Gary Adams: Wanting to keep on a steady course
June Casagrande
In a campaign in which maintaining Newport Beach’s quality of life
has been a rallying call for challengers, incumbent Gary Adams’
prescription is simple: Re-elect the people who helped make the
city’s quality of life what it is today.
“I think a key issue in this campaign is whether or not a change
in leadership is in order,” said Adams, who can rattle off a long
list of reasons Newport Beach is an extraordinary town: outstanding
libraries, tight limits on development, top-notch staffers fighting
for improved water quality and limits on John Wayne flights and
expansion. “When you look at successes for any city government, I
don’t think you can top what’s been done here in Newport Beach.”
Adams said he is proud of his hard work to ensure the city’s
future. And that’s why the current campaign is frustrating, he said.
“I think it’s been easy for some people to say I’m part of a
developer-controlled council, but if you look at the facts, you can
see that’s really disingenuous,” he said.
For example, he noted, there has been no significant development
in the city outside the general plan’s guidelines in about 10 years.
The biggest additions to the city in recent years, Newport Coast and
Bonita Canyon, got their development entitlements from Orange County
and the city of Irvine, respectively, before they were part of
Newport Beach.
“In fact, by incorporating Bonita Canyon, I think we did a great
job of keeping development there relatively low,” Adams said.
Adams, who is endorsed by the Newport Beach Police and
Firefighters Union, the Newport Beach Police Employees Assn.,
numerous past mayors and county Supervisor Jim Silva, said he is also
proud and pleased with the work the city has done so far in
controlling traffic.
“When you consider that we accommodate millions of visitors each
year, when you consider that back in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s
when the city fought Caltrans’ plan to put a freeway for the city,
you can see that some of Greenlight’s positions on traffic are based
more on fear than on facts,” he said.
On the contrary, Adams said, a wholesale change in leadership
poses perhaps the biggest threat to the city’s future.
“I think change and debate are healthy, good things,” Adams said.
“But when things are going well, I think there’s a lot to be said for
continuity.”
The John Wayne Airport Settlement agreement is a case in point, he
said. The current agreement is well on track to gain court approval,
in part because of the city’s lobbying efforts in Washington, D.C.
Adams said that the best way to ensure its protections are to
continue the work the city has already done. From there, he said, the
city can consider regional solutions for the long term, possibly
including El Toro.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.