EDITORIAL
Since it was proposed, we have been firm in our insistence that the
dangers of Newport Beach’s Greenlight law outweigh its benefits and good
intentions. Ballot-box lawmaking is a principle we simply can’t endorse,
if only for fear of the “tyranny of the majority.”
But that doesn’t mean we can’t see beneficial effects from Greenlight.
And one we weren’t expecting was clearly on display last weekend as
developer Stephen Sutherland hit the streets of Balboa Peninsula to
garner support for his proposed 147-room luxury resort at the Marinapark
mobile home park, city-owned land that also is home to the American
Legion Hall.
Pre-Greenlight, the idea of a developer pitching a project directly to
the people would have been outrageous. But now, if that is part of what
it takes to get support for large development, we say “Good for
Greenlight.”
A little door-to-door developer campaigning should mean voters are
more educated about not only a project they’ll vote on, but on the issues
surrounding development in the community. It should raise the interest
and awareness of Newport residents on issues that are next door, down the
street and across town.
It should make our city government stronger.
Of course, it will be up to residents to keep the door open when the
developer comes knocking. And we can only encourage and hope developers
will put on a fair and honest sales pitch.
But if both sides keep that bargain, Sutherland’s walk last week could
end up as a major step in improving relations between residents and
developers, which Greenlight’s victory and the ballot-box demise of the
Koll Center expansion project prove is still strained.
That’s something we can heartily support.
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