Newport Beach sets up coast committee
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Arguing that a pending lawsuit amounts to a
strong-arm tactic against the city, City Council members on Tuesday
rejected Newport Coast resident Phil Greer’s bid to serve on a committee
overseeing the community’s incorporation into the city.
“How are we supposed to work with you if you threaten to sue us?” City
Councilman Steve Bromberg asked.
Greer, who brought annexation to a temporary halt in November by
delivering a petition to a county hearing, countered that the lawsuit
instead pertains to an alleged conflict of interest by a judge. Greer had
originally filed the suit to stop annexation of Newport Coast to the city
of Newport Beach. But he said the litigation now is pending only because
a judge overseeing the original lawsuit failed to disclose that he is a
resident of Newport Beach.
“It has to do with the integrity of the process,” Greer said.
Councilman John Heffernan said in previous meetings with Greer that he
had made clear that, unless Greer dropped the suit, Heffernan wouldn’t
support appointing him to the committee.
Greer countered their concerns, saying, “It is our sincere desire to
work within the organizational structure of Newport Beach.”
But the council wasn’t swayed; members voted 5 to 1, with Norma Glover
dissenting, to exclude Greer and instead name Jack Butefish and Pat
Fuscoe to the remaining two slots. Along with Heffernan and four
representatives from the Newport Coast Committee of 2000, which
represented Newport Coast residents to the city during annexation
negotiations, the two appointments complete the seven-member body.
Greer maintained that the city should include a representative of his
roughly 1,000-member A Simple Vote group. Doing so, he argued, would make
the committee more representative of all Newport Coast residents.
Further, he said, if the Committee of 2000 were truly representative
of the community’s residents, the city would not have had an unpleasant
surprise Nov. 17, when Greer delivered 969 signatures to stop annexation.
Though the petition at first appeared to stop the process, a count of
the signatures showed that not enough were valid to halt annexation.
Newport Coast, which has about 7,000 residents, was annexed Jan. 1.
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