Greenlight guidelines get green light
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- The law has been in place since December, but it took
until Tuesday for the final nuts and bolts of the city’s slow-growth
measure to be ironed out.
After months of discussion, six of the seven City Council members
adopted a set of guidelines, now known as council policy A-18, that will
help to put the Greenlight law to work. Councilman Gary Proctor was
absent from the meeting.
Council members, a majority of whom had opposed the initiative that
voters approved in November, said they felt confident the guidelines
followed the intent of the city’s residents at the polls.
Greenlight requires citywide elections on any general plan amendment
for a project that adds more than 100 peak-hour car trips or dwelling
units, or 40,000 square feet more than the general plan allows.
During several study sessions over the last couple of months and a
public hearing at the March 13 meeting, council members and residents
fine-tuned the proposed guidelines.
While Greenlight supporters said they disagreed with some aspects of
the final draft, they liked the overall result and said they were glad
months of tweaking and rewriting the new policy had come to an end.
“I’d rather be home watching Jeopardy,” Phil Arst, a spokesman for the
group of people who had worked to get the initiative on the ballot, said
jokingly. “I hope that we can move forward and make this a better city.”
As a result of Tuesday’s decision, Dec. 15, 2000, was set as the
starting date for Greenlight’s “look-back” provision.
That clause requires that 80% of previous general plan amendments
within each of the city’s 49 distinct neighborhoods “adopted within the
preceding 10 years” should count toward the threshold, which triggers a
citywide vote.
While some council members and others, including Chamber of Commerce
representatives, said in the past that a 2000 starting date would
contradict the initiative’s language, city officials said legal
precedents supported the decision to choose 2000 instead of 1990.
The move will probably reduce the number of Greenlight votes, and it
gained support from Greenlight opponents.
Another point of contention involved whether parking structures should
be included in the calculation of a project’s floor area. Some Greenlight
advocates, such as Allan Beek and Susan Caustin, had argued for the
inclusion of parking structures because developers could increase the
floor area of the project’s other buildings otherwise.
Looking ahead, Councilwoman Norma Glover said she hoped the guidelines
would not keep developers from coming into the city.
“I hope that the businesses that are thinking about coming to Newport
Beach will continue to come in,” she said, adding that she also hoped
other groups, such as service organizations and churches, would not be
deterred by the possibility of citywide elections on their projects. “I
hope that we can still create a climate that’s good for the community.”
But one business already has announced it would not be coming to
Newport Beach, in part because of Greenlight.
David Wilson, owner of Toyota of Orange, said earlier this month that
he considered bringing a Lexus dealership to the city, but the wait and
cost was too much.
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