Newport Beach has chance to make many changes
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Ben L. Schmid
Richard Stevens gave an avid developer’s view of the semi-thwarted
commercial development of Newport Beach, (Rebuttal, “Greenlight
endangers Newport’s quality of life,” Sunday). If he wants to
understand the reason for suppression of over-commercial development,
then visit Miami Beach. The Balboa Bay Club’s current expansion, with
nearly a half-mile of harbor-view-blinding, four-story buildings show
the loss of staunch restraint exercised by the Newport Beach Planning
Department and City Council.
Having been a summer homeowner on Balboa Island for more than 40
years and a full-time resident for more than 15 years, I applauded
the limitation of building size to total floor footage of 150% of the
net lot size on Balboa Island. The 25-foot height limit was also
applauded. Now the height allowable has been raised to 29 feet
(without a public reviewed code change) -- will 35 feet be next?
As a member of the San Marino City Planning Commission for seven
years, I and others maintained the planning code, limiting frontyard
fence height, visible vents or solar panels from street-facing roofs
and land building heights affecting the neighbors’ yard sun exposure.
A lawyer was always a member of the commission to give a
preliminary explanation before each third or fourth meeting of why we
respect and enforce the planning regulations. Seldom, when the
commission’s finding was appealed to the city council, was the
finding reversed.
As for the need for commercial development and increasing housing
density to increase revenue, San Marino elected to maintain its zoned
business areas without the addition of auto dealerships and markets.
In order to fund increasing municipal costs, a property tax
assessment was voted on every four years to maintain the police and
fire departments. Thus, any well-organized city can increase needed
revenue by stating the need.
Volunteerism is another untouched source for satisfying cost
growth. If we are going to be a beach community, let’s act like one
and balance the stated needs versus the costs.
As the city reviews and amends the general plan, let’s limit
densification, not permit any more oil change, or similar facilities,
on Mariner’s Mile or within Corona del Mar, provide timed traffic
signals on Jamboree Road and MacArthur Boulevard, bypass Laguna Beach
traffic through Corona del Mar by realigning the Newport Coast Drive
turnoff at Coast Highway, add a pedestrian bridge at the school
crossing and pay to remove the pay station at the San Joaquin toll
road. These are all within a possible bond issue or assessment for
their implementation and within the province of the existing City
Council.
* BEN L. SCHMID is a Balboa Island resident.
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