For what price a new home?
June Casagrande
If you want a permit for a variance, first you go to the Planning
Department and fill out some paperwork. Then you exit that building,
walk to the front building where the cashier is, and pay your fee.
Then, receipt in hand, you walk back to the first building, where
Planning Department staff will give you the permit.
If you want to apply for a job with the city, there’s no place to
sit while you wait. If you and a group of neighbors want to meet with
staff from the city manager’s office, you’ll have to stand outside in
the hall. There isn’t room for more than three people at a time to
sit and wait.
Those are just a few examples City Manager Homer Bludau offers to
illustrate just how cramped, outdated and inefficient the City Hall
complex is.
And if you don’t believe him, you’ll get a chance to see for
yourself. Perhaps as soon as next month, city officials will begin
meeting with members of the public and even giving City Hall tours in
hopes of gathering resident input on spending up to $30 million on a
new City Hall.
The council has approved spending $578,185 to draw up some
schematic designs of options for a new City Hall. But that’s just the
beginning of what could be a long, contentious and ultimately costly
process.
“This is under consideration,” Bludau said. “It isn’t done deal.
We are serious enough to move forward, do our due diligence, see what
the costs are and how the community feels about it.
“What council has said so far is that we’re serious about looking
at the planning to see if we want to move forward with a new City
Hall,” he said. “The first step will be holding some public meetings
to see what does and what doesn’t work and giving people tours, doing
public education and outreach.”
The public outreach, which could begin next month, will be the
easy part. Once contractor Griffin Holdings Inc. has finished
schematics early next year, the real arm wrestling will begin. Staff
and many members of the council seem eager to improve the aging
facility. They cite problems like archaic air conditioning, outmoded
seismic standards, cramped workspace, lack of amenities for people
with disabilities and outrageously inefficient
But they differ on how to proceed. Councilman John Heffernan
thinks that now is just not the time to spend nearly $600,000 on the
study, much less spend $20 million or $30 million on the complex
itself.
Councilman Don Webb was a little disturbed to see the rough plans
laid out at a study session because they basically called for razing
the existing City Hall buildings and fire station and replacing them
with one new building for City Hall, a new fire station and a parking
garage.
“I like the old buildings,” said Webb, who instead proposed
finding a way to salvage a few of the buildings and add on structures
to create more space and greater efficiency.
That could prove logistically impossible or financially
impractical, but for now, it’s on the list of options to be explored.
The parking garage would pay for itself even while providing free
parking to City Hall visitors. Spaces would be available for a fee on
nights and weekends to people parking to go to the beach, Lido
Village and other nearby attractions.
But while the parking structure looks like a financial no-brainer,
the rest of the project isn’t so lucky. The biggest question looming
is: Where will the money come from.
The city’s answer, in a nutshell, is: We haven’t figured that part
out yet.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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