Marinapark will go to public vote
June Casagrande
Voters will decide in November 2004 whether developer Stephen
Sutherland should be allowed to build a 110-room luxury resort at
Marinapark.
Council members voted 6 to 1 on Tuesday to put the matter on the
ballot and to require an environmental study of the project.
Opponents of the beachfront resort on the peninsula gave council
members an earful on why they believe the project should be stopped.
“The people of this city do not want a hotel at Las Arenas Park,”
said Tom Hyans, president of the Central Newport Beach Community
Assn. and an outspoken opponent of the hotel.
The council chamber was nearly full late into the night with a mix
of opponents and supporters gathered to speak on the project.
“I’m convinced that Stephen Sutherland [the project’s developer]
is a good neighbor now and he will be a good neighbor after this
project is built,” resident Jeff Davis said.
Council members said that Tuesday’s action was the only way to
assure that voters decide the matter and that an environmental study
of the project be done. Under current rules, if a developer puts a
project on a ballot through a ballot initiative, he is not required
to produce environmental studies.
“This is just to put this to a vote of the people,” Mayor Steve
Bromberg said. “That’s a good thing. I can’t imagine why anyone
wouldn’t want this to go to a vote of the people.”
Councilman Dick Nichols cast the dissenting vote, saying he has
concerns that the project is not appropriate for the area.
Developer Sutherland Talla Hospitality was selected by the city to
develop the oceanfront property that now hosts the Marinapark mobile
home park and the Las Arenas Park and tennis courts. Sutherland first
introduced a 156-room resort, but scaled back the project to 110
rooms to win community support.
Residents opposing the project, led by Hyans -- also a Greenlight
Committee member -- have said that the resort would change the
character of the peninsula. Some believe that the city-owned land
should either remain a mobile home park or be made into public
property.
If the resort is built, the beach behind it would still be public.
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