Newport Beach’s government at a balanced spot
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Two years ago, when Newport Beach voters passed the Greenlight
initiative and elected a controlled-growth candidate to the City
Council, it sounded like a mandate for change. Residents wanted a
more responsive government. They wanted council members who worked
together well. And they clearly wanted a halt to major developments.
This year, given an opportunity to seal that mandate by populating
the council with Greenlight-endorsed candidates, they did not. They
voted in both incumbents -- Tod Ridgeway and Gary Adams -- along with
a longtime city employee, Don Webb. Only Dick Nichols in Corona del
Mar won by running with the Greenlight philosophy.
It is a stunning change of direction. The Greenlight movement had
staged a series of successes, both at the ballot -- the defeat of the
Koll project -- and in City Hall, where other developments -- the
Dunes hotel expansion -- were put aside to avoid a Greenlight
election showdown. Cries against a “business as usual” council and
City Hall resonated from West Newport to Eastbluff.
But on Tuesday, the power of the Greenlight movement was no longer
unlimited, the edge to the fervor a tad softened.
For all of Newport Beach, it is a change that should be welcomed.
Unlimited power -- whether tending toward developers or toward
slow-growth residents -- rarely has positive effects on government.
Now, Newport Beach has settled at a middle point, precisely where a
“checks and balances” form of government can operate best.
Greenlight now has two voices on the council in Nichols and John
Heffernan. Together they can argue more compellingly for the
Greenlight philosophy of controlled development and more limited
government. Despite Tuesday’s setback, it is a philosophy shared by
many in the community that deserves to be part of City Hall
decision-making.
Other interests have a place in that process, from the developers
who have been so pilloried in recent elections to landowners and
business owners. They all have deep-rooted stakes in this community.
Residents, of course, always have their place in determining the
course of the city’s future, a role they should continue to fulfill
by speaking with their council members, attending meetings and being
active in the plethora of community organizations that Newport is so
fortunate to have. And they have one final role in this balanced
government: the Greenlight law, which gives them the opportunity to
decide at the ballot box whether large developments will be allowed.
It is now up to all the players to work together to make this
system work.
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