Q&A; -- Breaking down the first Greenlight election
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The first Greenlight election will arrives Nov. 20 -- barely more than
a week away. The Daily Pilot wants Newport Beach residents and voters to
know exactly what the outcome of the election means to the two sides
involved.
This week, via e-mail, those for and against an expansion of the Koll
Center off Jamboree Road and MacArthur Boulevard answered five questions
from the Daily Pilot staff and then rebutted their opposition’s answers.
Representing those in favor of the project is Koll Center developer Tim
Strader Sr. Speaking on behalf of those against the project is Greenlight
spokesman Phil Arst. Both are Newport Beach residents.
QUESTION 1
You have both argued that your side is the one with the most benefits
to voters. What single aspect of this issue do you think is the most
relevant to Newport Beach residents?
ANSWERS
ARST: We are the original Greenlight residents who wrote and
campaigned for Greenlight (Measure S) last year. Prevention of even more
traffic congestion is the single most important benefit of our “Vote No”
campaign. We are sick and tired of ever-increasing traffic congestion in
the city. The official city staff analysis of the Koll 10-story office
tower points out that several intersections, including MacArthur
Boulevard-Jamboree Road will become unsatisfactorily congested and will
require a $15-million to $20-million overpass or equivalent in the
future. As another project, Conexant, is located next to Koll and waiting
to apply for an additional 500,000 square feet in office towers, the need
for limiting traffic becomes even more important.
STRADER: The most important aspect of this project is that it meets
the guidelines, spirit and intent of Greenlight. For example, this
project is located out by the airport, miles from residential areas in
coastal Newport Beach. Additionally, it will provide $3 million for
traffic improvements, $60,000 toward a new fire station in the airport
area, $28,000 per year in property tax and new jobs.
REBUTTALS
ARST: The Koll project does not meet Greenlight goals. Greenlight was
voted into law by residents to provide a mechanism to maintain Newport
Beach as a high-quality residential beach-bay community. A traffic
congestion-creating office building is decidedly not Greenlight.
Disturbingly, Koll has usurped the name of Greenlight and pretends to
support it. However, its published list of endorsers include the leaders
of the developer-funded campaign that spent $720,000 to try to defeat
Greenlight last November. Do you really believe that those developers and
Koll are now supporting Greenlight?
STRADER: The official city staff report that the opposition points to
is the same one upon which the Newport Beach planning staff, Planning
Commission and City Council based their decision to approve the project
after numerous public hearings. Voters should not be misled. This project
will provide more than $3 million for traffic improvements (which can be
applied to the Jamboree-MacArthur intersection), $60,000 for a new fire
station, $28,000 in property tax and jobs.
QUESTION 2
You have disagreed in the past over the number of peak-hour car trips
this project will generate, the bottom-line financial benefits to the
city and the proximity of homes to the project. What are your official
figures and position on these three issues?
ANSWERS
ARST: The official traffic study for the Koll project projects 2,700
average daily auto trips with 390 a.m. and 360 p.m. peak-hour trips.
We believe the project will lose money for the city. The financial
study of the Koll project was flawed because it did not take inflationary
increases in the cost of services for the project into account. The city
also exempts Koll for some costs under its development agreement, again
at the expense of the taxpayers.
The Koll project is about a half-mile from the nearest residences, The
Terrace, and one mile from the BayPoint Apartments. Within 1.9 miles are
portions or all of Eastbluff, The Bluffs, Bonita Canyon and Belcourt,
subjecting them to increased traffic on Jamboree and MacArthur.
STRADER: The city’s own traffic study and environmental impact report
cites that, out of a total of 2,700 trips generated per day, only 10%
(270) will impact Newport Beach streets. This is equivalent to the
traffic generated by less than 30 homes. The tax revenue generated by
this project is $28,000 per year, plus $3 million for traffic
improvements and $60,000 toward construction of a new fire station. This
project is located five miles from West Newport, and 4 1/2 miles from
Corona del Mar and Coast Highway.
REBUTTALS
ARST: As the project is in Newport Beach, all of its traffic will dump
on MacArthur and Jamboree. Several intersections will have significant
and unavoidable traffic congestion impacts. As we are a small community,
with only two ways across town around the bay, the 2,700 daily car trips
generated by Koll will help congest Bristol-MacArthur-Jamboree, forcing
other traffic congestion onto Coast Highway and throughout the city.
Finally, the dollar amounts to be contributed by Koll are totally
inadequate to fully mitigate traffic impacts on our city streets.
STRADER: All 2,700 car trips will not be driving into Newport Beach.
According to the city’s own traffic plan, only 270 cars will drive on
Newport Beach surface streets. The majority of traffic will head out to
Irvine or onto freeways leading away from the city. The tax benefits of
this project were calculated by applying a standard uniform accounting
formula used by all municipalities. This project is more than four miles
from the most densely populated areas of Newport Beach -- Corona del Mar,
Newport Peninsula, Balboa Island and West Newport.
QUESTION 3
You’ve both been accused of using misrepresentative, skewed facts and
rhetoric in this election. How do you respond?
ANSWERS
ARST: The Koll Group has usurped the Greenlight name by calling
themselves the Greenlight Implementation Committee. This serves only to
confuse and deceive voters.
Koll literature states they “support Greenlight.” However, its
endorsers include the leaders of the Measure T campaign that spent
$720,000 to try to defeat Greenlight. To contend that these people now
support Greenlight is disingenuous and an affront to the intelligence of
Newport Beach voters.
Koll literature states their project is “in the Irvine Business
Complex . . . and miles from any residential area.” That is untrue, as
they are in Newport Beach and are only a half-mile from the nearest
residences. All this proves is that Koll is running a misleading and
deceptive campaign.
STRADER: We have always asked the voters of Newport Beach to look at
the facts when deciding on whether to support our project, and only the
facts have been presented. These are the same facts that were analyzed by
the city of Newport Beach planning staff, Planning Commission and City
Council when they held their hearings and approved the project.
REBUTTALS
ARST: The city planning staff criticized the project as contributing
to significant and unavoidable traffic impacts. They estimated $15
million to $20 million would be needed to fully mitigate long-term
traffic at MacArthur-Jamboree. Koll’s contribution to the city of $2
million (not the $3 million they claim) is only one-ninth of that.
Despite these drawbacks, the pro-development majority of the City Council
voted 4 to 3 in favor of the project. Three councilmen voted “no” as they
wisely preferred to wait for the completion of the updating of the city’s
general plan to ensure that Newport Beach is maintained as a high-quality
city.
STRADER: The Greenlight Initiative was overwhelmingly passed by the
voters last November and is now law. Measure G is asking the voters to
now implement the Greenlight process by reviewing all the facts and
making their own decision based on the merits of the project. The
Greenlight Implementation Committee is made up of individuals who did
just that. They are not anti-business, as some of the Greenlight
supporters appear to be, and they do not think that the intent of
Greenlight was to press their personal beliefs on others. They believe
that by implementing Greenlight, the voters should have the right to vote
on the project based on the facts.
QUESTION 4
This is the first election required by the city’s new Greenlight
Initiative. What will be the legacy of this election for Greenlight in
particular and growth in general?
ANSWERS
ARST: Our legacy of this first Greenlight vote will hopefully be that
the City Council and large developers will now understand that we
residents were serious when we said we wanted a residential, high-quality
city where we can raise a family in a more controlled traffic
environment. They will now understand that the projects must benefit the
city and residents, not just the pockets of the developers.
Hopefully, the legacy will also be the understanding that voters
soundly rejected the highly deceptive campaign conducted by Koll, and
Newport politics will be cleaned up in the future.
Based upon this, “beneficial” growth can continue, hopefully under the
auspices of an updated city general plan, rather than on an unplanned
piecemeal basis like the Koll project.
STRADER: This election will for the first time give voters the
opportunity to approve projects that are in the appropriate location and
provide benefits to the city. The legacy to the residents of Newport
Beach is that they will now have the opportunity to vote on each project
based on its own merits. That’s what Greenlight was intended to do and
why the Greenlight Implementation Committee supports this project.
REBUTTALS
ARST: The deceptive naming of the Greenlight Implementation Committee
and claims to support Greenlight were designed to deceive voters so they
wouldn’t be able to vote on the merits of the project as claimed. If this
deception wins the election, the legacy will be an even greater voter
mistrust of the electoral process. Additionally, out-of-town developers
will be encouraged to bring even larger projects into Newport when they
learn that money and deception can win for meritless projects.
STRADER: The Greenlight process allows voters to decide the fate of
projects on a case-by-case basis and based on their own merits. It is
wrong, and it was not the intent of the Greenlight process, to prejudge
any project before it has been presented to the voters. The opponents of
Measure G have anointed themselves the ultimate arbiter of any future
projects and that is not what Greenlight intended.
QUESTION 5
Do you feel this vote is a contest between business freedoms and the
freedom of residents to protect a community way of life?
ANSWERS
ARST: Greenlight was passed to protect both business freedoms and the
residents’ community way of life within the protective umbrella of the
city’s general plan. This election is not a contest between these two
groups. Koll has used up its individual entitlements under the current
general plan and is trying to obtain additional entitlements for a
250,000-square-foot, 10-story office tower.
Approving even more high-rise office buildings without the capability
to absorb their traffic is counter to the best interests of both
residents and business interests in Newport Beach. A “no” vote on Measure
G is needed to maintain the quality of life and property values for all
of Newport Beach.
STRADER: Newport Beach’s unique quality of life exists because of the
balance between residential and business uses as a result of more than 40
years of city planning.
REBUTTALS
ARST: A reasonable balance between business and residential uses has
worked in the city because their sizes were mandated under the city’s
general plan. Koll is now trying to circumvent the general plan to break
that balance and generate more traffic than our streets can handle. We
hope that the balance of these 40 years will not be tossed down the drain
and that a “no” vote will provide us time to do proper planning for the
city.
STRADER: It is because of projects such as this one that Newport Beach
is the great city it is by finding a balance between business and
residents. With the recent downturn in the economy, it is now more
important than ever to find beneficial projects to help boost Newport
Beach’s sagging economy and why the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of
Commerce says “yes” on Measure G.
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