EDITORIAL
So far, since last November’s election, the Newport Beach City Council
has done a good job of listening to its constituents, who spoke most
dramatically and clearly when they passed the slow-growth Greenlight
initiative.
In fact, complaints about an unresponsive council helped fuel the
drive to place restrictions on future growth in the city, making it clear
to most that the new council -- which added three members in Steve
Bromberg, John Heffernan and Gary Proctor -- had to change its ways,
especially when it comes to planning and development.
Simply put, the City Council needs to stop letting the character, look
and feel of the city slip away. Doing so, of course, is not so simple, as
illustrated by the council’s debate last week over a Planning Commission
proposal to require close review of new building on Corona del Mar’s
bluffs.
Competing beliefs in the importance of property rights and the need
for environmental protection clashed as council members tried to decide
whether the review would be fair to homeowners and consistent with city
regulations. In the end, they sent the proposal back to the Planning
Commission for more discussion, missing an opportunity to make a strong
statement about how Newport Beach will look in the coming years and
decades.
That statement does need to recognize the rights of homeowners, who
are paying millions of dollars to buy land in Corona del Mar.
But limitations on how large those new mansions can be are not
unreasonable, and property rights can only extend so far before they
infringe on the rights of others -- namely those neighbors who are still
in the bluff’s small, old bungalows.
The crafting of this statement, by virtue of the council’s action, is
now back in the hands of the planning commissioners, who should be
applauded for tackling the issue in the first place. They now should not
hesitate to recommend to the council a clear, precise and fair policy on
handling new home construction in Corona del Mar.
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