the world’s threat of overpopulation, Beek said every
woman should agree to bear only one child for the next century.
Married to his second wife, Jean, a child psychologist, Beek has five
stepchildren and four step-grandchildren. His own two daughters -- one
works as a driver for a medical laboratory in Fresno, the other serves in
the Coast Guard in Florida -- don’t have any children.
“I must have taught population control too seriously,” Beek said,
adding that while he’s a registered Republican, he hasn’t voted for the
party in years.
El Toro and the future
On a more local level, Beek drew on an anecdote from his father’s life
to talk about Orange County’s airport issue.
The older Beek once cut loose two cats who were fighting each other
after somebody had tied their tails together with a string.
“The victims fight each other instead of the aggressor,” Beek said.
“Instead of fighting each other, we should all work for federal
legislation that no airport will be a bad neighbor. We should have flight
caps at all airports. I publicly speak up about this from time to time,
but nobody does anything about it.”
Campaign finance reform -- “We should have campaigns paid for by the
public” -- and the introduction of acceptance voting, which would allow
voters to give their support to more than one candidate and prevent vote
splitting, will be high on the list of his future activities, Beek said.
“It’s like the tie,” he said. “It looks better. But nobody wants to
switch.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.