Officials searching for Newport Coast money
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Newport Coast residents who paid about $13 million to
build a portion of Newport Coast Drive received only about $3.5 million
when part of the road was sold and became the toll road -- one of several
startling bookkeeping mysteries the city is investigating for its newest
residents.
Some say as much as $20 million may be unaccounted for and they want
answers.
“There’s a perception throughout our community that the funds were not
used appropriately by the county,” said Jim McGee, chairman of the
Newport Coast Committee of 2000 and an appointee to the city’s advisory
committee for the area. “We’re hoping the city will be able to determine
where the money went.”
Newport Coast’s 7,000 or so residents became Newport Beach residents
Tuesday when annexation of the area became official. One of the perks for
the community’s residents: a pre-annexation agreement that says city
staff will try to get answers to questions that county officials have
shrugged off regarding about $181 million in bonds sold to help build
Newport Coast -- bonds its residents pay off through their tax bill.
From a series of assessment district bonds issued in 1988, $40.3
million was used to pay for construction of the 6.1-mile Newport Coast
Drive, which runs from MacArthur Boulevard to Coast Highway.
At first, construction of the road was met with strong support, as it
promised to reduce the gridlock traffic that then could flow only through
Corona del Mar.
But then the Transportation Corridor Agency announced it would take
the northern two miles of Newport Coast Drive as part of the toll road.
And the agency valued the stretch of road at $3.5 million, although a
third of the road’s cost would have been $13.3 million.
“Not a very good deal for us,” McGee said.
The road now forms the border at the city of Irvine, with its southern
lanes officially part of Newport Beach.
Of further concern to residents: The $3.5 million was never put back
into the pool that originally paid for the road. Instead, it was put into
a fund set aside for road improvements that extend outside Newport Coast
into the city of Irvine.
“I think the biggest problem right now is just a lack of good
information provided to the residents and a lot of unanswered questions,”
said Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff, who is working on the problem. “We
hope to answer those questions and give them all the information.”
Though some in Newport Coast suspect misappropriation of money, Kiff
said the city is approaching the matter from a position that such
mishandling is unlikely.
“I’d be surprised if we find any wrongdoing,” he said.
The toll road has been a sore spot among Newport Coast residents since
the early 1990s because it requires them to pay a toll to use a road
they’re already paying for on their tax bills.
As residents of unincorporated Orange County, some tried to get
answers from county representatives.
“We sent the county a letter, but the answers they gave us were pretty
unsatisfactory,” McGee said.
Supervisor Tom Wilson, who represents the area, could not be reached
for comment. Marian Beacham of the county’s financing division said her
office is gathering information on all the assessments on Newport Coast
residents and plans to meet with Newport Beach officials in the near
future. She said she’s confident that once the numbers are laid out on
the table, residents will be assured that all their money is accounted
for.
“There’s no money missing,” Beacham said. “That’s not the case.”
The issue is just one of a number of challenges the city faces while
finishing the annexation. An advisory committee is expected to be formed
at Tuesday’s City Council meeting to tackle issues such as how the city
will use $18 million it received from the Irvine Ranch Water District to
help residents pay off some of their assessment district debt and whether
to use an additional $7 million to build a community center at the top of
Signal Peak or near the intersection of Newport Coast Drive and San
Joaquin Hills Drive.
“We’re going to start dealing with all these issues,” said City
Councilman John Heffernan, whose district now includes the area. “There’s
a lot to do up there.”
-- June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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