Letter to the Editor -- Phillip B. Greer
Your Dec. 5 article (“Challenge to annexation tossed aside”)
concerning the annexation of Newport Coast into Newport Beach creates the
impression that opposition was limited to a single individual. I can only
assume that this was done to hide the widespread disenchantment that
exists in Newport Coast for the annexation.
The lawsuit you refer to as “mine” was filed by a community
organization called “A Simple Vote.” I was simply the attorney who
represented the group. A Simple Vote is an organization made up of
hundreds of Newport Coast residents from almost all the neighborhoods of
our community. More than 20 people took time out of their busy lives to
walk door to door in support of the fundamental concept of a simple right
to vote.
More than 1,100 people, representing registered voters, homeowners,
property owners and residents, signed a petition saying that they were
dissatisfied with how the process of annexation was proceeding. The group
fell short not because it lacked public support but because individuals
aligned with the city of Newport Beach prevented them from circulating
petitions in certain neighborhoods.
Newport Coast tax dollars will now go to support Newport Beach’s
effort to move air traffic from John Wayne Airport to an El Toro airport.
However, with the very real possibility that those same flights the city
finds unacceptable over established parts of the city will now travel
over Newport Coast, there is no guarantee that the city will fight to
protect our homes.
There are many more questions about parks, maintenance of streets and
the like that nobody from the city or the committee has been willing or
able to answer. This is why we believe that the city and the committee
were so afraid of a vote.
This is why we believe the city of Newport Beach and the
self-proclaimed Committee of 2000 could never answer our fundamental
question: If this deal is so good for the residents of Newport Coast, why
were they so afraid of a vote?
There is widespread discontent over annexation and widespread mistrust
of the individuals who spearheaded this adventure. It seems that, instead
of cavalierly dismissing the concerns of the people they will soon
govern, the Newport Beach City Council should realize that the Committee
of 2000 does not speak for a majority of the residents of Newport Coast.
The city should be seeking out residents who do not blindly follow the
party line and including them in the process.
All voices should be heard. When the members of the Newport Coast
Committee of 2000 Steering Committee spend their evenings walking door to
door, talking with the residents of the community, instead of having
private meetings with city of Newport Beach officials, then they can
claim to represent the people of Newport Coast. Until that time, the true
representatives of our community are the volunteers who collected almost
1,000 signatures in support of fundamental democratic principles. These
are the people the city of Newport Beach should be talking to.
A Simple Vote is not one person. It is hundreds of people, all
concerned about what happens to the quality of life in Newport Coast now
that the city of Newport Beach has facilitated its land grab.
PHILLIP B. GREER
Newport Coast
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