Readers Respond -- Has Greenlight begun to take its course?
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Reality has set in. Not for the author of the editorial (“Lexus
stopped at Greenlight in Newport Beach,” March 25). A piece lamenting the
lost opportunity of having a new car dealership built in Newport Beach?
The downside of being inconvenienced with a trip to the far reaches
of Huntington Beach or Tustin to purchase a new Lexus? Developers taking
their business elsewhere is supposed to be viewed as a detriment to our
future? Take a drive down Harbor Boulevard in my hometown of Costa Mesa.
You’ll see more than a mile of car dealerships and I don’t feel
saddened for the people of Newport Beach having missed this opportunity
of much needed revenue to enhance and progress the quality of life in
their community. I envy them and their Greenlight initiative.
ROBERT HILCHEY
Costa Mesa
Lexus of Newport Beach will not be. Too bad, maybe we will have to
drive to Costa Mesa to buy that car.
We don’t need another Fletcher Jones type dealership. We need
responsible build out of what remaining assets Newport Beach has. And
this means exactly what Greenlight means: limiting future traffic by
limiting growth and development now. Doesn’t the term “quality of life”
mean anything?
Or must we remain at the mercy of development that may strangle the
very life that provided us the reason for being here in the first place?
PAUL JAMES BALDWIN
Newport Beach
I suspect the fact that a new Lexus dealership won’t be moving to
Newport because of the Greenlight initiative is only the tip of the
iceberg. Many worthwhile projects the city needs will be quietly killed
because they are not worth the extra effort.
Our firm is a small for-profit firm in the business of developing and
rehabilitating apartments with affordable rents under the federal tax
credit program. We had been in early discussions with the city about
developing a new affordable housing project for senior citizens. We had
identified a city-owned site we thought was suitable and were attempting
to gain city support for this project when Greenlight made the ballot. We
decided to wait and see if the measure would pass.
Upon passage of Greenlight, we made the decision that the extra layer
of risk and expense imposed by Greenlight made continuing the process
uneconomical. I suppose this is what the Greenlight proponents want. Only
very large developers with substantial projects that have large potential
rewards make this extra layer of risk worthwhile.
For a project of perhaps 40 affordable senior units, we decided there
are better places to spend our limited resources. Whether or not
affordable senior housing with limited traffic was the type of
development Greenlight was meant to stop, this is clearly the type of
project Newport needs and, in fact, the city is under governmental
mandate to provide affordable housing. I suspect there are numerous
low-profile developments such as this one that will die without a sound.
PAUL FRUCHBOM
Newport Beach
You must miss the point. The people of Newport don’t want a car
dealership here and I don’t think most of the people would care if
Fletcher Jones left. The idea is to have no more commercial buildings.
You make it sound like a tragedy. Let’s look at it like a victory.
STEVE DENNEHY
Newport Beach
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