Annexed residents remain undaunted
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Mathis Winkler
WEST SANTA ANA HEIGHTS -- Neighborhood leaders might be upset that
Costa Mesa’s City Council members voted Monday to apply for the
annexation of West Santa Ana Heights. But residents, who have worked on
the issue for years, said Tuesday that the move will just delay their
wish to become part of Newport Beach.
With about 96% of the roughly 1,800 people living in the
unincorporated area opposed to a Costa Mesa address, it seems certain
that the application for annexation is doomed to fail.
“We can . . . go back with a ‘hell no, I won’t go’ message,” said
Robert Hanley, who has lived in the neighborhood for almost 30 years. “If
they require us to do a vote like that, no trouble, we’ll do it.”
Mayor Libby Cowan, who approved the application with Councilwomen
Karen Robinson and Linda Dixon, said Tuesday she approached the issue as
a policy decision.
Since West Santa Ana Heights falls within Costa Mesa’s sphere of
influence, the local agency formation commission, a county agency that
oversees annexations, should make the ultimate decision.
“They are the ruling authority,” Cowan said. “We are not.”
While city officials had previously adopted resolutions to release Bay
Knolls from Costa Mesa’s sphere of influence to join Newport Beach, no
such steps had been taken regarding West Santa Ana Heights, Robinson
said.
Councilman Gary Monahan, who voted against the move with Councilman
Chris Steel, said he didn’t buy that argument.
“That’s not true. Sorry,” he said Tuesday. “The people in Santa Ana
Heights have been petitioning the city for years to release them from our
sphere of influence.”
Monahan added that since residents were almost certain to reject the
application, Monday’s decision would waste a lot of time and money.
“If 50% [of residents] file a protest, there isn’t even an election,”
he said. “The annexation [application] is just gone, canceled, adios.”
Like their Santa Ana Heights neighbors on the other side of Newport
Beach Golf Course, folks in the western part of the community prefer to
join Newport Beach.
That city’s lead role in the fight against an expansion of John Wayne
Airport, which looms just across the San Joaquin Hills Tollway to the
north of the neighborhood, has been cited as a main reason for annexation
to Newport Beach by Heights residents.
Newport Beach city officials didn’t include West Santa Ana Heights in
their application since the area falls under Costa Mesa’s sphere of
influence. But they’ve said in the past that they’d take the neighborhood
should the commission decide the Heights has to be considered as a
community that should be annexed as a whole.
“I honestly believe that Newport Beach wants us,” said Hanley, adding
that he knew city officials had their own, pragmatic reason.
“They want us for one reason,” he said. “We are the bulwark against
the airport.”
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