Laura Dietz: Looking to preserve the rainbow’s end
June Casagrande
Laura Dietz fell in love with Newport Beach the first time she saw
the place in 1981. By 1988, the San Francisco native was able to
fulfill her dream of moving here and, ever since, she says she’s been
dedicated to maintaining Newport as a place for “very high-end
lifestyles.”
“This is the end of the rainbow; it doesn’t get any better than
this,” the Cameo Shores resident and candidate for Council District 6
said.
To help preserve that, Dietz’s list of priorities for the city
include containing John Wayne Airport expansion, preserving water
quality, hammering out a workable Local Coastal Plan and revitalizing
areas of the city such as Mariners Mile. But perhaps the main theme
of Dietz’s campaign is senior care, inspired in part by her work with
her own mother.
“There are opportunities in the area behind Hoag Hospital to
create senior housing, from independent living to assisted living,
that will help the people who help build Newport Beach stay in the
city they love and stay with their families,” she said. In addition
to the fact that the area offers perfect proximity to Hoag, it also
provides the opportunity to create high-rise senior living facilities
without obstructing anyone’s view.
She also sees a great deal of potential when she looks at the
Mariners Mile area -- a place where she thinks she can offer a
creative solution.
“I call them ‘boutique hotels’ -- small, high-end hotels that can
attract business to the area” -- helping neighboring restaurants
without adding too much traffic, she said. Central to this plan could
be pedestrian overpasses over Coast Highway.
Such overpasses could also solve the dangerous pedestrian problems
in Corona del Mar, she said. “We should look into our possibilities
of making that happen there,” she said.
The Local Coastal Plan is another hot-button topic for Dietz. She
said the city can look to the lessons of a recent lawsuit in Malibu
to find ways to meet Coastal Commission requirements for beach access
while protecting private property owners as much as possible.
But every issue, Dietz said, falls under one, all-important
umbrella.
“We need to take a close look at how our city conducts its
business and whether it’s being done ethically,” she said.
“Everything else falls under that.”
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