Beek launches anti-annexation campaign
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Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT BEACH -- The Newport Coast annexation issue has been on the
City Council agenda about 22 times over the past two years, officials
say.
But community activist Allan Beek says he still wants to know what the
voters really think about the city’s proposal to annex the wealthy
neighborhood south of the city, home to about 2,600 people.
“People need to get a chance to vote on the issue,” he said Wednesday.
The council “has considered it a done deal and avoided it all along.”
This week, Beek circulated fliers in the community asking the public
to call Mayor Gary Adams to ask him to hold a special meeting before
Friday to put the issue on the Nov. 20 ballot.
Among Beek’s concerns are whether the added neighborhoods would
support plans for an airport at the closed El Toro Marine Air Base and if
they would be accessible to grass-roots campaigns, such as the one he
helped orchestrate last year in support of the city’s slow-growth
Greenlight initiative.
City officials counter that putting the 30-year-old issue to a vote
would have a “chilling effect” on the annexation.
And City Manager Homer Bludau said Newport Coast residents are already
part of the fabric of the city.
“Their children go to our schools,” he said. “They use our facilities,
our beaches, parks and libraries. Over the years, several Newport Beach
residents have moved over to Newport Coast.”
In September, council members unanimously approved plans to annex
Newport Coast, Santa Ana Heights and Bay Knolls. Annexation of the latter
two areas has been pushed back to mid-2002, but Newport Coast could
become part of the city by Jan. 1.
The city filed its application to annex all three communities in
March. City staff expects a hearing before the Local Agency Formation
Commission about the Newport Coast portion of the application in
September.
Residents who live in the unincorporated territory must still vote on
the plan later this year after the commission makes a decision on Newport
Beach’s application.
Beek made his opinion on the issue public in April when he told
council members that the annexation would drastically change the
character of Newport Beach.
Beek said he believes annexation would hurt the city because Newport
Coast voters will “dilute our votes,” they are likely to be against an
airport in El Toro and their gated communities would hamper door-to-door
campaigns, the lifeline of any grass-roots movement.
“We absolutely can’t communicate with them,” he said.
Not so, says Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff.
“That’s what homeowners associations are for,” he said. “They are
easily approachable, and their meetings are open to anybody who wants to
talk to them.”
Kiff added that Newport Coast residents have often approached him on
city issues and have shown him that they are genuinely concerned about
what goes on in Newport Beach.
Council members said they found Beek’s flier offensive and
misinformed.
“I ran on a platform of pro-annexation,” Councilman Tod Ridgeway said.
“I have never heard any objections voiced so far, maybe just one. There
were plenty of opportunities for people to oppose the annexation, but
nobody did.”
Adams said he believes it would be a bad idea to put the issue up for
a vote.
“This issue has been in the public eye for more than 20 years,” he
said. “I’m surprised all of a sudden it’s a new issue stirred up with a
lot of sensational rhetoric and misinformation to advance [Beek’s] own
agenda.”
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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