Proposed Dunes project prompted Greenlight activists
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It is obvious that the Daily Pilot editorial writer does not live
in Newport Beach, and the recent editorial “Dunes sale a sad ending”
is a perfect example (July 28).
I do agree that Tim and Annie Quinn are great people, and I think
those of us who had any contact with them at all would attest to
that. But that does not mean the new building project they endorsed
for the Dunes was going to be great for all of us who bordered the
property.
The Daily Pilot writer makes a mistake in the statement “plans to
build a hotel that by almost all accounts, except those of the
slow-growth activists, was going to serve the city better and provide
less traffic problems than an already approved 275-room hotel.”
The community’s outrage that the Newport Beach Planning Department
approved that project is what caused most of us to hook up with
Greenlight. It was proof that there was no thought for the people
most affected by the proposed hotel.
You see, unlike some of the Planning Department, City Council and
Daily Pilot staff, we are the ones who live and must travel along
that stretch of Coast Highway almost every single day. It is already
way too congested, is a traffic hazard and none of us believed the
propaganda that building a huge hotel at that site would not present
more problems.
Most of the Dunes’ neighbors also realized that having outside
entertainment for hotel guests would cause music, voices and even
bright lights to adversely affect neighbors on all sides. The water
magnifies sound, making noises at a huge new hotel a real problem,
especially when those hotel parties are in the evening -- a time we
appreciated our quiet neighborhoods. We liked the Quinns, but not
enough to ruin our quality of life.
It is unfortunate that neither the Daily Pilot nor the City
Council fully appreciated the resultant anger of Newport Beach
citizens to learn their families and neighborhoods were being
sacrificed by people who would never have to experience the resultant
problems.
Will we like the new neighbors? Sure, as long as they abide by
rules and regulations that are now in place. Greenlight gave us the
ability to make our relationship with any neighbor more pleasant.
EDNA WILLIAMS
Newport Beach
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