Madelene Arakelian: A return to a quaint city
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June Casagrande
Madelene Arakelian envisions a Newport Beach defined neither by
Fashion Island nor tattoo parlors. She sees a hope for a return to
the days of her youth, when Newport Beach embodied terms like
“quaintness” and “community.”
“Newport Beach was a very special place when I was growing up,”
said the 68-year-old Arakelian, a semi-retired businesswoman and
waste industry consultant. “We need to grow, but we need to grow
sensibly.”
In her bid for the District 1 City Council seat, Arakelian lists
as her top priorities: traffic, improving communication between the
City Council and the residents, bringing Newport Beach back to a
community rather than a metropolis, water quality and the city
budget.
“There’s no system of checks in the budget to provide
accountability,” she said, adding that the current system for
verifying receipt of lease payments on city-owned land is
insufficient.
As the Greenlight-endorsed candidate for the district that
includes the Balboa Peninsula, Arakelian will compete with incumbent
Mayor Tod Ridgeway and activist Marianne Zippi for the council seat.
She’s quick to say that Greenlight doesn’t mean no-growth, it means a
resident-guided approach to careful growth with the ultimate goal of
a single community in mind.
“I didn’t support annexation of Newport Coast, but that’s no
longer the issue,” she said. “They’re part of the city now. It’s a
city of different areas that need to all start working together. I
see the city backing away from its promises to Newport Coast and
that’s not right -- things like median maintenance.”
Arakelian’s solutions for city traffic problems include
controlling growth and finding case-by-case solutions for traffic
problem areas, including possibly better synchronizing lights,
widening roads and creating some one-way streets.
Greenlight’s newest refrain -- that city officials need to be more
respectful and communicative with residents -- is also near and dear
to her heart.
“I want to be able to have community forums where we just sit down
and talk, like a fireside-type of communication,” she said. “I want
to get elected because I want to listen to the public.”
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